Art Nouveau as a movement ran from roughly 1890 to 1910, defined by organic curves, botanical motifs, and a rejection of strict classical proportions. The typography that came out of it (Mucha posters, Eugène Grasset's lettering, the early Vienna Secession) influenced everything from Edwardian advertising to the psychedelic poster revival of the 1960s. Brands today reach for Art Nouveau-inspired type when they want decorative confidence without going full vintage.
The Mojomox catalog doesn't include strict Art Nouveau revival fonts (those tend to read costume-y in 2026). What it does include is a handful of fonts that share the underlying aesthetic: organic curves, considered ornament, and the kind of expressive personality that the era valued.
1. Saltz
Sharp condensed serif with editorial confidence. The drama of Saltz at large sizes channels the same dramatic instinct that drove Art Nouveau posters.
2. Aezra
Sharp narrow serif with long terminals. The terminal detail is where Art Nouveau influence shows; the rest is more disciplined than the original era.
3. Ques
Wide elegant contrast serif-style typeface. The contrast and refined character give Ques a decorative confidence that fits the tradition.
4. Cesty
Friendly rounded display font with 70s influence. The 70s psychedelic revival drew directly from Art Nouveau; Cesty inherits that lineage through that intermediary.
5. Lace Rounded
Handwritten line font with playful character. The decorative quality of Lace channels the hand-drawn confidence of Art Nouveau lettering directly.
6. Rozi
Modern elegant font with sharp serifs. The decorative serifs and confident strokes have the same instinct as the original Art Nouveau era's editorial type.
7. Bauhaus Chez
Rounded high-contrast typeface. The contrast and decorative quality fit the Art Nouveau aesthetic, modernized for 2026 packaging and editorial work.
How to use Art Nouveau-influenced type
The original era used type as the primary visual element, surrounded by white space or matched with botanical illustration. The modern use is more restrained. Pair these fonts with quiet sans-serifs for body text and let the decorative font carry the wordmark or hero headline. Beauty, hospitality, fashion, and editorial work all use this register effectively.






