Bhasha Bharti Font Site
Unicode fonts fail miserably in cheap DTP software (like old CorelDRAW, PageMaker, or low-end laser printers).
| Pros | Cons | | :--- | :--- | | High Visibility: Bold design makes text pop. | Visual Fatigue: Too heavy for long-form body text. | | Traditional Look: Authentic "Indian publishing" aesthetic. | Legacy Issues: Some older versions use non-standard mapping, making copy-pasting difficult without a converter. | | Stability: Very reliable for printing. | Lack of Styles: Often lacks a "Light" or "Condensed" variant, limiting design flexibility. | | Multi-language: Good support for Devanagari script variants. | Dated Feel: Looks slightly old-fashioned compared to modern fonts like Noto Sans Devanagari. | bhasha bharti font
NCERT (National Council of Educational Research and Training) and various State Boards have used Bhasha Bharti for school textbooks. The font's adherence to standard character shapes ensures children learn the correct orthography. Unicode fonts fail miserably in cheap DTP software
Bhasha Bharti was developed by CDAC, a government society under the Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology (MeitY), India. CDAC has since moved to Unicode fonts (e
CDAC has since moved to Unicode fonts (e.g., Bharati series), but Bhasha Bharti remains available as legacy software.