It’s back to school time and what better way to demonstrate your finger on the pulse of trends than by using a chalk board-inspired Canva font in your posts?
Here are ten Canva fonts that will do the trick.
Six Hands Chalk
This font reminds me of my fifth-grade teacher, Mrs. Peters, who used a long chalk stick to hold her chalk. Here cursive writing was beautiful – something I never mastered.
More Sugar
Like a fat marker, this font makes a statement. It reminds me of the bubble fonts we used to use in the 80s. Yeah, I’m that old!
Bright Sunshine Cap
What an elegant all-caps font that is easy to read. This would be perfect for marketing headlines for brands with a fun personality.
Balmy
To me, this font almost looks like it was created with a chalkboard eraser. For those of you who’ve never experienced the joy of cleaning erasers, you’re lucky. It’s messy and when I was in school reserved for those who completed their work early…idle hands and all.
Just Another Hand
This elegant font looks like handwriting. It’s for a more casual look and feel for your marketing initiatives. It would make a great sub-header or body copy font.
Bryden Write
This handwriting-style font slants slightly to the left, which implies a right-handed writer. It’s casual, bold, and childlike, which makes it perfect for brands focused on children’s products or services.
Sigher
This font, with its broken edges looks like it’s been formed by a pen losing its ink. It’s casual, a little messy, and juvenile, which makes it great for elementary school promotions. Consider this font for headlines and subheadings.
Hibernate
This cursive font would be best used by middle and senior level education, and possibly into secondary education levels. It’s not a classic cursive with it broken style and gives a sense of casualness that feels personal. This would be good in headlines and subheadings as well.
Schoolbell
What’s a more perfect back-to-school font name than Schoolbell? It’s causal, fun, and screams, “You will write this on the board 100 times after school today.”
Purisa
This simple font with its clean lines and curvy letters is a casual font best used in body copy or subheadings. It appears to be a handwriting font that is done with a thin-line marker—notice the thick and thin lines.
Now that you’re prepared for your back-to-school with these marketing fonts, what will you create?
Which font is your favorite?