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  1. Blocked Off - Personal use only
  2. Accent Watermelon - Unknown license
  3. Jelek - 100% free
  4. Concielian Break - Unknown license
  5. Abaddon™ - Unknown license
  6. HVD Rowdy - 100% free
  7. SF RetroSplice Shaded - Unknown license
  8. rockdafonkybit - Personal use only
  9. Surf Punx - Unknown license
  10. Comic Strip MN - Unknown license
  11. Deng Thick - Unknown license
  12. Jumbo - 100% free
  13. Induction - Unknown license
  14. Nonstop - Unknown license
  15. Shadow of Xizor - Unknown license
  16. Spacebeach - Personal use only
  17. Yahoo!© - Unknown license
  18. Quadaptor - Unknown license
  19. Moby - Unknown license
  20. Ben Brown - Unknown license
  21. Metro-Retro - 100% free
  22. Shoguns Clan - Unknown license
  23. Tozuna - Personal use only
  24. Masterforce Solid - Unknown license
  25. Rasstapp 1.0 - Unknown license
  26. CRAY AN? - 100% free
  27. GUNBATS - Unknown license
  28. Loud noise - Unknown license
  29. Rock ‘n Roller - Unknown license
  30. Big Blocko - Unknown license
  31. SF Speakeasy Shaded - Unknown license
  32. 1-2-3 GO! - Personal use only
  33. Sk8ordye - Unknown license
  34. Holitter Forge - 100% free
  35. Albatross - Unknown license
  36. Thaun by Scholtz Fonts, $19.00
    I can best describe the Thaun family as a general purpose display family, inspired by Scholtz Fonts' " "Delikat". I wanted to produce a display font that was more robust than Delikat, without losing the delicacy of the original. In order to do this I thinned solid, curved strokes toward the baseline, and let them dwindle to gently rounded points. As a graphic designer I became aware that designs that used a number of styles from the same family seemed to work well. This was easily done using a standard sans serif font such as Arial or Helvetica. However, when a different look is needed, display fonts do not always have a the variety of different styles that are necessary to produce a coherent design. Thus with Thaun, the challenge was to create a coherent family based on a display font. The archetype of this family is Thaun Regular with six different widths forming closely related styles. There are also two variants of the archetype i.e. Thaun Black & Thaun Rough to add variety to the primary style. An additional sub-family, Thaun Accord, appears in two widths. Thaun Jazz is a wide three dimensional variation. Thaun has all the features usually included in a fully professional font. Language support includes all European character sets, Greek symbols and all punctuation. Opentype features include automatic replacement of some characters and discretionary replacement of stylistic alternatives.
  37. Hyperspace Race by Swell Type, $20.00
    It had to happen: we reached into the future and returned with the ultimate hyper-wide hyper-condensed hyper-thin hyper-bold font: HYPERSPACE RACE! It boldly goes where no sci-fi font has gone before, with WARP SPEED MODE (149 custom connecting letter pairs), alternate letters without connections, Variable Font for unlimited adjustment of Weight, Width & Slant, and character support for 211 European and Asian languages, including Russian, Serbian/Macedonian, Ukranian & Vietnamese. See the Variable and Opentype features in action as I re-create 15 familiar sci-fi logos in under two minutes with the Variable Font!
  38. Chimphand by One Fonty Day, $6.00
    Chimphand is an organic, natural and contemporary handwritten typeface with their tall x-height. Weights of light, regular and bold for both normal width and condensed allow you to play with the typeface more. In addition, you will have an access to their style sets ( Gap ) to add stencil-ish character to every weights. This gap style is much more subtle than normal stencils, but unique and nicely fit to the typeface. Gaps are more visible on larger fonts and bolder weights. Chimphand is good for any purpose, but works more on shorter text. Thanks and enjoy!
  39. Alda by Emigre, $59.00
    The original idea for Alda came from exploring an alternative approach to generating different typeface weights by adapting the characteristics of physical objects. I was interested to find out how far this could be pushed before the letters became a parody of what they referenced. Initially I took this treatment very literally, with the boldest weight expressing the tension of bent steel, and the lightest being as spineless as a rubber band. This allowed me to infuse each weight with unique characteristics, where the bold is robust and angular, and the light is delicate and soft.
  40. Kobely by Partnrz, $15.00
    Kobely is a reproduction of a local broadcaster's real handwriting. My daughter thought her boss's handwriting was so neat and uniform, it would make a great font and asked if I would be willing to create it. I agreed. She had him write out all the basic characters, which he gladly did with both a standard ink pen and a Sharpie¨ marker. I then turned it into a three weight family, perfect for use on post-it notes, shopping and to-do lists - anywhere you need the natural feel of real handwriting. I created it in various weights to spare you from adding a stroke to make it bolder. Adding a stroke can often compromise the small details of a font. Kobely is designed to be readable in even the boldest weight!
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