Ambroise vs Cardinal

Ambroise and Cardinal are both serif typefaces sharing a elegant foundation. Where Ambroise leans didone, high contrast, Cardinal brings editorial, modern. Compare which suits your Editorial project.

68% Similarity

Design DNA

Design overlap:20%

Ambroise

Structural
DidoneHigh Contrast
Visual
Elegant

Cardinal

Visual
ElegantModern
Purpose
Editorial

Highlighted traits are shared between both fonts

Visual Comparison

Ambroise

Premium

Cardinal

Premium

Premium font preview not available

Visit the foundry website to see samples

Feature Comparison

Feature Ambroise Cardinal
Type Premium Premium
Classification serif serif
Variable Font No No
Weights Multiple Multiple
Italics Yes Yes
License Commercial License Required Commercial License Required
Language Support latin, latin-extended latin, latin-extended
Source Typofonderie Production Type

Best Use Cases

Editorial

Typography suited for magazines, newspapers, and long-form content. Editorial fo...

Ambroise Cardinal
Branding

Fonts that establish strong brand identity with distinctive character and versat...

Ambroise Cardinal
Fashion

Typography for fashion brands, style publications, and luxury apparel. Fashion f...

Ambroise Cardinal
Headlines

Typography designed specifically for titles, headers, and attention-grabbing tex...

Ambroise Cardinal
Luxury

Typography for luxury brands, high-end products, and premium services. Luxury fo...

Ambroise Cardinal

Which Should You Choose?

Recommended: Ambroise

  • didone, high contrast design character
  • Suited for Fashion
  • From Typofonderie
  • 3 free alternatives available
View Ambroise →

Consider: Cardinal

  • editorial, modern design character
  • Suited for Headlines and Luxury
  • From Production Type
  • 3 free alternatives available
View Cardinal →
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