Font Directory
Rocline
Rocline includes 1 downloadable variant for live preview and testing.
Font Specimen
Details
- Designer Doni Purwoko
- License Personal use only
- Format TTF
- Variants 1 file available
Rocline Personal Use Only font.
Rocline is a serif font family with a Regular TTF file for personal-use design work. It is a useful choice to preview when you need a serif voice for titles, display text, branding drafts, poster layouts, or web mockups, while keeping the license limit in mind.
About Rocline Font
Rocline is presented as a serif font and is credited to Doni Purwoko. The downloadable file is a TrueType font in a regular style with normal weight, so it is best tested first in headings, short lines, and design compositions where one clear serif style is enough. Because only one regular variant is listed, it should not be treated like a full editorial family with matching bold, italic, or extended weights. For page layouts, brand drafts, and social graphics, try it in the preview with the exact words you plan to use. A serif can change character quickly depending on letter spacing, capitalization, and size, so testing real text is more useful than judging it from a name alone.
For designers, Rocline can be a practical starting point for personal logo concepts, mood boards, invitations, poster titles, cover mockups, and typography studies. Use it where a single serif style can carry the message without needing a large weight range. In logo work, check short names in uppercase and lowercase, then look closely at spacing around letters such as R, o, c, l, and e. For posters and thumbnails, preview the font at the final display size rather than only at large preview scale. For web mockups, use it as a visual placeholder only unless you have the correct license for the final use. If you need body text, long paragraphs, or a full publication system, compare Rocline with a more complete text family that includes bold, italic, and multiple weights.
Features
- Serif font style suitable for testing in titles, logo drafts, posters, and other short-text layouts.
- Regular TrueType font file with normal style and 400 weight.
- Single listed variant, which keeps testing simple but limits typographic hierarchy.
- Personal Use Only license, so commercial use requires extra permission or a separate license.
Best Uses
- Personal logo concepts and branding sketches
- Poster titles, cover designs, and display headlines
- Invitation drafts, mood boards, and typography practice
- Website or app mockups where the font is not being used in a final commercial release
- Short social graphics, quote images, and presentation title slides
License Information
Rocline is marked Personal Use Only. You may use it for personal projects, tests, and non-commercial drafts, but do not use it for client work, paid products, business branding, advertising, merchandise, monetized content, or live commercial websites unless you obtain the proper commercial license from the rights holder.
Designer and Foundry
Rocline is credited to Doni Purwoko. No foundry name or designer website is listed for this font entry.
Usage Tips
Start by previewing Rocline with the exact wording of your project. For logos, test both all-caps and title case, then adjust tracking carefully because serif letterforms can feel crowded when used in tight marks. For posters and thumbnails, keep the text short and give the letters enough space to remain readable. For font pairing, combine Rocline with a simple sans serif for captions, navigation, or body copy so the serif can stay focused on the main title. Avoid relying on it alone for long-form layouts unless you are comfortable with a single regular weight and no listed italic or bold companion.
FAQ
Is Rocline free for commercial use?
No. Rocline is marked Personal Use Only. For commercial projects, you should get the correct commercial license or permission from the rights holder.
Who designed Rocline?
Rocline is credited to Doni Purwoko.
What font format is available?
The listed file is a TTF, or TrueType font, in a regular style.
Can I use Rocline for a logo?
You can test it in personal logo concepts and mockups. Do not use it for a business, client, product, or public commercial logo unless you have a commercial license.
Is Rocline good for body text?
It is better to test it first in short text and display settings. Since only a regular variant is listed, long documents may need a fuller font family with bold, italic, and multiple weights.
What should I pair with Rocline?
Pair it with a clean sans serif for body text, menus, captions, or supporting details. This keeps the serif style visible in headings while improving readability in smaller text.
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