Spring fonts share a quality more than a single style. They are lighter, fresher, and a little more open than the typefaces that feel cold. The list below covers twelve, from refined contrast typefaces to handwritten and rounded display fonts, with two free Google Fonts at the end.
1. Ques: Elegant Extended Humanist

An extended humanist with flared stems that give it a serif-style character. The calligraphic quality and full set of stylistic alternates make Ques a strong fit for beauty, fashion, and refined editorial work. Eighteen single weights across upright and italic styles, plus two variable fonts.
2. Vole: Geometric Sans with Fluid Counters

A geometric sans-serif with rounded counters and a fluid interior shape. Reads as modern and friendly without crossing into novelty, which makes it suited to brand systems, food packaging, and product work. Nine weights with a variable.
3. Rati: Contemporary Contrast

A contrast typeface that pairs softened curves with sharp terminals. The lighter weights read as elegant; the heavier weights carry a stronger, more contemporary voice. Made for logos, titles, and editorial work where the brand wants modern with a creative edge.
4. Goji: Rounded Sans with Playful Alternates

A rounded sans-serif with a deep set of alternates and stylistic sets. The character is playful but the structure is clean, which lets Goji carry brand identity work and longer text without feeling juvenile. Strong fit for kids, gaming, and friendly product branding. Nine weights with a variable.
5. Miox: Groovy Bubble Font

A chunky bubble font with an inky feel in the lighter weights and a 70s character in the heavier ones. Suits bakeries, retro packaging, quirky jewelry, and music titles. Nine weights with a strong alternates library.
6. Lace: Loopy Handwritten Typeface

A loopy typeface for modern, branded lettering. Strokes stay uniform across weights, so the handwritten character holds together from light to black. A natural fit for restaurant menus, beauty branding, and personal-feeling identity work.
7. Auria Sans: Airy Sans for Fresh Branding

A modern sans-serif with soft inner corners that give it a wavy, airy quality. The alternates extend the character: multiple r terminals, rounded options for A, M, and W, and circular dots for punctuation. Pairs well with serif headlines for wellness, beauty, and clean fashion brands.
8. Cesty: Friendly Rounded Display

A bold rounded display with a friendly feel. Heavier weights read as full and confident; lighter weights bring a more springy, open character. A natural fit for menus, packaging, and brands that want to feel bright without leaning saccharine. Nine weights and a variable.
9. Kijs: Nature Serif with Brush-Style Alternates

A nature-inspired serif with inked counters, wavy variance, and cursive i and j alternates that give it an earthy quality. The lighter weights feel sophisticated; the heavier weights gain flow through their rounded terminals. A serif option for beauty, nature, and editorial brands that want personality alongside the structure.
10. Soya: Extended Editorial Display

An extended typeface with wide, boxy letters and distinct cut-off terminals. Lighter styles feel upmarket and considered; heavier styles push louder and more expressive. Made for art, design, and fashion brand work that wants a confident editorial voice. Nine weights with ligatures and alternates.
11. Caveat (Free, Google Fonts)
A casual handwritten font with marker-style strokes and a consistent flow. A reliable free option for personal-feeling brand voice, editorial quote treatments, or packaging that wants a human touch.
12. DM Serif Display (Free, Google Fonts)
A high-contrast display serif with elegant proportions and tight detail. A strong free option for editorial layouts and brand systems that want spring elegance without a custom license.
How to pick one
For light editorial work, Ques or DM Serif Display. For warm, rounded character, Vole, Goji, or Cesty. For a nature-leaning brand voice, Kijs or Lace. For more expressive direction, Miox, Rati, or Soya.
For softer typefaces in the rounded category, see the soft fonts post. For fluid, flowing letterforms, see the wavy fonts post.