TYPEMATCHSEO

TYPEMATCH.

V2.1

700
400
PAIRING ID: COV-CAV // ETHOS: HANDWRITING + HANDWRITING

Systematizing Covered By Your Grace & Caveat

Anchor the expressive personality of Covered By Your Grace with the utilitarian clarity of Caveat.

Display Face

Covered By Your Grace

Weight: 700

Body Face

Caveat

Weight: 400

This pairing is engineered for teams that need a clear hierarchy without sacrificing brand voice. Covered By Your Grace brings tall, skinny, handwritten energy to hero units, pricing sections, and campaign headlines. Caveat absorbs the heavy lifting for paragraphs, product storytelling, and UI labels with its handwritten, natural, variable texture and dependable rhythm. Together they create a typography stack that scales from high-impact landing pages to dense documentation without retooling your CSS tokens.

Typographic Hierarchy & Scale

H1The Quick Fox
H2The Quick Fox
H3The Quick Fox
PThe quick brown fox jumps over...
Dark Context
Aa

High contrast negative space.

Accent
Gg

Legibility on high-chroma.

Pairing Strategy

Systematizing Covered By Your Grace & Caveat

Anchor the expressive personality of Covered By Your Grace with the utilitarian clarity of Caveat.

This pairing is engineered for teams that need a clear hierarchy without sacrificing brand voice. Covered By Your Grace brings tall, skinny, handwritten energy to hero units, pricing sections, and campaign headlines. Caveat absorbs the heavy lifting for paragraphs, product storytelling, and UI labels with its handwritten, natural, variable texture and dependable rhythm. Together they create a typography stack that scales from high-impact landing pages to dense documentation without retooling your CSS tokens.

Covered By Your Grace thrives as a headline face thanks to its tall, skinny, handwritten qualities. Use weights 400–600 for crisp editorial lockups.
Caveat excels in paragraphs and UI thanks to its handwritten, natural, variable traits. Keep it between weights 400–600 for optimal readability.
Hierarchy guidance: run a 1:1.2 modular scale and reserve Covered By Your Grace for H1–H3 while Caveat powers captions, body copy, and data tables.

Best-Fit Use Cases

  • High-growth SaaS landing pages that require tall hero statements with trustworthy product copy.
  • Editorial magazines and thought-leadership hubs where Covered By Your Grace can dramatize pull quotes while Caveat keeps 1,500-word essays skimmable.
  • Conversion funnels or onboarding flows that need Caveat's handwritten voice to balance Covered By Your Grace's attention-grabbing display.

Accessibility Notes

Maintain a minimum 4.5:1 contrast ratio for Caveat body copy and loosen letter-spacing to 0.01em for uppercase Covered By Your Grace moments. Pairing different categories demands disciplined color pairing—test both light and dark themes to ensure Caveat does not bloom at small sizes.

CSS Implementation Cheatsheet

:root {
  --tm-header-family: 'Covered By Your Grace', handwriting;
  --tm-body-family: 'Caveat', handwriting;
  --tm-header-weight: 400;
  --tm-body-weight: 400;
  --tm-header-tracking: -0.04em;
  --tm-body-tracking: -0.005em;
}
Heading scale: clamp(2.75rem, 3.6vw, 5.25rem) for H1, clamp(1.5rem, 2.8vw, 3rem) for H2, and keep paragraph size at 1rem–1.125rem with 1.6 line-height.
Component guidance: Buttons inherit Covered By Your Grace at 400 for momentum, while forms, tables, and footnotes stay on Caveat with 400 weight for predictable kerning.

FAQs

Why does Covered By Your Grace make sense as the lead font?

Covered By Your Grace owns the emotional register of this system. Its tall, skinny, handwritten profile helps anchor campaign creative, meaning marketing and product teams can reuse the same voice without reinventing the scale.

Where should Caveat show up?

Caveat is the workhorse. Keep it in paragraphs, long-form editorial, knowledge bases, or anywhere legibility is non-negotiable. Its handwritten, natural, variable qualities reduce fatigue on dense layouts.

Does this pairing support complex localization?

Yes—both families are available on Google Fonts with generous glyph coverage. Test cyrillic/latin accents early, but most Latin-based locales and UI patterns are fully supported.