Font Directory

Mertune

Mertune includes 4 downloadable variants for live preview and testing.

TTF 4 variants Personal Use Personal Use
Mertune font preview showing the family name
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Styles in this family

Mertune Font
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
0123456789

Font Specimen

Mertune font specimen showing alphabet, numbers, and sample text

Details

Mertune font.

Mertune is a sans serif font family for personal design projects, with upright, italic, bold, and bold italic styles in TTF format. It is a useful choice to test when you need a clean text style with enough weight range for simple layouts, headings, and mockups.

About Mertune Font

Mertune is credited to Muhamad Fikry Nuralif and Fikryal Studio. The family is presented as a sans serif, which makes it a practical option for visitors who want a straightforward font for titles, short blocks of text, social graphics, and early brand concept work. Because the package includes regular, italic, bold, and bold italic styles, you can build basic hierarchy without mixing unrelated fonts right away. Use the regular style for neutral wording, the bold style for stronger titles or labels, and the italic styles for emphasis, captions, pull quotes, or softer secondary details.

For logo work, posters, web mockups, and presentation layouts, try Mertune with short phrases first. Test the brand name, a few menu labels, a headline, and a paragraph sample in the preview before using it across a whole design. Sans serif fonts can work well in modern layouts, but the final result depends on spacing, letter shape, size, and contrast. If you are building a logo or client-facing design, check how the font behaves in all caps, in lowercase, and at small sizes. For pairing, keep the companion font simple: a readable serif can add contrast for editorial designs, while another quiet sans serif can work for body copy if Mertune is used mainly for headings.

The most important limit is the license. Mertune is marked Personal Use Only. That means it should be treated as a font for personal projects, previews, practice work, student layouts, private mockups, and non-commercial experiments unless you obtain the correct permission from the designer or foundry. Do not use it for paid client work, business branding, product packaging, advertising, merchandise, monetized social media assets, or a public logo until the commercial terms are confirmed.

Features

  • Sans serif font family with regular, italic, bold, and bold italic styles.
  • TTF font files suitable for common desktop design apps and font managers.
  • Useful style range for basic hierarchy: normal text, emphasized text, strong headings, and bold italic accents.
  • Personal-use licensing, so commercial projects need separate permission or a commercial license.
  • A practical font to test in previews for headings, short descriptions, posters, branding drafts, and web layout mockups.

Best Uses

  • Personal posters, practice layouts, and student design work.
  • Logo drafts and brand concept exploration before commercial licensing.
  • Website and app mockups where you want to test a clean sans serif voice.
  • Social media graphics, quote cards, and simple promotional-style personal artwork.
  • Headlines, labels, captions, and short paragraphs that need regular and bold contrast.

License Information

Mertune is marked Personal Use Only. Use it for personal, non-commercial work unless you have permission or a commercial license from the designer or foundry. For client work, business branding, logos, merchandise, ads, packaging, paid campaigns, or monetized projects, confirm the correct license first.

Designer and Foundry

Mertune is credited to Muhamad Fikry Nuralif, with Fikryal Studio listed as the foundry. The designer URL points to fikryalstudio.com.

Usage Tips

Install the TTF files, then test all four styles in the preview or your design app before committing to a layout. Start with a headline, a short paragraph, and a few labels. Check spacing in all caps, readability at small sizes, and how the bold weight balances with the regular style. If the design feels too plain, pair it with a serif for contrast; if it feels too busy, keep Mertune as the main display font and use a very neutral body font.

FAQ

Is Mertune free for commercial use?

No commercial-use permission is stated. The license is marked Personal Use Only, so treat it as personal-use only unless you obtain a commercial license or direct permission.

Who designed Mertune?

Mertune is credited to Muhamad Fikry Nuralif, with Fikryal Studio listed as the foundry.

What font styles are included with Mertune?

The family includes regular, italic, bold, and bold italic styles.

What file format does Mertune use?

The listed font files are in TTF format, which is widely supported by common desktop design software and operating systems.

Can I use Mertune for a logo?

You can test it in personal logo drafts and concept work. For a business logo, client logo, product logo, or any public commercial identity, confirm and obtain the correct commercial license first.

What should I pair Mertune with?

For contrast, try a readable serif for body text or supporting copy. For a cleaner interface-style layout, pair it with a neutral sans serif and let Mertune handle headings or key labels.

Is Mertune good for long paragraphs?

Test it before using it for long reading. The available styles give you useful hierarchy, but readability depends on size, spacing, line height, and the exact letterforms in your layout.

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