, author of one of the most famous adaptations of DIN,
FF DIN, speaking about the design's history With the popularity of the DIN fonts due their minimal and modern design, several designers and companies have released their own interpretations and adaptations, often adding new weights such as light or extra-bold, and italics, causing a range of digital interpretations to exist.
Commercial One of the most famous and best-selling digitisations of DIN is
FF DIN (1995), created by Dutch typeface designer
Albert-Jan Pool for
FontFont.
Typographica editor Stephen Coles has particularly praised it for the quality of its hinting for onscreen display. Users include the
New York City Ballet,
ETH Zurich,
The Verge and the film
The Wolf of Wall Street. Unlike the original design, it uses conventional weight names. As the original DIN design is out of copyright, other companies have offered digital releases (or obtained rights to resell Linotype's).
Parachute (Latin, Arabic, Cyrillic, Greek), Elsner+Flake, Paratype (with Cyrillic characters) and others have issued revivals of some DIN styles, often upgraded with additional weights. Fontsite renamed its release .
Microsoft created custom digitizations of both and versions of DIN 1451 in 2013, but this version was never released publicly. In 2016, a version was released as , as Microsoft's first ever
Open Type variable font. The source was completely rebuilt from the ground up by Aaron Bell of Saja Typeworks and was expanded in weight, character set and manual hinting. It supports
Latin,
Cyrillic,
Greek, currency symbols, and some
Coptic. It was first included in
Windows 10 version 1709, and is primarily being used as the user interface font for
Xbox software. Parachute Type Foundry also designed the PF DIN Max Variable typeface, which also based on the DIN 1451 typeface. Emil Karl Bertell designed the Praktika typeface, inspired from the DIN 1451 typeface. Thomas Schostok designed the CA BND typeface, inspired from the DIN 1451 typeface. In 2023, the Berlin-based Type Foundry, Fontwerk released the Neue DIN typeface designed by Hendrik Weber, Andreas Frohloff and Olli Meier. Neue DIN is an interpretation of the DIN 1451 typeface and has an overall compact appearance with a range of extreme widths. It is variable first and provides 81 static fonts which correspond to
W3C’s
CSS specifications. Since September 2025, matching italics and
left-leaning italics (‘Retalic’) have been available, increasing the number of static fonts to 243.
Open Source An extensive set of digitisations is made by Peter Wiegel with donations requested from users under the
OFL. This includes the regular style () in two grades for printing with less and more ink spread, and the less well-known . He also digitised the rounded
DIN 16 Oblique and
DIN 17 Upright Standard Typeface for Drawings using the names TGL 0-16 and 0-17, the names under which they were known in the
German Democratic Republic. Peter Wiegel also digitised a precursor of DIN 1451 typeface named Preussische IV 44 Ausgabe 3 typeface. The Linux community had various DIN digitisation fonts released under various packages, including Open Din Schriften Engschrift (2009) and OSP-DIN (2011). Both are recreations based on the original DIN specifcation and licensed under OFL. American cybersecurity and data backup company,
Datto, Inc. released D-DIN at 2017, a typeface based on a variant of the DIN 1451 typeface as their corporate typeface and licensed from Monotype. The font contains regular, italic and bold variants with three widths and is also licensed under OFL; however the company has since stopped usage. Other derivatives from D-DIN include D-DIN-PRO, Altinn-DIN and DINish (additionally with
variable font), which are all licensed under OFL under the license requirement. Gidole is a DIN-inspired font licensed under OFL released in 2015. It include variants in font weights and three alternate design styles (regular width, mono, Gidolinya with rounded corners). Google Fonts forked the repo in 2025 and rebuild only the Regular weight for their webfont service. ==See also==