The project undertaken at Ek Type was an attempt to realise the nuances of type design in regional scripts. The project I worked on was to code and develop the Ek Gujarati font. Ek Gujarati is a humanist monolinear typeface that is part of the Ek multiscript family. I worked on the regular and extrabold weights of Ek Gujarati. Gujarati script is quite similar to Devanagari script, minus the shirorekha. It has a distant feature that differentiates it from other Indian scripts, and that is the 'vanak'. With its differences came different challenges in coding. During the course of my internship, I learned how to use the software and programmes needed to code and develop an open-type font. The tools used during this project were FontLab Studio 5.1, Adobe Font Development Kit (afdko), and MakeOTF. MakeOTF requires one to have certain text files apart from a ttf font to develop an open-type font. There are certain specific commands that make these codes work. These included substitution rules, glyph positioning rules, defining glyphs, kerning, contextual substitution, et al. We followed a specific way of naming the glyphs, which helped us maintain consistency in coding. This will also make life easier for anyone who works on this font later. After a lot of trial and error, some serious and some silly, the font was successfully generated. The final part of this was to test the font to see if it worked. And it did.