About Julia Petretta
Julia Petretta is a working type designer with a small, focused open-source catalog — credited on 5 open-source typefaces in the open-source library indexed by TypeCraft. The work spans display, serif, sans-serif, with display representing the largest share of the catalog. Every typeface in the catalog below is distributed under a permissive open-source license, almost always the SIL Open Font License, and is free to use in commercial work without paying a licensing fee or asking permission.
The work concentrates on display design, which is the freest of the typographic traditions. Display designers are not constrained by the legibility-at-small-sizes problem that disciplines body-text design — they can take risks with proportion, weight, contrast, and detail that would be exhausting in a paragraph but become magnetic in a poster, headline, or piece of packaging.
The catalog of 5 releases is large enough to read as an intentional body of work and small enough that each typeface still rewards detailed attention on its own page. Designers in this position tend to be selective about which projects they release publicly, which means the open-source typefaces below are usually their most considered work, not their experiments. Beyond the primary display work, the catalog also includes serif releases, which is unusual enough to be worth noting — most type designers stay within a single category their whole careers, and the willingness to work across registers is a signal of either restless curiosity or genuine breadth of craft.
Every release in the catalog below is distributed under a permissive open-source license, which means you can ship these typefaces in commercial work, embed them in apps you sell, ship them with software you distribute, and modify the source files to suit a particular project — provided you respect the lightweight attribution and redistribution terms documented on the TypeCraft licensing page. The decision by Julia Petretta to release this work into the public open-source catalog is the reason the rest of the design industry can use it without a licensing budget, and is worth pausing to acknowledge.
If you found this designer through a specific typeface, the related families on each font's detail page point you to the closest stylistic neighbours in the broader catalog. If you would prefer to browse the open-source library by category — serif, sans-serif, display, handwriting, monospace — the categories index is the right starting point. If you are choosing a typeface for a specific job, the use-cases index filters the catalog by intent rather than by family.