British Design | Performance Loudspeakers | Experts Since 1972
Robert Barford - CEO of Monitor Audio Group
This summer’s football promises unforgettable moments, and with our Bronze Series 7G 5.1 AV system, you can experience every chant, every tackle and every goal like never before.
Welcome to the Monitor Audio Group Experience Centre — a 6,000 sq. ft. destination designed to educate, inspire, and collaborate, bringing over 50 years of engineering expertise to life. As an independently-owned British brand, we design and engineer every product with complete creative freedom, delivering sound exactly as the artist intended, and this immersive space offers a unique window into our craftsmanship and performance-led philosophy. Featuring three state-of-the-art listening environments, the centre creates powerful connections to music and film, while the Sound Performance Academy at its core empowers partners with the knowledge and confidence to deliver exceptional audio experiences.
The Elevate Sound Performance Academy is our commitment to raising standards across our global partner network, empowering retailers, integrators, and distributors to deliver a premium Monitor Audio experience at every touchpoint. Built on three core pillars — Training, Design Services, and Technical Support — Elevate equips teams with the knowledge, tools, and expert guidance needed to work smarter, deliver optimised system designs, and ensure every installation achieves outstanding performance with confidence and efficiency.
The new Creator Series C2L-A angled in-ceiling speaker is engineered to deliver precise, highly directive sound exactly where it’s needed.
From refined stereo and AV systems to integrated audio solutions and amplification, discover high-fidelity systems that deliver exceptional performance at every level.
Experience the stories behind the sound. From groundbreaking product innovation to immersive listening experiences, expert reviews, and more. Discover how our passion for high-fidelity audio shapes every moment.
At Monitor Audio we stand behind our products, we work closely with our partners, and we challenge customers considering a premium audio purchase to think again, to find out more and Listen Again.
It’s not an empty promise.
Our brands and products will do the talking.
You can find comprehensive symbol glossaries with descriptions in documents provided by manufacturers like the Cardinal Health Symbols Glossary OriGen Biomedical Symbol Glossary Third-Party Resource Collections: Sites like
If acquiring the official MDD EN9080-2008 font is challenging, consider these alternatives:
The factory icon with a clock or specific date layout. Use-by Date: The hourglass icon. Batch Code / Lot Number: The "LOT" icon. Catalogue Number: The "REF" icon.
Which of the ISO 15223-1 standard you need to target (e.g., 2016 or 2021)
The standard provides a globally recognized set of graphical symbols used for medical device labeling, packaging, and accompanying documentation. Under the EU Medical Device Regulation (MDR) and In Vitro Diagnostic Regulation (IVDR), using these symbols is often required to ensure safety information is understood regardless of language.
By moving beyond legacy fonts and embracing the official, up-to-date symbols, manufacturers can create clear, safe, and globally compliant labeling that meets the high standards of the modern regulatory era. The transition from the MDD to the MDR is well underway; your labeling should reflect this new reality.
Many professional labeling software suites (such as BarTender, NiceLabel, or Loftware) come pre-packaged with verified, legally compliant medical device symbol libraries built directly into their systems. These libraries automatically update when new regulatory revisions are published. 3. Creating an In-House Font Vector Vault
Ensures labels meet the stringent requirements of EU MDR 2017/745 and IVDR 2017/746.
By following these guidelines and recommendations, you can ensure that your medical device labels comply with regulatory requirements and are clear, readable, and effective.
Essential Guide to ISO 15223-1 Medical Device Symbols Navigating medical device labeling requires strict adherence to international standards to ensure patient safety and regulatory compliance. The primary standard for these graphics is ISO 15223-1
Some developers have created open-source fonts containing medical device symbols, available on platforms like GitHub or public font libraries.
You may need to place specific symbols (like the "Consult Instructions for Use" or the "Single Sterile Barrier System" icon) onto your labels or Instructions for Use (IFU). A quick search suggests a dedicated "font" exists for this standard.
Once you have legally obtained the official font or symbol files, here are the key steps for their proper use:
They usually come with validation documentation and clear character maps. 3. Open-Source and Freeware Repositories
While the official MDD-EN9080-2008 font is not freely available for commercial use without standards purchase, several free medical symbol fonts exist with varying licensing terms:
Since these are copyrighted standards, "downloading" them as a free font is not the official process. However, you can access the icons through several reputable channels:
Font formats like TrueType (TTF) and OpenType (OTF) are vector-based. This means the symbols can be scaled infinitely up for large shipping cartons or down for tiny ampoule labels without losing sharpness, pixelating, or blurring. 2. Layout Efficiency
You can find comprehensive symbol glossaries with descriptions in documents provided by manufacturers like the Cardinal Health Symbols Glossary OriGen Biomedical Symbol Glossary Third-Party Resource Collections: Sites like
If acquiring the official MDD EN9080-2008 font is challenging, consider these alternatives:
The factory icon with a clock or specific date layout. Use-by Date: The hourglass icon. Batch Code / Lot Number: The "LOT" icon. Catalogue Number: The "REF" icon.
Which of the ISO 15223-1 standard you need to target (e.g., 2016 or 2021)
The standard provides a globally recognized set of graphical symbols used for medical device labeling, packaging, and accompanying documentation. Under the EU Medical Device Regulation (MDR) and In Vitro Diagnostic Regulation (IVDR), using these symbols is often required to ensure safety information is understood regardless of language.
By moving beyond legacy fonts and embracing the official, up-to-date symbols, manufacturers can create clear, safe, and globally compliant labeling that meets the high standards of the modern regulatory era. The transition from the MDD to the MDR is well underway; your labeling should reflect this new reality.
Many professional labeling software suites (such as BarTender, NiceLabel, or Loftware) come pre-packaged with verified, legally compliant medical device symbol libraries built directly into their systems. These libraries automatically update when new regulatory revisions are published. 3. Creating an In-House Font Vector Vault
Ensures labels meet the stringent requirements of EU MDR 2017/745 and IVDR 2017/746.
By following these guidelines and recommendations, you can ensure that your medical device labels comply with regulatory requirements and are clear, readable, and effective.
Essential Guide to ISO 15223-1 Medical Device Symbols Navigating medical device labeling requires strict adherence to international standards to ensure patient safety and regulatory compliance. The primary standard for these graphics is ISO 15223-1
Some developers have created open-source fonts containing medical device symbols, available on platforms like GitHub or public font libraries.
You may need to place specific symbols (like the "Consult Instructions for Use" or the "Single Sterile Barrier System" icon) onto your labels or Instructions for Use (IFU). A quick search suggests a dedicated "font" exists for this standard.
Once you have legally obtained the official font or symbol files, here are the key steps for their proper use:
They usually come with validation documentation and clear character maps. 3. Open-Source and Freeware Repositories
While the official MDD-EN9080-2008 font is not freely available for commercial use without standards purchase, several free medical symbol fonts exist with varying licensing terms:
Since these are copyrighted standards, "downloading" them as a free font is not the official process. However, you can access the icons through several reputable channels:
Font formats like TrueType (TTF) and OpenType (OTF) are vector-based. This means the symbols can be scaled infinitely up for large shipping cartons or down for tiny ampoule labels without losing sharpness, pixelating, or blurring. 2. Layout Efficiency