Font: Dvb-ttdhruv

Depending on the specific version available, DVB-TTDhruv often comes in multiple weights (Regular, Bold, etc.). This variety allows designers to create a clear hierarchy within their layouts, distinguishing headlines from subheadings and body copy seamlessly.

If you want to use it on a web page (e.g., for a simulated TV interface), convert it to WOFF2 first using FontForge or CloudConvert:

@font-face 
  font-family: 'Dvb-ttdhruv';
  src: url('Dvb-ttdhruv.woff2') format('woff2');
  font-weight: normal;
  font-style: normal;
.teletext 
  font-family: 'Dvb-ttdhruv', monospace;

“Dvb-ttdhruv” is not a mainstream retail font. It likely originates from a specific broadcast, academic, or personal design project. Further identification requires direct access to the font file or its creator. Dvb-ttdhruv Font



This report documents the font identified as “Dvb-ttdhruv”. Based on naming conventions, the font may be:

No widely known commercial font by this exact name has been found in standard font databases (Google Fonts, Adobe Fonts, MyFonts, etc.). “Dvb-ttdhruv” is not a mainstream retail font

Known DVB fonts include DVB‑Trm (Tiresias) and generic sans‑serifs. No public record of "Dvb‑ttdhruv" appears in ETSI documentation or open‑source teletext projects (e.g., VDR, TVHeadend).

The typeface tentatively identified as "Dvb-ttdhruv" has been cited in limited digital contexts, yet no formal documentation or specimen exists in major typographic registries. This paper examines the possible origins, encoding structure, and intended application of the font, hypothesizing that "Dvb" correlates with DVB‑TT (Digital Video Broadcasting – Terrestrial Television) subtitling or EPG character sets, while "dhruv" may indicate a designer or project codename. We conclude that, if real, Dvb‑ttdhruv likely serves a technical, non‑Latin script function, possibly for Devanagari or other Indic scripts. and intended application of the font

Because this is not a commercial retail font, you will not find it on Adobe Fonts, Google Fonts, or MyFonts. Instead, look in these niche locations: