Choose the Right Font for Custom Awards and Engraving
How Font Advice Is Reviewed
- Font recommendations are checked against item size, material, engraving method, logo files, amount of text, and viewing distance.
- Small plates, name tags, industrial labels, and long inscriptions usually need simpler lettering than large plaques or presentation awards.
- Send draft wording and artwork before approval if you need help choosing a readable font.
The right font is not only a style choice. It affects readability, tone, material fit and how polished the finished award, plaque, trophy plate, name plate, gift or industrial label will feel.
Aran Awards & Engraving helps customers in Hamilton and Southern Ontario match wording, logos, materials and occasions to fonts that engrave cleanly and read well in real use.

Aran’s Standard Font Starting Points
If you want a reliable Aran starting point, begin with Cataneo BT or BakerSignet BT. These two standard fonts cover many award, plaque and name-focused layouts before moving into more specialized font options.
- BakerSignet BT: a clean, traditional serif-style choice for formal headings, recipient names, plaques and recognition awards.
- Cataneo BT: a more expressive classic style for names, headings and ceremonial pieces with enough engraving space.
- For longer inscriptions: use one standard font for the title or recipient name, then pair it with a simpler serif or sans-serif for supporting text.

Real Examples Of Fonts In Use
These public Google Business photos show how lettering choices look on finished Aran projects. Use them as practical examples of style, contrast and spacing, not as verified typeface matches.
Name Tags And Office Nameplates
Small name plates and desk signs need open, simple lettering so names and roles stay readable at a glance.



Plaques And Recognition Awards
Formal plaques can use more traditional lettering, but the title, recipient name and supporting text still need a clear hierarchy.



Script On Glass And Wood
Script-style lettering works best as an accent for short names, initials and personal phrases.



Industrial Tags And Lamacoids
Industrial labels need straightforward lettering, strong contrast and practical spacing before decorative style.



If You Are Not Sure, Start Here
- For prestige: start with a serif font for formal plaques, lifetime achievement awards and traditional recognition.
- For readability: use a clean sans-serif for small plates, long text, room signs, badges and industrial labels.
- For personality: use script for a recipient name or short phrase, then keep supporting text simpler.
- For impact: use decorative or display fonts only for short headings, team names or event words.
The Same Words Can Feel Very Different
A font can make the same inscription feel formal, modern, personal or energetic. Before production, check the whole message, not just the recipient name.
Practical rule: if the engraving has several lines, choose one font for the main heading and one readable font for the body text. Too many styles can make a premium item look busy.

Font Styles We Use Most Often
Serif Fonts
Best for formal awards, commemorative plaques, board recognition and lifetime achievement pieces. Serif fonts carry a traditional, established tone.
Sans-Serif Fonts
Best for clean corporate awards, name plates, office signage, small tags and long inscriptions. They are usually the safest readability choice.
Script Fonts
Best for names, signatures and short personal messages. Use script sparingly so the engraving stays readable.
Decorative And Display Fonts
Best for sports awards, short event headings and themed gifts. Avoid them for long wording or small plates.
Common Font Examples At Aran
These examples come from Aran’s current font lists. The best choice still depends on the product, material, logo, wording length and engraving size.
- Common serif examples: BakerSignet BT, Book Antiqua, Bookman Old Style, Calisto MT, Cambria, Cataneo BT, Garamond, Georgia, Lucida and Times New Roman.
- Common sans-serif examples: Arial, Avenir, Bahnschrift, Century Gothic, Futura Bk BT, Gill Sans MT, Hurson, Louis George Cafe, Univers and Verdana.
- Common script and handwritten examples: Alex Brush, Autography, Bradley Hand, Brush Script MT, Dulcelin, Freestyle Script, Great Vibes, Jenna Sue, Michella Garden, Sign Painter House Script, Sunkissed, Welcome and Winter in March.
- Common decorative and display examples: Bauhaus 93, Bernard MT Condensed, Bodoni Bd BT, Britannic Bold, Broadway, Collegiate Black, Cooper Black, Copperplate Gothic, Engravers Gothic, Ghailsa, Gill Sans UltraBold, Impact and Stencil.
Small Engraving Needs Readability First
Name plates, badges, trophy plates, lamacoids and compact gift items have less space. Thin strokes, tight scripts and complex display fonts can lose detail once reduced.
For small engraving, send the exact wording before production. The best layout depends on names, titles, logo size and line breaks.

Best Font Choices By Project Type
| Use case | Recommended style | Why it works | Avoid | Best fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Aran starting point | Cataneo BT or BakerSignet BT | A reliable first choice when you want Aran’s standard engraving look. | Using Cataneo BT for long or very small text where a simpler font will read better. | Plaques, awards, name-focused layouts and formal recognition. |
| Corporate awards | Serif or clean sans-serif | Looks professional and keeps names, dates and titles easy to read. | Overly decorative fonts for long recognition text. | Crystal, acrylic, glass, metal and plaques. |
| Sports trophies and medals | Bold sans-serif or display heading with readable details | Creates energy while preserving team, division and date details. | Script for small medal text or long event names. | Trophy plates, medals, ribbons and team awards. |
| Plaques | Serif heading plus readable body text | Gives a formal tone and supports longer inscriptions. | Using one script font for every line. | Wood, acrylic, metal and presentation plaques. |
| Name tags and name plates | Sans-serif or simple serif | Names and roles stay readable at a glance. | Thin, condensed or highly decorative lettering. | Metal, plastic, magnetic badges and desk plates. |
| Gifts and personal engraving | Script accent with readable support text | Adds warmth without sacrificing clarity. | Very small scripts on curved or reflective items. | Tumblers, boards, glassware, keepsakes and gifts. |
| Industrial labels and lamacoids | Simple sans-serif | Prioritizes quick reading, consistency and practical identification. | Decorative fonts, all-script labels or low-contrast layouts. | Lamacoid labels, tags, panels and equipment plates. |
Match The Font To The Material
Metal, wood, acrylic, glass, crystal and lamacoid surfaces all handle contrast and detail differently. A font that looks strong on a large plaque may not be the best choice on a small curved gift item.
When you request a quote, include the product type, wording, logo, preferred material and deadline. That gives the team enough context to recommend a font that works in production.

Use Script As An Accent
Script fonts can make an award feel personal, especially when they highlight the recipient name. For the rest of the inscription, a serif or sans-serif font usually gives better readability.
This is especially important for plaques, sports plates, name tags, industrial labels and any item with several lines of text.

Font Sample Guide
Use these guide visuals as a starting point. The final recommendation should still consider the exact wording, product size, logo, material and how the item will be viewed.

Font Help By Product
- Plaques: for plaques, start with formal readability. See custom plaque guidance.
- Name tags and name plates: for names, titles and desk plates, clarity matters first. See custom name tags and name plates.
- Corporate awards: for formal recognition, match the font to the brand and award material. See corporate awards.
- Sports awards: for tournaments and teams, keep plates readable while giving headings energy. See sports trophies and medals.
- Industrial labels: for lamacoids and equipment plates, use clear practical lettering. See industrial tags and lamacoids.
- Equipment and process: for material and production questions, see Aran’s in-house engraving and printing equipment.
Font Selection FAQ
What are Aran’s standard fonts?
The standard starting points are Cataneo BT and BakerSignet BT. BakerSignet BT is the safer traditional default for formal recognition. Cataneo BT is more expressive and is strongest for headings or names where there is enough space.
What is the safest engraving font if I am unsure?
A clean serif or sans-serif is usually the safest starting point. It depends on the product, but readability should come before decoration.
Can I use a script font on an award?
Yes. Script works best for a recipient name, signature or short phrase. For long text, pair it with a readable serif or sans-serif.
What font works best on small trophy plates?
Small trophy plates usually need open, simple lettering. Avoid very thin strokes, tight scripts and complex display fonts.
Can Aran match our company font?
Send the font name or brand artwork with your quote request. The team can review whether it is suitable for the material and engraving size.
Does the material affect font choice?
Yes. Metal, wood, acrylic, glass and lamacoid surfaces each handle contrast and fine detail differently.
What should I send for a font recommendation?
Send the product type, inscription, logo, material, quantity, deadline and any style preference. Exact wording helps the team check line breaks and spacing.
Need Help Choosing A Font?
Send Aran Awards your wording and project details. The team can help choose a font that fits the product, material and occasion.
- Product type
- Exact inscription text
- Logo or artwork
- Preferred style or font name, if known
- Material or product choice
- Quantity and deadline
- Pickup or delivery needs
- Any previous sample to match
