Escrow vs Palatino
Escrow and Palatino are both serif typefaces sharing a readable foundation. Where Escrow leans didone, editorial, Palatino brings old style, script. Compare which suits your Editorial project.
Design DNA
Design overlap:17%
Escrow
Palatino
Highlighted traits are shared between both fonts
Visual Comparison
Escrow
Premium
Palatino
Premium
Feature Comparison
| Feature | Escrow | Palatino |
|---|---|---|
| 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, cyrillic, greek |
| Source | Font Bureau | Linotype |
Best Use Cases
Typography suited for magazines, newspapers, and long-form content. Editorial fo...
Typography optimized for extended reading, book publishing, and literary content...
Typography for newspaper design, print journalism, and daily publications. Newsp...
Typography for magazine design, periodicals, and print publications. Magazine fo...
Typography for academic papers, research publications, and scholarly documents. ...
Typography for business documents, reports, and professional communications. Doc...
Which Should You Choose?
Recommended: Escrow
- didone, editorial design character
- Suited for Newspapers and Magazines
- From Font Bureau
- 2 free alternatives available
Consider: Palatino
- old style, script design character
- Suited for Academic and Documents
- From Linotype
- 2 free alternatives available
- Broader language support
Free Alternatives to Consider
Free fonts that can replace both Escrow and Palatino