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  1. Adobe Song by Adobe, $29.00
  2. Adobe Fan Heiti by Adobe, $29.00
  3. R and R - Unknown license
  4. Fong Shay Noon JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Fong Shay Noon JNL is a non-traditional approach to an Oriental-styled font as there are some letter forms with curves and others with straight lines. The name derives from a Chinese restaurant in North Miami Beach, Florida during the 1960s, which in turn took its name from a play on a Yiddish phrase.
  5. Kerberos Fang - Personal use only
  6. Ab Fangs - Unknown license
  7. Kerberos Fang by Hanoded, $15.00
    A creepy, blood-splattered horror font, made entirely with brushes and ink. Ideal for websites and halloween.
  8. Country Fang by Baseline Fonts, $39.00
    Brian Miller is a graphic designer who loves hillbilly culture, which is what inspired his popular phrase, 'country fangs!'--used to describe anyone with teeth that - well - just don't quite line up right. Git Cletus an' Jimmy Ray an' we'll hold down a piggy an' make 'er SQUEAL!!!!!--be sure t' put yer teeths in, too! Country Fang includes multiple grit patterns and appropriate "teeth" icons to spiff up any layout on the fly.
  9. Dragon Fang by astroluxtype, $20.00
    Dragon Fang is a headline display font set. The style suggests Medieval font forms but in a contemporary sense. The font contains uppercase and lowercase letterforms which include a few alternate characters. Look for the swash “B” and “D” to give your design project a special look. Influenced by everything from Rick Griffin and Linotext to tribal tattoo art this font will bring a contemporary edge to your design project. Fantasy book cover art, album covers, even that horror movie will find many uses for astroluxtype’s Dragon Fang.
  10. Fangs ALot by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    FangsALot is a bizarre typeface family that was designed to alternate two character sets. These sets are alternated automatically in applications that support the OpenType feature Contextual Alternatives (calt). The template used to design characters is a distorted triangle that resembles a curved tooth or a fang. This shape can be flipped horizontally, vertically, and both horizontally and vertically to give four orientations. Two of these orientations are used in the regular style and two in what is called the italic style. I thought the fang motif did not come through clearly in the regular and italic styles. Rather the impression they give is more like graffiti lettering. To emphasize the fang motif I added two more members to the family by filling fang outlines with unadorned sans-serif characters. Then to allow more color in lettering, I added two more styles with letters on black. I then had six styles based on triangles skewed left and right. Why not fill the family out with three more styles based on an isosceles triangle? The end result is a family of nine. All members of the family are monospaced and are hard to read. The three graffiti-like styles have some alternative letters that can be accessed with the OpenType feature Stylistic Sets. Also, for each style it is possible to use only one set of characters by adding a space after each letter and then adjusting the character spacing. The graffiti-like styles can be useful in situations where the hard-to-read property is not important but where a menacing and vicious touch is needed, such as topics of sharks, teeth, biting, and vampires.
  11. ZANG - Unknown license
  12. Mang by MADType, $21.00
    Mang is an 11 point (or 22 pt or 44 pt etc.) bitmap font that was originally designed for a poetry piece in Born Magazine. It is slightly quirky but works well as a text face. You can use it for screen resolution or print designs as it includes outlines.
  13. Ganges by ROHH, $40.00
    Ganges is a condensed sans serif typeface inspired by Central European advertising typography from late XIX century. The font has condensed proportions and original letter shapes. Ganges is designed mainly for editorial design, especially for display use, as well as short paragraphs of text. Its narrow proportion makes it very practical to use for posters and magazine covers. Characteristic letter forms fit great for branding, logo and packaging design. It is also a very interesting choice for websites and e-book headlines. Ganges family consist of 27 fonts - 9 weights, 9 italics and 9 obliques. It supports extended set of latin languages, as well as broad number of OpenType features, such as case sensitive forms, standard and dicretionary ligatures, stylistic alternates, contextual alternates, lining, oldstyle and tabular figures, slashed zero, fractions, superscript and subscript, ordinals, currencies and symbols.
  14. Janges by Supfonts, $18.00
    This handwritten script has been attentively written, with gentle curves to produce a font thats completely distinctive and original. Perfect for adding a elegant and unique touch to your lettering projects and branding Also with their help, you can create a Wedding lettering or beautiful frame for your home. Or just use for your small business, book covers, stationery, marketing, magazines and more. --- TTF & OTF versions are available. A lot of Swashes Multilingual Support I hope you have oodles of fun using Janges script! Dmitriy --- Check out my blog: instagram.com/media.lab.co pinterest.com/dmitriychirkov7
  15. Yang by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    Yang is a new Sans typeface that has a little bit of Ying in it. This combination makes it a very versatile font. Just give it a try and you will see. Yours working on the "Ying", Gert Wiescher
  16. Gang by Ani Dimitrova, $39.00
    Gang is a 2 - style display font family designed by Ani Dimitrova. Both weights contain a set of extended Latin and Cyrillic, as well as all sorts of open type features: standard ligatures, proportional figures, numerals, arrows, matching currency symbols, and fractions. In both styles, the font is well-suited for large headlines, word emphasis, and different types of advertising. The fonts' wide proportions make them a perfect choice for screen usage. This style palette offers a flexible range for display typography. The Gang type family is ideally suited for magazines, branding, posters, as well as web and screen design, and more.
  17. Fango by Typo5, $16.95
    A heavy one. For major impact use it only in caps, however typing randomly upper and lower case has interesting results too. Play with it please.
  18. Range by Device, $29.00
  19. Bang by ITC, $29.00
    Bang was designed by David Sagorski in 1993 as a playful font of spirals. It consists of two capital alphabets which can be combined like the usual capitals and small caps, although both have the same height. They differ from one another only in the decorative forms which adorn them and the highly decorated characters of one set are complemented by the slightly more reserved characters of the second. Serious this font is not, rather, with its circles and spirals, Bang is best in point sizes 12 and larger and is meant for short texts and headlines.
  20. Tang by Suomi, $19.00
    The Tang family came to be, when I started studying fonts made for use in very small point sizes, like Bell Gothic. I studied the use of ink traps and went to town with them. Instead of just using them for their purpose: trapping ink to prevent the type getting blotted; I used them as a design feature. With those features Tang works very well in both headline and text use. I use it as a house type, and I've already seen it in a beer and cider labels.
  21. Adobe Thai by Adobe, $29.00
  22. Adobe Tamil by Adobe, $29.00
  23. Adobe Arabic by Adobe, $29.00
  24. Adobe Myungjo by Adobe, $29.00
  25. Adobe Gothic by Adobe, $29.00
  26. Adobe Text by Adobe, $35.00
  27. Adobe Heiti by Adobe, $29.00
  28. Adobe Garamond by Adobe, $35.00
  29. Adobe Gurmukhi by Adobe, $29.00
  30. Adobe Gujarati by Adobe, $29.00
  31. Adobe Kaiti by Adobe, $29.00
  32. Adobe Fangsong by Adobe, $29.00
  33. Adobe Telugu by Adobe, $29.00
  34. Adobe Bengali by Adobe, $29.00
    The Adobe Bengali typeface was designed by Neelakash Kshetrimayum, with Bengali script expert Fiona Ross consulting on the design. This type family was designed to harmonize with Adobe?s other Brahmic fonts, both in terms of apparent size and style, to ensure that this suite of typefaces families can be typeset together as a system. The primary intended usage ? for printed outputs, particularly continuous text settings ? guided the design direction.
  35. Adobe Caslon by Adobe, $35.00
    The Englishman William Caslon punchcut many roman, italic, and non-Latin typefaces from 1720 until his death in 1766. At that time most types were being imported to England from Dutch sources, so Caslon was influenced by the characteristics of Dutch types. He did, however, achieve a level of craft that enabled his recognition as the first great English punchcutter. Caslon's roman became so popular that it was known as the script of kings, although on the other side of the political spectrum (and the ocean), the Americans used it for their Declaration of Independence in 1776. The original Caslon specimen sheets and punches have long provided a fertile source for the range of types bearing his name. Identifying characteristics of most Caslons include a cap A with a scooped-out apex; a cap C with two full serifs; and in the italic, a swashed lowercase v and w. Caslon's types have achieved legendary status among printers and typographers, and are considered safe, solid, and dependable. Carol Twombly designed this Caslon revival for Adobe in 1990, after studying Caslon's own specimen sheets from the mid-eighteenth century. This elegant version is quite true to the source, and has been optimized for the demands of digital design and printing. Adobe Caslon? makes an excellent text font and includes just about everything needed by the discriminating typographer: small caps, Old style Figures, swash letters, alternates, ligatures, expert characters, central European characters, and a plethora of period ornaments.
  36. Adobe Handwriting by Adobe, $29.00
    A trio of fonts based on the handwriting of some of Adobe?s own designers. The three eponymous styles of the family ? Ernie, Frank, and Tiffany ? each have a unique flavor with its own rhythm and character.
  37. Adobe Kannada by Adobe, $29.00
    The Adobe Kannada typeface was designed by Erin McLaughlin, with Brahmic script expert Fiona Ross consulting on the design. This type family was designed to harmonize with Adobe?s other Brahmic fonts, both in terms of apparent size and style, to ensure that this suite of typeface families can be typeset together as a system. The primary intended usage ? for printed outputs, particularly continuous text settings ? guided the design direction.
  38. Adobe Ming by Adobe, $29.00
  39. Adobe Jenson by Adobe, $35.00
  40. Adobe Devanagari by Adobe, $29.00
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