Another typeface made for the visually impaired!

What began as an identity rebranding for the Braille Institute of America quickly became something else entirely for design firm Applied Design Works. As all people with vision difficulties are not completely blind, any visual identity the designers created would have to be extremely legible for those with patchy, fuzzy, or dim vision, or else the entire identity would not serve as it should.

The result was Atkinson Hyperlegible, a typeface that has been carefully designed for people who have trouble reading type. It's definitely a face with idiosyncrasies in individual characters—some letters have stronger–than–normal strokes, while other characters have missing pieces—but when used as part of a design, it reads very well, even for those with normal vision.