7,601 search results (0.09 seconds)
  1. MW QUOIN - Personal use only
  2. BalaCynwyd - Unknown license
  3. Bonk Italic - Unknown license
  4. Get Burnt - Unknown license
  5. Bonk Outercut - Personal use only
  6. DecoBorders - Personal use only
  7. HardlyWorthit - Unknown license
  8. Collective O (BRK) - Unknown license
  9. Bonk Fatty - Unknown license
  10. MontereyPopsicle - Unknown license
  11. Collective S (BRK) - Unknown license
  12. BirminghamBold - Unknown license
  13. Curlmudgeon Hollow - Unknown license
  14. Roughie-Light - Unknown license
  15. ImperatorPlaque - Unknown license
  16. Collective RO (BRK) - Unknown license
  17. Collective RS (BRK) - Unknown license
  18. Bonk College - Unknown license
  19. Embossing Tape 1 BRK - Unknown license
  20. Bonk Undercut - Unknown license
  21. DecoDividers - Unknown license
  22. NFL Packers - Unknown license
  23. NFL Saints - Unknown license
  24. Scars Before Christmas - Personal use only
  25. Rounded, two. - Personal use only
  26. Ming Gothic JJCR - Personal use only
  27. Relaxation JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Amongst the pages of a 1946 foreign publication entitled "100 Alphabets Publicitaires" ("100 Advertising Alphabets") is the casual brush stroke sans that was the design basis for Relaxation JNL.
  28. Ongunkan Younger Futhark by Runic World Tamgacı, $45.00
    The Younger Futhark, also called Scandinavian runes, is a runic alphabet and a reduced form of the Elder Futhark, with only 16 characters, in use from about the 9th century, after a "transitional period" during the 7th and 8th centuries. The reduction, somewhat paradoxically, happened at the same time as phonetic changes that led to a greater number of different phonemes in the spoken language, when Proto-Norse evolved into Old Norse. Also, the writing custom avoided carving the same rune consecutively for the same sound, so the spoken distinction between long and short vowels was lost in writing. Thus, the language included distinct sounds and minimal pairs that were written the same. The Younger Futhark is divided into long-branch (Danish) and short-twig (Swedish and Norwegian) runes; in the 10th century, it was further expanded by the "Hälsinge Runes" or staveless runes. The lifetime of the Younger Futhark corresponds roughly to the Viking Age. Their use declined after the Christianization of Scandinavia; most writing in Scandinavia from the 12th century was in the Latin alphabet, but the runic scripts survived in marginal use in the form of the medieval runes (in use ca. 1100–1500) and the Latinised Dalecarlian runes (ca. 1500–1910)
  29. HansHand - Unknown license
  30. ImperatorBronze - Unknown license
  31. ImperatorSmallCaps - Unknown license
  32. Copyright Violations - Personal use only
  33. Imperator - Unknown license
  34. CopperCanyonWBW - Unknown license
  35. Halter Pinchy - Unknown license
  36. Radios in Motion - Unknown license
  37. MadisonSquare - Unknown license
  38. Bamboo - Unknown license
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