16 search results (0.027 seconds)
  1. KG GANGSTER - Unknown license
  2. BN-Gangsters - Unknown license
  3. Ringster by Stripes Studio, $18.00
    Ringster is a new font that is brushed and very attractive with a natural, detailed and perfect texture. It also includes a weight with underline swashes. Ringster is perfect for logos, product packaging, posters, invitations, brand projects, greeting cards, news, blogs, and everything where you wish to add a personal charm.
  4. Bankster by Pelavin Fonts, $15.00
    With it’s origins in a hand-lettered headline about money managers, Bankster is an alphabet meant to evoke the feelings of currency or financial documents. Multiple styles facilitate the perfectly registered layering of components in a variety of color combinations to enhance impact and provide an enriched dimensional experience. It not be for everyone but, it's a perfect solution for the designer who has no patience for boring type treatments.
  5. Gangsar by Surotype, $20.00
    Gangsar is a Condensed typefamily, Inspired by Enge Hermes (1935). Having 6 weights including italic version, strong character, Sharp edges and proportional contrast. The typeface is versatile and can be successfully used in Branding, Posters, Magazines, Websites, Mobile Apps, etc.*
  6. EFCO Songster by Ilham Herry, $20.00
    Inspired by the Vintage Song Sheet Cover from the 19th Century. Thick n thin with a serif typeface, Comes with 2 style All-caps (Regular and Line Shade) and is also available with pair font and ornament extras. OpenType features support stylistic alternate characters to give a unique personality to the typography composition. Suitable for display needs such as signage, poster, logo, label, headline, cover design, etc
  7. Dx Gaster by Dirtyline Studio, $29.00
    Dx Gaster is a high-contrast Serif family with a strong impact and elegant typeface. Dx Gaster offers a wide variety of combinations for you to create with. Dx Gasters multiple alternates and swashes can add extra spice to your designs. A Strong sharp typeface specially designed for beautiful titles. Dx Gaster comes with elegant style, strength, and contrasts, with features an extended Latin character set of 404 glyphs covering over 86 languages. Casta is ready to be like a top model on the design catwalk, making your projects look classic but contemporary, finely tuned but assertive, and elegant as the best luxury fashion.
  8. Corleone - 100% free
  9. Double Bill JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Double Bill JNL gets its inspiration from the promotional movie trailer for 1938's gangster comedy "A Slight Case of Murder" starring Edward G. Robinson.
  10. Afterword JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    At the end of the 1931 gangster film “The Public Enemy” a hand lettered card offers up an afterword on the demise of Tom Powers (James Cagney’s character in the film) and how a “public enemy” is neither a man nor a character but a problem society must deal with. The text is in an Art-Deco influenced sans serif, and has been digitally recreated as Afterword JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  11. Packing Heat by Hanoded, $16.00
    I came across a photo of Al Capone and some of his henchmen when searching the internet for something completely unrelated. We don’t have a history of notorious gangsters in Holland, so I was intrigued by Capone all of my life. Packing Heat is 1930’s slang for ‘carrying a gun’, which I thought befitted this handmade font with an early 20th century look. Packing Heat comes with multilingual support and a set of alternates for the lower case glyphs.
  12. Dreadnought by Hanoded, $15.00
    With Dreadnought I go back to my roots: one of my very first fonts was a scary brush typeface called Face Your Fears - a very popular typeface with horror lovers, thrill seekers and gangsta rappers. Dreadnought was created using a stiff brush and some very high quality paint on textured paper. The result is a lively, scary and very legible font. Use it for your movie, book or album: you won't be disappointed!
  13. Deudhora by Flawlessandco, $9.00
    Deudhora is a tatto script font. This font type gives a feel of gangsta style. An Original typeface that suitable for any graphic designs such as branding materials, t-shirt, print, logo, poster, photography, quotes .etc This font support for some multilingual. Chicano Font Style that contains uppercase A-Z and lowercase a-z, alternate character, numbers 0-9, and some punctuation. If you need help, just write me! Thanks so much for checking out my shop!
  14. Face Your Fears II by Hanoded, $15.00
    When I created Face Your Fears some years ago, it was an instant hit. I have seen it on Gangsta Rap albums, metal albums, books and on movie posters. It has been used for T-shirts, websites and, believe it or not, for a beer label as well. I have always toyed with the idea of redoing the original font, as some of the glyphs were a bit off. Face Your Fears II is similar in nature to the original font, but comes with a lot of improvements, has slightly altered glyphs and (probably) better kerning. But maybe, just maybe, it isn't your cup o' tea. In that case, you can always just go for the original!
  15. Copperplate New by Caron twice, $39.00
    Imagine America in the 1930s. A gangster flick with Al Capone, a crime novel featuring Philip Marlowe. Our hero in a fedora sits in a classy bar, orders a double bourbon, lights a cigar and eyes the evening paper. He turns the pages, reading about a bank heist over on Third Avenue, a scandal involving a baseball player, a small ad for a general practitioner and a large spread about a famous law firm. What do the bottle of booze and the majestic facade of the bank have in common? The elegant baseball uniform and trustworthy attorneys? - Copperplate Gothic - When Frederick William Goudy created his legendary typeface in 1901, it went on to literally become the symbol of early 20th century America. Tiny serifs, characteristically broad letterforms, and particularly bold titles decorated calling cards at 6-point size, enormous bronze-cast logos, newspaper headlines, restaurant menus and more. This was the golden age of Copperplate, lasting up until the arrival of die neue Typografie and monospaced grotesques in the 1960s. Then the typeface almost completely disappeared. It made a partial comeback with the advent of the personal computer; digitizations of varying quality appeared, and one version even became a standard font in Adobe programs. This may have played a role in Copperplate later being used in DIY projects and amateur designs, which harmed its reputation. Copperplate New has been created to revive the faded glory of the original design. Formally, the new typeface expands the existing weight and proportional extremes. The slight serifs are reduced even further, making the typeface sans-like at smaller point sizes and improving readability. In contrast, at large point sizes it retains all of its original character. Decorative inline & shadow styles have been added and both have been created in all five proportions, making it easy to adapt the typesetting to the format you need. Despite these changes and innovations, Copperplate New remains true to Goudy’s original design and represents a snazzy way to evoke a golden era in American culture. Specimen: http://carontwice.com/files/specimen_Copperplate_New.pdf
  16. Ah, Ruthless Wreckin TWO, the font that sauntered into the digital typeface scene with the swagger of a vintage gangster movie protagonist, yet bears the charm of an old-school comic book. Picture th...
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