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- Download All Fonts in OTF format for All Operating Systems
- Download documentation
- Web fonts for embedding into websites
- Ponomar (previously called Hirmos Ponomar) is a font for typesetting Synodal Church Slavonic (that is, Church Slavonic used in modern liturgical texts of the Russian Orthodox Church). It may also be used to typeset liturgical texts in Romanian (Moldovan) Cyrillic, Aleut and Sakha (Yakut) Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Ponomar Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Pochaevsk reproduces the typeface used in editions published by the Holy Dormition Pochayev Lavra in the late 19th century and, subsequently, in editions published in the 20th century by Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, New York. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Pochaevsk Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Triodion is another font for typesetting Synodal Church Slavonic. It is intended to reproduce the typeface of liturgical books published in Russia at the beginning of the 20th century Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Triodion Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Acathist reproduces another typeface that was used in the Synodal editions of the second half of the 19th and early 20th centuries. This typeface was used for large format editions such as Altar Gospel Books and Acathists Download OTF | Download TTF | Clone on GitHub
- Fedorovsk is designed to mimic the typeface used by Ivan Fedorov, who produced some of the first printed books in Moscow. It is intended primarily for reproducing publications from that era, either in an academic setting, or as modern Old Rite liturgical texts. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Fedorovsk Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Vilnius is designed to mimic the typeface used by the Mamonichi Press in Vilnius, which produced important editions in the late 16th and early 17th century. Download OTF | Download TTF | Clone on GitHub
- Menaion provides both Cyrillic and Glagolitic characters and is intended for representing text from Ustav-era Church Slavonic manuscripts. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Menaion Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Voskresensky provides Cyrillic characters and Znamenny Musical Notation symbols and is also intended for reproducing the text of Ustav-era manuscripts. The typeface is modelled after the characters in the Voskresensky Hirmologion. Please note that the neumes are still experimental. Download OTF | Download TTF | Clone on GitHub
- Monomakh is a Cyrillic font implemented in a mixed ustav/poluustav style and intended to cover needs of researches dealing with Slavic history and philology. It also provides Latin characters in a similar typeface, which is useful for working with multilingual academic editions. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Monomakh Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Shafarik is a Unicode font, named after Pavel Jozef Šafárik, Slovak-born scholar and one of the founders of modern Slavic philology, intended for an academic presentation of Old Church Slavonic (OCS) texts written in both the Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets. The font supports both round (Bulgarian) Glagolitic and angular (Croatian) Glagolitic. Download OTF | Download TTF | Clone on GitHub | Download documentation
- Indiction is used for decorative drop caps (bukvitsi) in liturgical books of the Russian Orthodox Church published since the late 19th century. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Indiction Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Vertograd is another font used for decorative drop caps and titling, commonly found in liturgical books of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Vertograd Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Cathisma is a font used for titling in many 18th-20th century liturgical editions published by the Holy Synod in Russia. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Cathisma Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Oglavie is another font used for titling in many 18th-20th century liturgical editions. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Oglavie Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- Pomorsky is a decorative font intended for drop caps (bukvitsy) and titling in Old Ritualist texts. It reproduces the calligraphic style of book and chapter titles used by Priestless Old Ritualists of the Vyg Hermitage. Download OTF | Download TTF | Download legacy Pomorsky Unicode font, which is no longer supported | Clone on GitHub
- FiraSlav is a monospaced font for Church Slavonic, intended for editing Church Slavonic text in a text editor. All diacritical marks and combining letters are presented as spacing symbols and a monospaced appearance is maintained. The font includes both regular and bold flavors. Download OTF | Download TTF | Clone on GitHub
var letter = '(?:ᲂу|Оу|оу\\S)[̀́̑҆̾̏҇҃ⷠⷡⷢⷣⷷⷤⷥꙵꙶⷦ]*';
- RussianMission is not a standalone CJK font. It provides only the 20 Han glyphs used in the texts of the Russian Mission in China and the Russian Mission in Japan to transliterate Church Slavonic syllables. The characters have now been accepted for encoding into the CJK Unified Ideographs block of Unicode starting at U+9FD6. See the README file for the codepoints and more information. RussianMission is not a supported font. Glyphs are provided for inclusion into other CJK fonts. Download
Fonts are provided in OpenType-CFF (PostScript) format (with OTF extension) or in TrueType format (with TTF extension). Both formats have advanced OpenType typographic features described in the documentation. Generally you should download and install the OpenType font (with OTF extension) for most purposes; the TrueType font (with TTF extension) is needed for older systems that do not support OTF fonts or in web applications where a smaller file size is desirable. As well, we no longer provide fonts with SIL Graphite features, since modern word processing and text layout software supports OpenType features; but if you need support for Graphite, see the legacy fonts package.
The fonts are licensed under the SIL Open Font License. More information is indicated on the legal page. Questions can be addressed to the SCI-Users mailing list (with discussion in English, Russian or any other Slavic language).
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