Laravel Webfonts allows you to easily download, install, and preload over 1500 Google fonts locally in your Laravel project.
- 🔍️ Search and install over 1500 Google fonts from the public google-webfonts-helper API.
- ⚡️ Automatically generate
@font-face
CSSat-rules
when installing fonts using CLI. - 🧑💻 Supports Vite and Bud out of the box with zero configuration.
- ⚡️ Provides an easy-to-use
@preloadFonts
Blade directive to preload fonts found in the Vite/Bud manifest. - 🚀 Automatically injects font preload markup into
wp_head
on WordPress sites running Acorn.
Install via Composer:
$ composer require log1x/laravel-webfonts
If you already have fonts locally installed in your project, skip to Preloading Fonts.
Laravel Webfonts provides a very easy way to install new webfonts to your project using command line:
artisan webfonts:add
By default, installing a font will trigger the following things to happen:
- Download the font archive to a temporary directory in local storage.
- Extract the font archive.
- Move downloaded fonts to
resources/fonts
. - Clean up the temporary directory.
- Generate and prepend
@font-face
at-rules to afonts
stylesheet.
The fonts stylesheet will reside at the root of your stylesheet directory located in resources/
. If the font stylesheet does not already exist, it will be created using the most common stylesheet extension (css, scss, ...) found among your styles.
By default, the resources/css
and resources/styles
directories are automatically scanned for existing files to find the appropriate place to write the fonts stylesheet.
The generated @font-face
at-rules will look like this:
@font-face {
font-display: swap;
font-family: 'Roboto';
font-style: normal;
font-weight: 400;
src: url('../fonts/roboto-v30-latin-regular.woff2') format('woff2');
}
@font-face {
font-display: swap;
font-family: 'Roboto';
font-style: italic;
font-weight: 400;
src: url('../fonts/roboto-v30-latin-italic.woff2') format('woff2');
}
Adding additional fonts will cause them to be prepended to the existing fonts
stylesheet.
When fonts are installed for the first time, a fonts
stylesheet is created in your project's stylesheet folder. In a vanilla Laravel project, this is typically resources/css/fonts.css
.
You must import the generated fonts
file into your project's primary stylesheet (e.g. app.css
). If you're using Tailwind, it would look something like:
@import 'fonts';
@tailwind base;
@tailwind components;
@tailwind utilities;
Note
If you are using WordPress alongside Acorn, you can ignore this section as preloading is automatically handled for you inside of wp_head
if an asset manifest containing valid fonts is detected.
Laravel Webfonts primary functionality while in production is to provide a simple way to preload your locally hosted webfonts.
This is done by reading the compiled woff2
fonts from your Vite or Bud manifest and generating the appropriate markup for you to place inside of <head>
.
In most cases, you can simply use the @preloadFonts
Blade directive to handle building and echoing the font preload HTML markup.
Alternatively to the Blade directive, you can access the PreloadFonts
class directly using the Webfonts
Facade:
use Log1x\LaravelWebfonts\Facades\Webfonts;
// Retrieve an array of compiled font paths.
$fonts = Webfonts::fonts();
// Build the font preload HTML markup.
$html = Webfonts::preload()->build();
If you discover a bug in Laravel Webfonts, please open an issue.
Contributing whether it be through PRs, reporting an issue, or suggesting an idea is encouraged and appreciated.
Laravel Webfonts is provided under the MIT License.