Every Font Available in Both Squarespace & Canva (All 236 of ‘em!)
Brand Consistency Matters — Which Means Font Consistency Matters.
Let’s set the scene: You’re creating your brand and find the perfect fonts in Canva. You build out a bunch of graphics using those fonts and you’re in love with them.
Then you get to work on your website. But when you look for those perfect fonts in Squarespace… they’re nowhere to be found.
(This works in reverse too — maybe you’ve found your dream fonts in Squarespace only to find they’re not offered in Canva.)
It might be tempting to just say “to hell with it, I’ll use a font that’s close but not perfect!” but I’d urge you not to. A font is part of your brand because it’s recognizable — whether someone is showing up on your social feed, your website, or anywhere else, it matters that the experience is consistent.
What’s the solution?
Use a font you know is available in both Squarespace (for your website) and Canva (whose free plan allows you to create all sorts of graphics for social, print, and beyond)!
How Do You Find Fonts Available in Both Squarespace and Canva’s Free Plan?
Easy peasy — just keep reading.
Below, I’ve included screenshots of all 236 fonts available in both Squarespace and Canva’s free plan.
I’ve broken them down by style:
Serif Fonts
Sans-Serif Fonts
Display Fonts
Script Fonts
Serif Fonts Available in Squarespace & Canva Free
Serif fonts include little “hats” and “feet” (aka serifs) that decorate most letters.
Consider a serif font if you want to convey a feeling that tends to be classic, trustworthy, competent, and serious.
Sans-Serif Fonts Available in Squarespace & Canva Free
Sans-Serif fonts don’t use the serifs (those “hats” and “feet”) that a Serif font would.
Consider a Sans-Serif font if you want to convey a feeling that’s modern, friendly, clean, and approachable.
Display Fonts Available in Squarespace & Canva Free
Display fonts are often heavily stylized. This means they can add pop and personality to your visual design, but they can also be hard to read at small sizes.
Don’t feel like you have to include a Display font in your design — you don’t! But if you do use a Display font, use it sparingly and typically only for headings, which are larger and easier to read.
Script Fonts Available in Squarespace & Canva Free
Script fonts are designed to look like handwriting or calligraphy.
Like Display fonts, these can be harder to read so they should be used sparingly — like in a single word in a headline for emphasis, or as a decorative element that’s not critical to conveying your message through words.