Newsweek Font
What font is used in the Newsweek logo?
I did a lot of research to find the font used in the Newsweek logo. I didn’t find the exact font used in the logo. Most likely, this font has been personalized.
Anyway, I found two fonts that are very similar to the original logo font. The first is premium and the second is free. You can manipulate these fonts a bit to make them look like the desired font.
The first font is “Hefring Slab Bold” and was designed by Mariya Pigoulevskaya and published by The Northern Block Ltd. This font is Premium and you can buy it from the link below.
The second alternative font is “Merit” and was designed by Scott Simpson. You can use it in your personal and commercial projects. Click on the button below to download it.
The special logo font that is intended for those of you who are interested in the press and reading today is the logo font of Newsweek magazine. This logo font with a combination of white and red color indicates important news. The style of this logo font is different in some letters, for example, ‘e’s’ has a different stroke at the end and other letters have a rectangular shape at the end of the edges. These logo fonts are very suitable and applicable in banking brands, news sites, Western movie titles.
About Newsweek
The magazine was founded in 1933 by Thomas J. C. Martyn. Journalist Samuel T. Williamson has served as Newsweek’s first editor. The first issue of the magazine was published on February 17, 1933. Seven photos of the weekly news were published with the cover of the first edition.
In 2003, blood circulation worldwide exceeded 4 million, including 2.7 million in the United States. By 2010, that number had dropped to 1.5 million. Newsweek publishes in Japanese, Korean, Polish, Romanian, Spanish, Spanish Rioplatense, Arabic, Turkish, Serbian, as well as an English-language Newsweek International.