8 fonts that let your portfolio shine — with live previews and pairing recommendations.
MAK
Muhammad Afsar KhanFounder, FontPreview
May 30, 2026
12 min read
Font Recommendations
Your photos are the stars. Your font should be the stage — invisible when done right, unforgettable when done wrong. After reviewing hundreds of photographer portfolios, I've learned that the best typography disappears, letting the images speak.
Photography Website Font Examples — screenshot from FontPreview.online
Try It Live — Type Your Studio Name
See how each font looks with your actual studio name before reading further.
Lumen Photography
Fine Art & Wedding · Est. 2015
1. Why Font Choice Matters More for Photographers Than You Think
Photographers sell vision, emotion, and storytelling. But here's what most photographers don't realize: the font on your website is the first clue about your price point and style. A potential bride deciding between a $3,000 wedding photographer and a $6,000 one often makes that judgment based on feel — and typography is a huge part of that feel.
I've worked with wedding, portrait, and commercial photographers on their branding. The ones who charge premium rates almost always use refined, restrained typography. The ones who struggle to attract ideal clients often use fonts that compete with their images. Your photos should do the heavy lifting. Your font should quietly support them.
The 3-second rule: Visitors decide if your photography looks "luxury" or "budget" within seconds of landing on your site. If your font is too playful, too heavy, or hard to read, they'll subconsciously lower their perception of your work.
2. What Makes a Good Photography Font — 4 Non-Negotiables
🖼️
Non-Intrusive
Lets images lead, doesn't compete
👁️
Legibility
Readable on phones, at a glance
✨
Elegance
Matches your photography style
📱
Mobile First
Most portfolio browsing is on phones
3. The 8 Best Google Fonts for Photography Websites
1
Montserrat
Geometric Sans · Sans-Serif
Lumen Photography
ModernCleanBoldTrustworthy
Best for: Commercial, portrait, and modern wedding photographers. Montserrat is confident without being aggressive — it says "professional" without shouting. The geometric shapes feel contemporary and reliable.
Best for: Editorial, documentary, and minimalist photographers. Inter is the ultimate invisible font — it gets out of the way completely. Perfect when you want your images to be the only thing people remember.
Best for: Wedding, engagement, and luxury portrait photographers. Playfair Display adds instant romance and sophistication. Use it sparingly — for the studio name, hero headings, or watermark-style text.
Best for: Family, newborn, and lifestyle photographers. Lato feels warm and trustworthy without being casual. It's excellent for about pages and pricing guides where you want clients to feel comfortable.
Best for: Fine art, editorial, and gallery-represented photographers. Cormorant Garamond carries centuries of artistic association — it whispers "I take this seriously." Beautiful for artist statements and collection titles.
Best for: Newborn, maternity, and children's photographers. Quicksand's rounded letters feel soft, safe, and gentle — perfect for brands centered on family and tenderness.
Best for: Fashion, editorial, and urban photographers. Raleway has a refined, almost delicate quality. The thin weight is beautiful for hero text, but use semi-bold for body copy.
Best for: Versatile photographers who shoot multiple genres. Work Sans balances Montserrat's boldness with Lato's warmth — an excellent all-rounder for portfolios that mix weddings, portraits, and commercial work.
Editorial · Commercial · Portraiture. Based in New York, available worldwide.
Headings & Body: Inter 700/400 · Best for: Editorial, commercial, documentary
5. Common Font Mistakes Photographers Make
❌ Mistake 1 — Using Decorative Scripts for Everything
Pacifico and Satisfy are beautiful for logos. They become unreadable after two sentences. Use scripts only for your studio name — never for body text, navigation, or pricing.
❌ Mistake 2 — Fonts That Compete With Photos
Ultra-bold, highly decorative, or unusual fonts draw attention away from your images. Your font should be almost boring — let your photography be the interesting part.
❌ Mistake 3 — Tiny Body Text on Mobile
Most portfolio browsing happens on phones. If your about page or pricing is 13px, clients will leave. Use 16px minimum.
Photography Font Checklist
Studio name font — elegant serif or clean sans
Body text — 16px minimum, high legibility
Mobile test — read all text on a phone without zooming
Fonts don't compete — typography recedes, photos lead
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best Google Font for wedding photographers?
Playfair Display for the studio name/logo paired with Lato or Montserrat for body text. This combination feels romantic and professional without being fussy.
Can I use Google Fonts for commercial photography websites for free?
Yes. All Google Fonts are open-source (SIL OFL) and permit unlimited commercial use on client websites, portfolios, and digital galleries.
What font size should a photography website use?
Body text: 16-18px. Navigation: 14-16px. Studio name: 24-36px depending on placement. Always test on mobile before publishing.
Founder of FontPreview.online — building free typography tools. Created this guide after helping a wedding photographer rebrand and watching her inquiries double.