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Subordinate Latin

September 26 2024

The Latin inside Japanese fonts

Japanese typeface designers call the Latin script section of their projects the “Subordinate Latin.” The typical Latin typeface has glyphs with varying proportional widths, but Kanji are designed to fit within a square space which means they are much wider than most Latin letterforms. This means a typical Latin font will look much too narrow when mixed in among Japanese characters. To allow Latin to blend with the other scripts in Japanese text, Latin letterforms are modified to be slightly wider and have shorter ascenders and descenders and bigger counters. In addition to this adjusted Latin, [some] Japanese fonts also include a “full width” Latin design.

“Hello Type” set in Shippori Mincho Subordinate Latin vs. Times New Roman
Japanese Subordinate Latin (top) compared to Times New Roman (bottom)
~ Say Hello to our preview new Japanese collection with Zen Fonts: Learn about the complex beauty of Japanese fonts by Min-Young Kim

i really fw the look of Subordinate Latin so i thought i'd compile a collection of fonts that feature it

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Type tester

❗ If you see dingbats, then the font is either unavailable on your platform or has failed to load.

Jump to: Fullwidth forms, Halfwidth forms
Font Platform Test

# Fullwidth forms

So that mixed-Latin/CJK text is visually harmonious some fonts have Latin fullwidth forms, matching the width of CJK characters. They are rendered by either enabling the font-variant-east-asian: full-width or font-feature-settings: 'fwid' CSS properties, or by using Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms Unicode code points.

Like monospace fonts, fullwidth characters occupy the same horizontal space regardless of their natural width.

Unlike true monospace fonts, full-width only affects certain characters (mainly ASCII character set letters, numbers, and punctuation), so it doesn't guarantee that all characters in the text will have the same width.

Font Platform Test

# Halfwidth forms

Some fonts also support a halfwidth variant, rendered by either enabling the font-feature-settings: 'hwid' CSS property, or by using Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms Unicode code points.

Font Platform Test

Form support table

Font Platform Fullwidth Halfwidth
honestly i really think that Source Han Serif looks the "cleanest" and is available free on Adobe Fonts (and Google Fonts[c])

special mention to Hiragino Mincho ProN which is really quite pretty, and the general goofiness of SimSun and MS Mincho
[a] This is the article's <body> font stack.
[b] A typical Latin font for comparison.
[c] Note that Noto [Serif|Sans] JP is just the Google Font version of Source Han [Serif|Sans], but as it's a Google Font, doesn't include font-variant-east-asian: full-width / font-feature-settings: 'fwid' or font-feature-settings: 'hwid' .
[d] Unlike all other listed fonts, Noto Serif|Sans JP's CJK characters remain fullwidth with the application of font-feature-settings: 'hwid'. Odd.