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  1. Brughler by Invasi Studio, $17.00
    Take inspiration from the old-fashioned era. The Brughler typeface gives a vintage aesthetic. With it's unique & distinct characteristics, it stands out from the rest, while also keeping a timeless appeal. Brughler comes with 3 different styles of the font: Regular, Rough, and Stamp. Brughler's Rough & Stamp versions allow you to create a printed look without using 3rd party effects, removing a step in the creation of your final product. It is perfect for packaging, posters, and branding projects that need a bold impact. Features: Uppercase Numerals & Punctuation Alternates Multilanguage Supports 60+ Latin based languages
  2. Monasterka by DePlictis Types, $31.00
    Monasterka refers to the preservation of ancient traditions and the right orthodox faith. It is a bold, archaic typeface in two styles especially designed for printing purposes. It is a powerfull, expressive typeface inspired by old cyrillic writing and may do a great job for brochures and publications designs that has to do with religious or historical thematic, mostly as headlines and titles with great impact and personality. This family has an extended language coverage for many languages including latin, cyrillic and greek alphabets and comes in two styles.
  3. Monotype Clearface by Monotype, $29.99
    A rather narrow and compact design, Monotype Clearface combines both old style and antique characteristics. The lowercase letters are tall, the ascenders and descenders quite short. The intention was to produce a typeface that was easy to read in small sizes, hence the name. Monotype Clearface Bold was first cut for mechanical composition in 1922, and was based on the Clearface Gothic design created by Morris Fuller Benton for ATF in 1910. Although designed as a text face, Monotype Clearface is now more commonly used in advertising and display work.
  4. Racon by Ahmet Altun, $17.00
    Racon Font Family comes in two weights as regular and bold with seven styles. You can create unique and great designs with its classy, legible, elegant look and most preferred texture and clean styles. You can enrich your designs by using Racon Fonts with its clean and old styled extra figures. You can reach the keyboard codes of the extras as a pdf file from the "Gallery". It would be a perfect choice for designing posters, affiches, logos, invitation cards, t-shirt and magazine prints, eye-pleasing typographic designs and more. Enjoy!
  5. CushingTwo by Hackberry Font Foundry, $13.77
    CushingTwo is the 6-font family designed for Fontographer: Practical Font Design for Graphic Designers: Regular, Oblique, Demi, DemiOblique, Bold, and BoldOblique. The two Demi variants will be listed separately in InDesign and the Creative Suite to keep things compatible with Office and such. The inspiration was a scan of the old Cushing No. 2 font in Felici's article on CreativePro about 100 year oldtype. It's a fun, open, large OpenType font of 370 characters with oldstyle figures, small caps, and small cap figures. It needs polishing, but it's good looking.
  6. Nouveau Techno JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The French publication “La Lettre Dans le Decor et La Publicite Modernes” (“The Letter in the Modern Décor and Advertising”) was a 24-page booklet showcasing the then-current trends of the time (circa late 1930s-early 1940s). On one page was found a squared, extra bold sans serif alphabet set with strong Art Nouveau influences, yet it was ahead of its time by taking on the look and feel of 1980s techno typography. They say “everything old is new again”, and Nouveau Techno JNL is now available digitally in both regular and oblique versions.
  7. Killarney by Fontdation, $15.00
    Introducing our new font Killarney. A bold and heavy display font that inspired by the vintage/classic letterforms used in old-advertisements. Mouse-crafted with high attention to details; clean lines, sharp edges and tempting curves. Its square and blocky letterforms make Killarney a great for headlines and space killer. Packed with 500+ glyphs, Killarney composed of slanted version, standard upper/lower case characters, numerals, punctuations, some multilingual letters, alternate characters, stylistic sets, ligatures, etc. This font is a must have item for your designing arsenal. Go get yours now while it's hot. :D
  8. Gazeta by Vanarchiv, $21.00
    This typeface was designed for editorial purposes (text sizes), where the letterforms contain short serifs (more economical). This font family contains different weights (from Extra Light until to Extra Bold) to create an simple and sequential typographic hierarchy scale. There are two different weights and options designed specifically for text sizes (Regular and Text). The design is classical but contain some contemporary details, which are not distractive for reading, it's simple and clean at small sizes. This font family include italics, small caps, ligatures, old style and tabular figures.
  9. Banret by Ryzhychenko Olga, $12.00
    Banret is built using simple geometric shapes. It is mostly the result of my experiments on the other font I made earlier in 2016, called Inventor. Font is inspired by old fonts of the beginning of the 20th century. Capital letters are built with one to four proportions. The font has four weights: normal, and bold, and two alternatives: ribbon, and flag. As far as it is a decorative font, it is not designed for large amounts of text. But it is perfect for creating branding elements, logos, slogans and posters.
  10. Diamond Braille by Echopraxium, $5.00
    Here is a "Decorative Braille font". The initial design was indeed drawn on a K.I.S.S digital sketchpad, the Windows default drawing tool (Microsoft Paint, classic version). A. Glyph Concept The Braille 2x3 dot matrix is weaved around a diamond-shape. a.1. Each "dot" is represented by a "right-angle isocel triangle". a.2. Braille dots in Diamond Braille a.2.I. "Dots" are outside the diamond for first Braille row (Braille dots 1, 4) and third Braille row (Braille dots 3, 6). a.2.II. "Dots" are inside the diamond for second Braillle row (Braille dots 2, 5). a.3. Diamond lattice Glyphs are connected horizontally (to/bottom diamond's corners) and vertically (left/right corners) to each other (see poster 5). a.4. Special Glyphs - Space: its is either empty ("Empty cell") or a "non Braille shape" { _, ° } depending on your display needs (as explained in b.3.II) - 6 dots: { £, =, û } - 6 empty dots: { ç, ¥ } B. Font user guide b.1. Lowercase glyphs { A..Z } In these glyphs the "dots" are represented as a white right-angle isocel triangle filled with a smaller black triangle. b.2. Uppercase glyphs { a..z } In these glyphs, the "dots" are represented as an empty triangle (this is an "empty dot"). b.3. 'Space' vs 'Empty Cell' b.3.I. 'Space' - 'Space' glyph is an empty shape - '¶' glyph (at the end of each line in Microsoft Word) is also an empty shape b.3.II. 'Empty cell' glyphs: _ (underscore), ° (degree). In these glyphs there are 2 "empty dots" at top and bottom corners of the diamond, which differentiates them from regular Braille glyphs (which dont have a "dot in the middle"). b.4. Diamond Lattice To display text as a 'diamond lattice', replace each 'Space' by an 'Empty cell' (as explained in b.3.II, see poster 5) b.5. Connectors The connector glyphs allow the creation of "circuit like" designs (see poster 1). Here are the connector glyphs: { µ, à, â, ä, ã, è, é, ê, ë, î, ï } b.6. Domino feature Some Glyphs represent numbers 1..6 in a way which is similar than on dominos (see poster 6) C. Posters Poster 1: the "Font Logo", it displays "Diamond Braille" text together with the Connectors feature. Poster 2: a pangram which is published on pangra.me ( "Adept quick jog over frozen blue whisky mix" ). Poster 3: an illustration of the Domino feature. Poster 4: a DiamondBraille version of the Periodic table. Poster 5: illustration of the Diamond lattice using only 6 dots ( û ) and 6 empty dots ( ç ) glyphs.
  11. SF Collegiate Solid - Unknown license
  12. SF Movie Poster - Unknown license
  13. Krystal - Unknown license
  14. Green Mountain 3 - Unknown license
  15. SF Big Whiskey - Unknown license
  16. ModernGradate - Unknown license
  17. SF New Republic - Unknown license
  18. SF Technodelight - Unknown license
  19. SF Tattle Tales - Unknown license
  20. Snott - Unknown license
  21. SF Quartzite - Unknown license
  22. Gr-Memories - Unknown license
  23. SF Juggernaut Condensed - Unknown license
  24. 612Koshey - Unknown license
  25. SF Juggernaut - Unknown license
  26. 612KosheyLine - Unknown license
  27. SF Americana Dreams Upright - Unknown license
  28. 612KosheyPL - Unknown license
  29. SF Americana Dreams SC - Unknown license
  30. SF Atarian System - Unknown license
  31. SF Technodelight NS - Unknown license
  32. SF Solar Sailer - Unknown license
  33. SF Fortune Wheel - Unknown license
  34. Lemon Twist by Art Grootfontein, $20.00
    Modern and bold, LemonTwist gives your designs a little zest of fresh feeling...
  35. Linear Gothic by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A great headline face very bold and graphic. Not recommended for small sizes!
  36. Rahel MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    This bold and high contrast typeface is mainly used for extreme outstanding headlines.
  37. Ringa by Melvastype, $25.00
    Ringa is extra bold slab serif typeface with a fun and sympathetic feel.
  38. Geo by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A Bold Powerful Geometric design. Great headline face; works well in many applications.
  39. FG Nadja by YOFF, $13.95
    FG Nadja is bold and beautiful - with a real artistic flair around her.
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