The typeface on newyorker.com is Adobe Caslon, Graphik and Graphik Web, loaded across 32 @font-face declarations. Every font family, weight and source on this page is read straight from the live CSS — no image guessing, no machine learning, just the rules the browser used.
Primary font
Adobe Caslon
Total weights
5
@font-face
32
Source
Custom web font
Adobe Caslon
Custom web font
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Weights loaded (1)
400Typography sets the voice of a brand
CSS to use Adobe Caslon
font-family: 'Adobe Caslon', Georgia, 'Times New Roman', serif;
Get Font Info inspected the homepage of newyorker.com and parsed 0 stylesheets totalling 0 KB. Inside those stylesheets we found 32 @font-face declarations — the rules a browser uses to download and register a custom typeface. The primary typefaces are served from custom web font, and 2 CSS rules reference them across the page.
Check the font on a specific element
Open the live inspector and hover any text on newyorker.com to see the exact font, weight, size and line-height for that element.
newyorker.com uses Adobe Caslon, Graphik and Graphik Web as its primary typefaces. These fonts are loaded from a self-hosted webfont and applied across 2 CSS rules on the homepage.
Where does newyorker.com load its fonts from?
newyorker.com loads its fonts from a self-hosted webfont. Get Font Info detected 32 @font-face declarations across 0 stylesheets on the live page.
What weights of Adobe Caslon does newyorker.com use?
newyorker.com loads Adobe Caslon in 5 weights: 400, 500, 600, 700, bold. If you want to match the look, request the same weights from your font host so you only ship what's actually used.
Can I use the same font as newyorker.com on my website?
Yes — once you know the font name, you can load it from the same source. If Adobe Caslon isn't a fit (licensing, weight selection, look-and-feel), close alternatives include Lora, Source Serif 4 and Merriweather. Use the CSS snippet on this page as a starting point.
Is the font on newyorker.com free to use?
These fonts are self-hosted webfonts. They may be licensed commercially from a type foundry, custom-made for the brand, or freely available — you would need to identify the typeface and check its license at the foundry.
See fonts used by other sites
Compare the typography on newyorker.com with how other well-known sites load and use their fonts.
This page lists the fonts loaded by the homepage of newyorker.com. Get Font Info reads the live CSS — every @font-face rule, every font-family declaration — so you see the exact fonts the browser used, not an image-based guess.