6,741 search results (0.011 seconds)
  1. Dyer - Unknown license
  2. Dead Hardy - Personal use only
  3. Balloon by Bitstream, $29.99
    Another informal script designed in 1939 by M.K. Kaufmann for ATF.
  4. Ad Lib by Bitstream, $29.99
    Designed for informal effects in 1961 by Freeman Craw for ATF.
  5. Stencil by Bitstream, $29.99
    Gerry Powell’s stencil version of Clarendon designed for ATF in 1938.
  6. Rivoli Initials by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    Based on the William T. Sniffin design for ATF, circa 1928.
  7. Bootspur JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Art Deco and Western styles fuse into one design in Bootspur JNL. A rounded A,M,N and W along with the Art Deco curvature found in the K,R,X and Y set Bootspur JNL apart from many of the other condensed Western fonts currently available.
  8. Carpellon by Creativemedialab, $16.00
    Carpellon is inspired by tattoo scripts, and features nice curves to represent the combination of art and beauty. It is unique and easy to read, and includes both regular and ornament styles. It is best for use with gothic art themes, tattoo lettering, posters, logos and more.
  9. Coliseu by Hanoded, $15.00
    Coliseu is a gorgeous, all caps Art Deco style font. Clean lines, rounded edges and an appealing style make Coliseu a very useful font. It was named after the beautiful Coliseu do Porto - an art deco landmark in that Portuguese city. Coliseu font comes with all diacritics.
  10. Schneider Kontrast by Intellecta Design, $9.00
    a naive interpretation of the F. H. Ernst Schneidler's art deco font...
  11. Orlando by Tim Rolands, $-
    Orlando is a quirky display face inspired by Art Nouveau metal types.
  12. Brillant by RMU, $30.00
    Another Art Nouveau font revived from the treasure drove of the past.
  13. Pavane by Scriptorium, $18.00
    Pavane is based on the calligraphy of Art Nouveau designer Rudolph Koch.
  14. Rudolfo by Scriptorium, $12.00
    Rudolfo is based on the calligraphy of Art Nouveau designer Rudolph Koch.
  15. Diode by Burghal Design, $29.00
    Diode is a sleek and simple font with mild art deco tendencies.
  16. KG Flavor And Frames Seven by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Decayed and stamped highly textured frames and decorations. Perfect for chalkboard art.
  17. Stymie by Bitstream, $30.99
    Morris Fuller Benton’s 1931 design, reworking the model of Memphis for ATF.
  18. Gandur New by Blackletra, $50.00
    Gandur is a display textura in three weights, split into two families: Alte — the German word for old — and New. Gandur was inspired by other geometric texturas, specially Max Bittrof’s Element (1933). The design began by adhering to a strict hexagonal grid, but during its development, slowly moved from a purely geometric to a more pen-based design (this is especially true in the heaviest weights). The differences between Alte and New are essentially morphological, with reflections in the character set and OpenType features. Gandur New has a more humanistic, contemporary structure and is more ‘romanized’ then Alte. Gandur New also features small capitals. Gandur Alte, on the other hand, remains truer to historical forms, most notably: S s X x Z z. Gandur Alte also features the long-s, which can be accessed via a Stylistic Set or the glyph palette. (As is historically accurate, a short-s will be used at the end of words automatically when the historical Stylistic Set has been activated).
  19. Mistook by Arendxstudio, $15.00
    Mistook - Street Art Graffiti Font is a free style font that has the characteristics of street art that shows freedom and is filled with unique characters Features : • Character Set A-Z • Numerals & Punctuations (OpenType Standard) • Accents (Multilingual characters) • Ligature • Alternate There it is! I really hope you enjoy it !
  20. Olde Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Olde Nouveau JNL is an interesting Art Nouveau typeface based on lettering found on some vintage sheet music. It's name is a contradictory pun, since "Nouveau" means new in French, and Olde (spelled in the archaic form) is the total opposite of what the Art Nouveau movement embodied.
  21. Evening Initials JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Evening Initials JNL are based on a few random examples of some unusual Art Deco initials found within the pages of an old Dover clip art book. A complete set of letters was redrawn from scratch and are offered for your creative endeavors as a digital type font.
  22. RMU Pittoreske by RMU, $35.00
    This great Victorian display font of the late 19th century was revived for today’s use. You also find two frame elements. To start setting a frame, type [shift] + [alt] + p for the corner, and continue with typing [alt] + p. Duplicate and mirror the lines to get a fantastic frame.
  23. Showpiece JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Showpiece JNL was redrawn from the hand lettering for the name and address of a music publisher found on some 1930s-era sheet music. The lettering style has features influenced a bit by both the end of the Art Nouveau period and the beginning of the Art Deco movement.
  24. Armoire by Justin Penner, $25.00
    Armoire is a contrast sans-serif typeface that blends the elegant rationalism of Art Deco with the ornamental craftsmanship of Art Nouveau. Designed for both display and text usage, Armoire features a subtle range of weights with accompanying italics, and a special set of case-sensitive uppercase letters.
  25. P22 Vienna by P22 Type Foundry, $24.95
    The Vienna Workshop (Wiener Werkstätte) produced a tremendous variety of art from the turn of the century until the beginning of World War II. This set, which includes three typefaces and a collection of graphic extras, draws on both the Art Nouveau and Expressionist traditions of the Workshop.
  26. Summer Program JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The WPA (Works Progress Administration) posters on file at the Library of Congress have been a treasure trove of classic hand-lettered type designs. Summer Program JNL is based on one such poster offering free arts and crafts classes in New York City sponsored by the Federal Art Project.
  27. Morton Tagcity by Sipanji21, $18.00
    Morton Taggity" is described as an impressive graffiti font. Fonts within this category often exhibit bold, dynamic, and expressive letterforms typical of graffiti art. Such fonts are commonly used in urban-themed designs, street art, posters, and various creative projects aiming for a bold and eye-catching typographic style. With "Morton Taggity," you can create designs that convey urban aesthetics and the energetic spirit associated with graffiti art. Its bold and expressive nature makes it suitable for projects where a vibrant and impactful typographic style is desired.
  28. National Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered title on the cover for the (ca. 1917) sheet music for “After the War is Over” provided the design inspiration for National Nouveau JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions. A precursor to the Art Deco movement which would arrive within the next decade, this bold thick-and-thin design embraces the elements of both Art Nouveau and Art Deco in one type design and gets its name from the patriotic spirit of America during “The Great War”.
  29. Morton Tagcity by Adita Fonts, $14.00
    Morton Taggity” is described as an impressive graffiti font. Fonts within this category often exhibit bold, dynamic, and expressive letterforms typical of graffiti art. Such fonts are commonly used in urban-themed designs, street art, posters, and various creative projects aiming for a bold and eye-catching typographic style. With “Morton Taggity,” you can create designs that convey urban aesthetics and the energetic spirit associated with graffiti art. Its bold and expressive nature makes it suitable for projects where a vibrant and impactful typographic style is desired.
  30. Bing by Pelavin Fonts, $20.00
    The sinuous, organic forms of Bing first came into being on a poster for a Smithsonian Institution exhibit on Siegfried Bing, a German art dealer in Paris who figured prominently in the development of Art Nouveau towards the end of the nineteenth century. Inspired by the natural forms of Antonio Gaudi, and the Paris Metro stations of Hector Guimard, Bing can be used effectively in the modernist style of Art Nouveau and is equally at home in the 1960s psychedelic rejuvenation of that genre.
  31. Ongunkan Proto Bulgarian Runic by Runic World Tamgacı, $70.00
    Kъnig – the old Bulgar runes The writing kъnig emerged in the places of ancient Thraco-Bulgarian migrations in ante-deluvial times and developed in stages paralleling the other ancient writings. There have been many interactions and loanings between kъnig and these other writings. The root of the word kъnig (OBg: кънигъı) comes from the Old Chinese k'üen 'scroll' (ModCh: 纸卷 zhǐjuǎn) [57]. The word was loaned directly in the Bulgar language (*kün'ig > *küniv) restoring two individual Old Chuvash forms: 1. *k'ün'čьk > кўнчěк kind of ornament on a woman's garment; *k'ün'-gi / *k'ün'-üg > k'ün'iv book, codex, which is evidenced by the Hungarian könyv book and Mordvinian konov paper borrowings; 2. *k'ün'i- > *k'ün'i-gi > к'әn'iγь > кънигъı. This word has been preserved in Sumerian as kunuku (inscription) and kəniga (writing, knowledge). It is inherited from Bulgar to Slavic: книга (Bulgarian and Russian), књига (Serbian, Croatian and Slovenian), kniha (Czech and Slovak), książka (Polish), and non-Slavic: könyv (Hungarian) languages. Kъnig letters (kъni) have been known from archeological finds for more than 100 years already; however, until recently, no attempt has been made to decipher them, find their phonological value, or connect them to their natural successors: the Glagolitic and Cyrillic alphabets. The oldest mention on the Bulgar runes is found in the mid-9th c. AD work On the Letters by the Bulgarian writer Chernorizets Hrabъr. Being already a Christian, he wrote pejoratively about the pagan Bulgars
  32. Autriche - Unknown license
  33. Passage by Tour De Force, $25.00
    Passage is freshly looking decorative Art Deco font family, inspired with modern influences.
  34. Nouveau Never Dies by Intellecta Design, $13.90
    Nouveau Never Dies is a compreensive family of ornaments from Art Nouveau era.
  35. Is Not A Brazilian Font by Intellecta Design, $17.95
    an art deco font based on brazilian Rio's lettering old publish lettering style
  36. Samuello by Intellecta Design, $22.90
    a naive interpretation of Samuel Wello art deco sans serif style of typefaces
  37. Onyx by Bitstream, $29.99
    Gerry Powell’s revival of the condensed and elongated Fat Face, cut for ATF.
  38. Eutaw Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A hand lettered emulation of a Roman stencil type face on the cover of the folio for the Stenso School Set was the basis for Eutaw Stencil JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions. The Stenso School Set (circa 1940-41) was comprised of three stencils – two lettering guides and a map of the [then] 48 United States. Developed and patented by Baltimore school teacher Ruth Libauer Hormats, her stencils were the first to offer a system for accurate letter spacing and ease of use. “Eutaw” (as part of the font’s name) is taken from Eutaw Place, the street where Ruth and her husband lived at the time of Stenso’s inception. To the Cherokee, the name means “Creek Indian”.
  39. VLNL Tp Martini by VetteLetters, $35.00
    Our chef Martin Lorenz likes to mix cool and fresh cocktails - shaken, not stirred! You have to taste his awesome Martini or mix it yourself! To make matters more easy, cocktail master Martin reveals his special recipe: “The TpMartini refers esthetically to typefaces drawn with a pointed nib as the Bodoni or Didot, but with the clear distinction that it is obviously constructed by modules. The visual system for the TpMartin is based on a square 5x9-unit grid and three different basic forms with which the font and other elements are designed. The basic forms consist of a straight line and circles of two different sizes. The line can be extended, but the circles retain their related proportions.” One piece of advice: Don’t drink and type!
  40. 1776 Independence by GLC, $38.00
    1776 Independence was designed inspired mainly from the Caslon typeface used by John Dunlap in the night of 1776 July 4th in Philadelphia to print the first 200 sheets of the Congress' Declaration of Independence establishing the United States of America. I just added accented letters and a few others, with respect for the original design. A render sheet,enclosed with font file, help to identify them on keyboard. It can be used as web-site titles, posters and fliers, editing ancient texts, menus or greeting cards as a very decorative font... This font supports as easily enlargement or small size, remaining clear and easy to read from 8 or 9 points to 72 and over. It gives a smart look especially to prints.
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