![Star Trek Logo](https://hipfonts.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Star-Trek-Logo.jpg)
FREE Star Trek Fonts To Take Your Designs To The Next Level and Beyond
NBC aired the first voyages of the starship USS Enterprise on September 8, 1966. Its mission was ‘to explore strange new worlds, seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before’. Who could forget the adventures of Commander Spock and Captain James T. Kirk? Certainly, they have made their mark not only in 60s pop culture, but also in modern sci-fi circles.
About the Enterprise
The Star Trek exploration has gone beyond the original TV series. The adventures continued in the 22-episode Star Trek: The Animated Series. Its return to being a television series was marked by three sequels: Star Trek, The Next Generation (1987), Deep Space Nine (1993), and Voyager (1995-2001). The prequel Enterprise (2001) was made set in the early days of human interstellar travel. Alternate timelines and spin-offs were created in the following years.
Star Trek has become a cult phenomenon since. The franchise has expanded towards media such as games, toys, novels, comics, and video games. Its multiple races, with their own languages and unique cultures, have been welcomed by non-fans and have been put in highest regard by followers of the series.
For Trekkies out there, you can learn more about the beloved Star Trek typography from the Font Shop. Check out Font Memes for the various fonts used in the TV series, such as Final Frontier Old Style by Allen R. Walden (as seen in the Original Series from 1966 to 1969), Starnext (The Next Generation 1987-1994), and the Enterprise Font (Enterprise 2001-2005).
For fan-created material, head on over to Star Trek Minutiae, a personal Star Trek site developed and maintained by Dan Carlson. If you simply want to re-create the famous logo, use the Star Series font from Famous Fonts.
Sci-fi Star Trek Fonts
For fan-created material, head on over to Star Trek Minutiae, a personal Star Trek site developed and maintained by Dan Carlson. If you simply want to re-create the famous logo, use the Star Series font from Famous Fonts.