Kannada Font Kama: Kathegalu
For years, Pavanaja carried the torch for Kannada. He wrote letters, attended global meetings, and argued for Kannada’s place in the digital universe. In 2001, Unicode accepted Kannada script block (U+0C80–U+0CFF). It was the wedding day. From then on, a Kannada font typed in Bengaluru could be read in Boston.
The most tragic is the story of – a font that could write dance and facial expressions. Developed for deaf and mute communities, it never gained popularity. It sits abandoned, like a lover waiting at a railway station that no train visits anymore. Kannada Font Kama Kathegalu
The government tried to ban its distribution, but like all forbidden romances, it only grew stronger. To this day, old copies of Azhagi Kannada survive on dusty hard drives, a testament to how fonts can become weapons of love and resistance. Today, we live in the age of polyamorous typography. Kannada fonts no longer belong to a single foundry or a single lover. They are free, open, and available to all. For years, Pavanaja carried the torch for Kannada