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  1. Lost Forever - Unknown license
  2. Lost World - Unknown license
  3. Lost Tribes by Gassstype, $23.00
    Hello Everyone, introduce our new product Font LOST TRIBES is a Rough Brush Font.This is a Textured Natural Style and classy style with a clear style and dramatic movement. This font LOST TRIBES is great for your next creative project such as logos, printed quotes, invitations, cards, product packaging, headers, Logotype, Letterhead, Poster, Design this font is great for your creative projects such as watermark on photography, and perfect for logos & branding, invitation,advertisements,product designs, stationery, wedding designs,label ,product packaging, special events or anything that need handwritting taste.
  4. Lost Brush by Stripes Studio, $18.00
    Lost Brush is a new, interesting brushed font, containing ligatures and swash. It is perfect for projects like brands, logos, product packaging, posters, invitations, greeting cards, news, blogs, and everything needing personal charm.
  5. Lost Buster by Ditatype, $29.00
    Your designs are your self expressions and should represent your personal styles. Without the right font, it will be hard to be prominent and to impress your audience. Lost Buster is here to assist you. Lost Buster is a capitalized handwritten font in brush details to produce a manual brush-looking display adding creativity values to designs with this font. It also gives more personal, natural impressions to make people feel close to the brand or design displayed. The advantages of a brush-detailed handwritten font are first, the unique display to get the brand or the design easily remembered and noticed, and second, legible, applicable for various media. You can also apply this font for various text sizes for its legibility reason and enjoy the available features here. Features: Alternates Multilingual Supports PUA Encoded Numerals and Punctuations Lost Buster fits best for various design projects, such as brandings, posters, banners, headings, magazine covers, quotes, invitations, name cards, printed products, merchandise, social media, etc. Find out more ways to use this font by taking a look at the font preview. Thanks for purchasing our fonts. Hopefully, you have a great time using our font. Feel free to contact us anytime for further information or when you have trouble with the font. Thanks a lot and happy designing.
  6. Lost Land by Umbra95, $20.00
    Lost Land is a horror hand drawn font. The font made for cover design, logos, headlines, apparel design, magazine titles etc. Font includes multi-lingual and currency support, numerals, and punctuations.
  7. Lost Format by T-26, $19.00
  8. Lost City by Tigade Std, $15.00
    Lost City is a Natural Retro Brush Font. It is a handwritten which can beautifully enhance your design and product with the feel of retro. It's perfect for creating quotes, greeting cards, branding, promotion, advertisements (hello creative people!). This is a complete set comes with the International Characters. Enjoy!
  9. Lost Monday by Din Studio, $29.00
    Is your project missing something that makes people going madly in love? Looking for a gorgeous font to engage and captivate your audience? What if we told you that we have a solution to maximize your designs? Introducing Lost Monday-A Monoline Font This is a different level font. A modern and stylish handcrafted monoline font that’ll make your audience swoon and enhance your projects. Every stroke and curve was created to capture the essence of simple but style. With stylish and passion edged into every curve and twist of this brush font - you’ll be sure to boost your sales and make the best impressions. Use it for headings, logos, business cards, printed quotes, invitations of all sorts, cards, packaging, and your website or social media branding. Lost Monday includes Multilingual Options to make your branding globally acceptable. Features: Beautiful Ligatures Stylistic Sets Multilingual Support PUA Encoded Numerals and Punctuation Thank you for downloading premium fonts from Din Studio
  10. Lost Castedral by Letterena Studios, $17.00
    Lost Castedral is a modern and stylish serif font. Add it to any of your designs, and enjoy the results! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  11. Lost & Forlorn by Dawnland, $19.00
    Punk/horror typeface for harsh designs, or to add some uease to strict ones. It's all up to you! 444 Glyphs with alternate caps using the Small Caps feature and double letters for a varied handwritten look. (Open type requiered.) Combine with the slanted and bold versions for even bigger variation. Ink on paper and carefully touched up digitally so that all letters will look good printed in bigger sizes.
  12. Lost Wind by Larin Type Co, $16.00
    Lost Wind - a beautiful and elegant hand drawn font - will emphasize your individuality in any project. This font also contains alternates lowercase and ligatures which gives you the opportunity to diversify your design. You can use this font to create a logo or for your businesses, branding, t-shirts, book covers, stationery, marketing, blogs, magazines, and more.
  13. Lost Souls by Vladislav Ivanov, $15.00
    Lost Souls is intended to represent something old, retro and innovative at the same time.
  14. Lost Arcade by Chris Rogers Fonts and Symbols, $19.00
    Are you a game developer, retro enthusiast or lover of pixel art? Ever had trouble tracking down an 8-bit display font that's classy, coherent and truly complete? This type enthusiast and veteran pixel artist once had the same problem, and cut no corners to solve it. Lost Arcade features four styles, a myriad of special characters, broad language support and an accompanying symbol font with 64 pixel art symbols. For the purists out there, each square is proportional to its neighbor.
  15. Paradise Lost by Hanoded, $15.00
    Paradise Lost is a 1667 poem by John Milton which mostly concerns the Biblical story of the Fall of Man, Eve's temptation by the devil and the expulsion of Adam and Eve from Eden. It's quite a hefty read, as the poem consists of ten books with over 10.000 lines of verse. Needless to say, I didn't read it all. But, it did give me inspiration for a font, which I called Paradise Lost. It's a good name, even though there is nothing Biblical about this font. Paradise Lost was created (pun intended) using a broken bamboo satay skewer and Chinese ink. It is all caps, but upper and lower case differ and like to mingle. I also included several ligatures for double lower case letters (aa, ee, jj, kk, etc.). Paradise Lost comes with an eternity of diacritics.
  16. Lost Signal by Zamjump, $11.00
    Lost Signal is a two-style display that's absolutely perfect for editorial headlines. Her bold and characterful figure makes her perfect for posters, extreme sports, automotive and magazine covers. Reserved for upper and lower case in each style, featuring fl and fi ligatures, this calm and bold typeface is a content creator's best friend. Including: Uppercase, Lowercase. Numbers, Punctuation & Symbols. Diacritic for Multilingual Support
  17. Loft by Monotype, $40.99
    Loft is a typeface family of extremes: from the extra compressed Hairline to the extra wide Mammoth. Paris-based designer Julien Janiszewski’s aim was to create a type family based on a strict hierarchy — a suite that would provide graphic designers with a tool to create systematic solutions. Its design was inspired by 19th-century wood type as well as the sign saying “DÉFENSE D'AFFICHER” (Post No Bills) that is ubiquitous in France. Loft comes in seven weights with matching italics. Interestingly, counter widths remain the same across all weights. As weights increase, the characters extend by building stroke thickness outside the counter. Loft is space-efficient in lighter weights while making an increasingly stronger statement as the designs become heavier. The Loft typeface family is distinctive, versatile, and always intriguing.
  18. Lust by Positype, $49.00
    Lust’s original masters were completely redrawn, expanded, with a new optical size added based on customer requests. Lust now sports 6 fonts, instead of the original 4: Standard, Display, Fine, and complementing Italics. The character set has been expanded as well to include more OpenType features and more swashes. The Lust Collection is the culmination of 5 years of exploration and development, and I am very excited to share it with everyone. When the original Lust was first conceived in 2010 and released a year and half later, I had planned for a Script and a Sans to accompany it. The Script was released about a year later, but I paused the Sans. The primary reason was the amount of feedback and requests I was receiving for alternate versions, expansions, and ‘hey, have you considered making?’ and so on. I listen to my customers and what they are needing… and besides, I was stalling with the Sans. Like Optima and other earlier high-contrast sans, they are difficult to deliver responsibly without suffering from ill-conceived excess or timidity. The new Lust Collection aggregates all of that past customer feedback and distills it into 6 separate families, each adhering to the original Lust precept of exercises in indulgence and each based in large part on the original 2010 exemplars produced for Lust. I just hate that it took so long to deliver, but better right, than rushed, I imagine.
  19. Lost in space by Gleb Guralnyk, $13.00
    This futuristic typeface "Lost in space" is a geometric vintage font with multi-lingual support.
  20. Lost and Foundry by Fontsmith, $15.00
    Breaking the cycle of homelessness We are partnered with The House of St. Barnabas, a private members club in Soho Square, whose work as a not for profit charity aims to break the cycle of homelessness in London. Each purchase (of the family pack) comes with a one month membership to The House and 100% of the proceeds from sales of fonts go directly to the charity to help their essential work. This unique collection of 7 typefaces is based on the disappearing signs of Soho, at risk of being lost forever due to the ever changing landscape of the area. By re-imaging the signage as complete fonts, we have rescued this rich visual history from the streets and present the typefaces into a contemporary context for a bright optimistic future. FS Berwick Thanks to its humble tiled origins, this Egyptian serif type maintains a uniform character width, creating the irregular letter proportions found in the final alphabet. Broad-shouldered, the bracketed serifs firmly ground the font, whilst its extreme hairlines become a necessity due to the uniform width. Of note is the upside down ‘S’, to be found on the original sign on Berwick Street. Perhaps due to its ceramic origins, there is a surprising ‘slippiness’ to its final appearance. FS Cattle Cattle & Son is best described as a wide, but not overly extended, grotesque-style sans serif, showing a uniform width and carrying a robust strength to its form. Whilst lightly functional overall, the purposeful diagonal legs of the ‘K’, ‘R’ and the tail of the ‘Q’ add an urgency to its appearance. The reduced size of the ampersand gives away Cattle & Son’s hand-painted origins, and the oblique compacted ‘LTD’ found on the original sign is also included in the final set. This beautiful sign is tucked away under an arch in Portland Mews, sheltering from the weather. Perhaps this is why it has lasted so long. FS Century This somewhat elongated set of Roman capitals was originally rendered in paint circa 1940, but its roots trace back to the Trajan Column in Rome. Witness the slightly unbalanced ‘W’ and the painter’s hand is revealed. Century’s flared serif style is extremely short, sharp and bracketed. The ‘M’ is splayed and has no top serifs. Century has a uniform appearance of width, probably due to its sign-written origins. Yet is elegant, classic and exudes sophistication. FS Charity A true Tuscan letterform, the original is located on The House of St. Barnabas in ceramic tiles and was revealed in all its broken glory in 2014. FS Charity retains the option of using these incorrect characters (try typing lowercase in the test drive above and compare with the more uniform uppercase characters). FS Charity features fishtailed terminals on its strokes, a curious branched ‘T’ and the ‘S’ displays tear-drop ends to its serifs. Almost uniform in width, the ‘A’, ‘M’ and ‘W’ are the widest characters in this set. FS Marlborough The elongated Marlborough features diagonal terminals to some characters and numerals. Also retained is the space-saving contracted ‘T’ glyph from the original sign, while the ‘R’ features a distinctive wedge-shaped leg. Highly individual in this form, similar signage appears around Soho, but featuring a variety of widths in their design. FS Portland The sister type to Cattle & Son, Portland is oblique rather than italic. The serifs are not overly long, yet still enhance its rather rigid cap height and baseline appearance. Its ‘A’ has a top serif, the ‘M’ is square and the ‘G’ foregoes any spur. Particularly delightful is the open ampersand. Numerals align to encourage the horizontal flavour of the oblique style. Overall, Portland is both confident and graceful. FS St James A lineal Continental style, St James also displays a true sense of ‘Londoness’ in its titling form, perhaps influenced by early Underground signage. Irregular letterforms display a continental flavour, particularly evident in its Deco style ‘W’, ampersand and numerals. The rather high cross bar in the ‘A’ is also reflected in the raised middle strokes of the ‘M’. Noteworthy are the distinctive unions found on all of the characters and the additional small caps. The original lettering is still located on Greek St.
  21. Lost Hills JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Lost Hills JNL is a split-serif Western font based on Jeff Levine's Brogado JNL. Named for an actual location in California, this font has all the basic characteristics of a traditional Old West design.
  22. Words You Lost by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
  23. Lost In South by Gassstype, $27.00
    Introducing Lost in South – Natural Brush Font is a Signature Style and classy style, this font is great for your creative projects such as watermark on photography, and perfect for logos & branding. Lost in South a natural handwritten feel. This handmade font will make your design has a beautiful natural touch for each details.
  24. Last Dream - Personal use only
  25. Last Ninja - Unknown license
  26. Lotte Paperfang - Unknown license
  27. Post Human - Personal use only
  28. Angel Lust - Unknown license
  29. Most Faster by Din Studio, $29.00
    Most Faster’s cool designs and spectacular features will bring your designs into a brand new level. It is a font created in capital letters with the racing theme reflecting courageous masculine impressions. The strokes on each letter are similar to a sharp-angled rectangle. Features: Multilingual Supports PUA Encoded Numerals and Punctuation Use Most Faster for any design projects such as posters, banners, logos, book covers, headings, printed products, merchandise, social media, and so on. Find out more ways to use this font by taking a look at the font preview. Get it now. Happy designing.
  30. Lust Script by Positype, $49.00
    Boom. You asked for more, um, well just ‘more’—more swashes, more options, more weights, more of everything. I cannot give you more weights. The design just won’t allow it and anything else would be a compromise or a bastardization of the exemplars just to make money that I am unwilling to do. But, I did give you an overly indulgent, 90% cacao bar and espresso, Lust Script Fine. The ending strokes on these glyphs will literally draw blood. Enjoy it as much as I have. The Lust Collection is the culmination of 5 years of exploration and development, and I am very excited to share it with everyone. When the original Lust was first conceived in 2010 and released a year and half later, I had planned for a Script and a Sans to accompany it. The Script was released about a year later, but I paused the Sans. The primary reason was the amount of feedback and requests I was receiving for alternate versions, expansions, and ‘hey, have you considered making?’ and so on. I listen to my customers and what they are needing… and besides, I was stalling with the Sans. Like Optima and other earlier high-contrast sans, they are difficult to deliver responsibly without suffering from ill-conceived excess or timidity. The new Lust Collection aggregates all of that past customer feedback and distills it into 6 separate families, each adhering to the original Lust precept of exercises in indulgence and each based in large part on the original 2010 exemplars produced for Lust. I just hate that it took so long to deliver, but better right, than rushed, I imagine.
  31. Losta Parka by Creativemedialab, $20.00
    Parka is a unique and fashionable stencil font with tons of alternatives and ligatures. Softly curved alternates match the solid and masculine looks for the balance of shape. Perfect for any titles, branding, logo, and many more.
  32. Post Industrial by TypeArt Foundry, $45.00
  33. Lust Hedonist by Positype, $50.00
    Check out the new Lust Pro & Lust Pro Didone to see how the series has grown and evolved. Confident, voluminous and versatile, Lust is an exercise in indulgence—an attempt to create something over the top and vastly useful. Lust Hedonist pushes contrast almost to the limit. The letterforms, especially the Script style are very self-indulgent for me, dare I say Hedonistic, and how I like to see letter masses taken to extreme contrast. The series unapologetically channels Herb Lubalin, but produced with a deliberate, contemporary twist. There is an intentional slyness infused in the letterforms—the extreme thick and thin lines flow effortlessly without becoming gratuitous. It’s always just enough, not too much. What makes the type series so appealing? The curves. When asked to describe the letterforms, most people unwittingly allude to the human form, using adjectives usually reserved for describing physical traits… creating all-too-familiar comparisons. Summerour has grown to accept this as unavoidable and reasonable given his acknowledgement of its influences and has provided nuances within the letterforms to accentuate that.
  34. Losta Frida by Creativemedialab, $20.00
    This family contains 5 weights and ornaments to create an artistic touch to your projects. Has tons of alternates and ligatures. Best for branding, Webdesign project, Clothing brand, logo design, valentine's greetings, packaging, and much more. Comes with a variable format as well as multilingual support, numbers, and currency symbols. Check out Pretty Boy which is a great pair for Losta Frida.
  35. Losta Riecha by Variatype, $22.00
    Losta Riecha is a stylish and luxurious serif font inspired by fashion trends and includes discretionary ligatures and stylistic alternates. Perfectly match the contemporary design theme for many projects such as logotypes, corporate branding, poster design, business cards, headline cover, and more. FONT FEATURES 301 Glyphs Additional Accents 68 Languages Kerning Ligatures Alternates
  36. Last Dream by Ardian Nuvianto, $15.00
    Last Dream is consisting of a stylish layered font, come with regular and extrude. This font was created with contextual alternates opentype features to create slice effect. Last Dream is perfect for branding projects, logo, social media posts, advertisements, product packaging, product designs, label, stationery and anything that you want. Here is that you get: Last Dream regular and extrude Works on PC & Mac Simple installations Supports multilingual Accessible in the Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe InDesign, even work on Microsoft Word. PUA Encoded Characters – Fully accessible without additional design software.
  37. Lust Slim by Positype, $50.00
    Check out the new Lust Pro & Lust Pro Didone to see how the series has grown and evolved. Confident and versatile, Lust is an exercise in indulgence—an attempt to create something over the top and vastly useful. If Lust Slim seems both new and familiar, that’s because it is. The series unapologetically channels Herb Lubalin, but produced with a deliberate, contemporary twist. There is an intentional slyness infused in the letterforms—the extreme thick and thin lines flow effortlessly without becoming gratuitous. It’s always just enough, not too much. What makes the type series so appealing? The curves. When asked to describe the letterforms, most people unwittingly allude to the human form, using adjectives usually reserved for describing physical traits… creating all-too-familiar comparisons. Summerour has grown to accept this as unavoidable and reasonable given his acknowledgement of its influences and has provided nuances within the letterforms to accentuate that. Intended to be set large, the typeface has both Standard (Lust, Lust Didone and a single unified Italic) and Display variants making it perfect for editorial use and a flexible solution for any display need.
  38. Lust Text by Positype, $29.00
    Yes, finally. This one took the most time and the most restarting. Years went into imagining what Lust Text should look like and how it should structurally behave in order to truly improve upon a setting that includes any of the Lust typefaces. I approached it as much from the side of the type designer, as I did a potential user. The flow, the warmth, the personality needed to be there, but all of the excess had to be removed responsibly. In the process, and in need of inspiration, I looked backward to historical artifacts and precedent. In each early Lust Text approach, the solution was lackluster and/or vanilla and not actually a ‘Lust’ typeface. The exercise was not in vain though. By exploring past examples, I found my footing drawing for media now and how it might be used later—all the while, producing seamless, elegant curves and restrained indulgence (that sounds almost silly to say, but I like it). The Lust Collection is the culmination of 5 years of exploration and development, and I am very excited to share it with everyone. When the original Lust was first conceived in 2010 and released a year and half later, I had planned for a Script and a Sans to accompany it. The Script was released about a year later, but I paused the Sans. The primary reason was the amount of feedback and requests I was receiving for alternate versions, expansions, and ‘hey, have you considered making?’ and so on. I listen to my customers and what they are needing… and besides, I was stalling with the Sans. Like Optima and other earlier high-contrast sans, they are difficult to deliver responsibly without suffering from ill-conceived excess or timidity. The new Lust Collection aggregates all of that past customer feedback and distills it into 6 separate families, each adhering to the original Lust precept of exercises in indulgence and each based in large part on the original 2010 exemplars produced for Lust. I just hate that it took so long to deliver, but better right, than rushed, I imagine.
  39. Last Episode by Hanoded, $16.00
    I was watching a nice series the other day, which I quite enjoyed, but then I realised that the episode I was watching was in fact the last one. That kinda upset me, as I was just getting into the story. Last Episode is a handmade, all caps font - great for titling, book covers and posters. It comes with a set of alternates and some really interesting discretional ligatures.
  40. Last Midnight by The Ampersand Forest, $45.00
    Suggested by J.M.Bergling’s 1917 “New Romeo Initials, Last Midnight is a display face created in a distinctive pseudocalligraphic Belle Époque style that we’ve come to associate with beloved fairy tales. Rich in typographic goodies, with two additional stylistic sets and a host of standard ligatures, Last Midnight now even has a Roman small caps set in both smooth and rough varieties — great for all of your tale-telling, folkloric, swashbuckling, & spellcasting needs! Part of The Ampersand Forest's Sondheim Series.
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