Finding the typeface you need is a whole thing. You’ll know it when you see it is one approach. Look at a lot of choices. Make sure to save ones that you think are really nice, even if they aren’t the winner this time. On my local machine, I use an app called Typeface . I try to tag stuff in categories that make sense to me. I have a good amount of nice stuff in there, but still, when looking for a web project, it’s limiting, because I don’t have local versions of all the typefaces that would be good candidates for a web project. All of Google Fonts, for instance, I have no interest in keeping local copies of. And it’s extremely cost-prohibitive to buy every great font I see available for purchase. I find it interesting to look at ways to explore typefaces in novel ways. For instance, font.fish has a way to explore them in a big scrollable grid. As you explore clusters and axises, you can see how the groupings work and perhaps find what you need by virtue of similarity and variation in what you need.…