Best Fonts for Logos in Canva
Written by Casey Botticello
Disclosure: Some of the links below are affiliate links, meaning that at no additional cost to you, I will receive a commission if you click through and make a purchase. For more information, read our full affiliate disclosure here.
In this guide, we handpick the best fonts in logos in Canva so you can produce images with style and sophistication.
Best Fonts for Logos in Canva
1. TT Norms
TT Norms is a clean and geometric sans serif typeface that is equipped with many stylistic alternatives and extended features. It has a total of 18 styles and comes in 7 weights from regular to ExtraBlack and matching italics.
2. Intro
Intro’s cultivated playfulness was further emphasized by adding some special ingredients, including carefully adjusted Oblique alternatives that fit next to the existing upright ones. All styles are available as Condensed versions.
3. Bodoni FLF
Bodoni is a serif typeface originally designed by Giambattista Bodoni in 1798. The earlier versions of Bodoni were considered Transitional while the later versions fall into the Modern category.
4. Yeseva One
A serif display type that is very feminine. I think that this is the only type in the world with such a feminine essence. Yeseva’s name is from the phrase “Yes, Eva.” As a sign of complete agreement between a man and a woman. I dedicate this font to my beloved wife.
5. Nunito Sans Regular
Nunito is a well-balanced sans serif typeface superfamily, with 2 versions: The project began with Nunito, created by Vernon Adams as a rounded terminal sans serif for display typography. Jacques Le Bailly extended it to a full set of weights, and an accompanying regular non-rounded terminal version, Nunito Sans.
6. Didot
The famous French typecutter Firmin Didot designed a new Greek typeface in Paris in 1805, under the influence of the neoclassical ideals of the late 18th century. It was immediately used in the publishing program of Adamantios Korai, the prominent intellectual figure of the Greek diaspora and leading scholar of the Greek Enlightenment.
7. Abril Fatface
Abril Fatface is part of a bigger type family system, Abril, which includes 18 styles for all Display and Text uses. The titling weights are a contemporary revamp of classic Didone styles, displaying both neutrality and a strong presence on the page to attract reader attention with measured tension through its curves, good color, and high contrast.
8. Rufina
Rufina combines features of several typographic styles with Bodoni forms found in the calligraphy of flexible tip pens. High contrast enables it to work well in text and headlines.
9. Aileron Regular
Aileron is a sans serif font which adds my own interpretation with reference to a typeface classified as Neo-Grotesque including Helvetica.
10. Odibee Sans
Odibee Sans is a display font project by London-based designer James Barnard. James set out to create his very own one-day build (ODB) and completed the entire character set, numbers, and basic glyphs in 24 hours.
Conclusion
Canva is an amazing graphic design tool, and I hope you found this tutorial covering the best fonts for logos in Canva useful! Click here to read our comprehensive Canva Guide. If you are interested in downloading Canva or trying Canva Pro for free, click here. Below are several related Canva tutorials that you might find useful: