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  1. Rameyon by ahweproject, $9.00
    Rameyon is a cool, graffiti-style display font. Add this font to your urban and casual creations, and you will love the outcome. Whatever the topic, this font will be a wonderful asset to your font library, as it has the potential to enhance any creation. This font is suitable for designs such as t-shirts, sportswear, logos, advertisements, clothing, and more.
  2. Stucco by Loshaj Foundry, $20.00
    Stucco is a construction material that is used as a decorative coating for walls, ceilings, exteriors, and as a sculptural and artistic material in architecture. Stucco can be applied on construction materials such as metal, concrete, cinderblock, or clay brick and adobe for decorative and structural purposes. In similar fashion, the Stucco font is designed to be a decorative piece and is intended to support a wide variety of mediums. The font is intended to be used as a header or headline font, but a creative designer will find other uses for it. The font contains 300+ glyphs which includes uppercase letters, lowercase alternates, numbers, symbols, accented characters for multiple language support.
  3. DIN Next by Monotype, $56.99
    DIN has always been the typeface you root for—the one you wanted to use but just couldn’t bring yourself to because it was limited in its range of weights and widths, rendering it less useful than it could be. The century-old design has proven to be timeless, but modern use cases demanded an update, which resulted in DIN Next—a versatile sans serif family that will never go out of style. This classic design turned modern must-have includes seven weights that range from light to black, each of which has a complementary italic and condensed counterpart. The family also included four rounded designs, stretching the original concept’s range and core usability. DIN Next also boasts a suite of small capitals, old style figures, subscript, superscript and several alternate characters. A quintessential 20th-century design, its predecessor DIN was based on geometric shapes and was intended for use on traffic signs and technical documentation. Akira Kobayashi’s update made slight changes to the design, rounding the formerly squared-off corner angles to humanize the family. Rooted in over 100-years of history, it’s safe to say that there will always be a demand for the DIN design, and thanks to DIN Next, now it’s as usable as it is desired. Wondering what will pair with it perfectly? Check out Agmena™, Bembo® Book, Cardamon™, Joanna® Nova, FF Quadraat® and Quitador™. Featured in: Best Fonts for Logos, Best Fonts for Websites, Best Fonts for Tattoos
  4. Ransahoff CT by CastleType, $19.00
    A very light, elegant, condensed typeface, which must be used very large (at least 100 points).
  5. Rolling Bold by Ardyanatypes, $15.00
    Rolling Bold is a modern script font designed to make your designs look more attractive. It will be very easy to use and will save you time in designing. Rolling Bold also has many opentype features such as ligatures, and alternates. It will be very suitable for use as logos, posters, packaging, merchandise, social media & greeting cards.
  6. Zinc Boomerang - Unknown license
  7. Pea Roxygirl - Unknown license
  8. Monster Paparazzi - Unknown license
  9. Pea Alyssa - Unknown license
  10. Avenir by Linotype, $42.99
    In drawing the Avenir® typeface, Adrian Frutiger looked to both the past and the future for inspiration. His goal was to reinterpret the geometric sans serif designs of the early part of the 20th century in a typeface that would portend aesthetics of the 21st century. He succeeded handsomely. In doing so, Frutiger added a bit of organic humanism to the design, freeing Avenir from the rigid geometric overtones of the earlier designs. Avenir is employed on signage at Dallas Fort Worth and Hong Kong international airports. The city of Amsterdam adopted Avenir as its corporate typeface in 2003. The original Avenir family is made up of designs with gradual weight changes in order to satisfy the needs of specific text applications. While the book and light weights have similar stroke widths, the book weight is well suited for body text, whereas the light was designed for captions and subhead text. Featured in: Best Fonts for Resumes
  11. Wed Dings by Design23, $39.00
    This font will help the beginner designer create their own wedding invitations.
  12. Passport MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Bulk and robust headlines - this font family will make them stand out.
  13. Convalescence - Unknown license
  14. Scrubble - Unknown license
  15. Requiem - Personal use only
  16. Verdy - Personal use only
  17. Lazov - Unknown license
  18. Jetmix - Unknown license
  19. LazovBold - Unknown license
  20. OLYMPIQUES - Unknown license
  21. jano - Unknown license
  22. jey - Personal use only
  23. bowellberalta - Personal use only
  24. Gunblade - Unknown license
  25. Manno - Unknown license
  26. GEKRAZZE - Unknown license
  27. finitimus iungo - Unknown license
  28. Hullunkruunu - Unknown license
  29. Charlie - Unknown license
  30. AHDN - Unknown license
  31. newsiren - Unknown license
  32. Snowshoe - Unknown license
  33. Carrington - Unknown license
  34. JohnLennon - Unknown license
  35. winob - Unknown license
  36. Impervious - Unknown license
  37. bubble - Unknown license
  38. Hiccups - Unknown license
  39. Waterfalls - Unknown license
  40. bohemica - Unknown license
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