Workbench
Type with Purpose
Good typography guides attention, improves understanding, and makes communication effortless.
The Anatomy of a Typeface
By FontSide · June 2026
Every typeface is a system of decisions — about stroke contrast, x-height, spacing, and rhythm. The best ones feel invisible: you stop seeing the letters and start hearing the voice behind them. That transparency is the hardest thing to design.
A high x-height opens up the counters and makes small text breathe. Tight tracking pulls a headline together; loose tracking gives a caption room to exhale. None of these choices are accidents — they are arguments about how reading should feel.
Uppercase
Lowercase
Numerals
Symbols
Package Manager
The recommended way to use fonts in modern web projects.
1. Install Package
pnpm add @fontsource-variable/workbench 2. Import in App
import '@fontsource-variable/workbench/wght.css'; 3. CSS Usage
body {
font-family: "Workbench Variable", monospace;
} Google Fonts CDN
Use Google's CDN to embed the fonts directly via HTML.
HTML <head>
<!-- Please select at least one weight and style --> Fontsource CDN
Skip the build step by adding this directly to your global CSS file.
Global CSS
/* workbench-latin-wght-normal */
@font-face {
font-family: "Workbench Variable";
font-style: normal;
font-display: swap;
font-weight: 100 900;
src: url(https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/fontsource/fonts/workbench:vf@latest/latin-wght-normal.woff2)
format("woff2-variations");
} Background & Story
Workbench and Sixtyfour fonts are inspired by the article Raster CRT Typography (According to DEC) by Norbert Landsteiner. They are a rework of some old pixel versions of the Commodore 64 and Amiga Workbench fonts the author created years ago.
The fonts now include two custom axes: Scanlines, which allows control of the height of the lines and, as a result of this, the amount of vertical space between the lines. And Bleed to change the amount of horizontal bleed of the pixels due to the phosphor latency found in CRT displays.
Due to this project's specificity and the fonts' historical origin, they only support a limited set of glyphs.
To contribute, see github.com/jenskutilek/homecomputer-fonts
Tags & Moods
Subsets
Install
pnpm add @fontsource-variable/workbench Designed by
Jens Kutílek
Links
License
OFL-1.1