4,260 search results (0.043 seconds)
  1. DayPosterBlack - Unknown license
  2. ChromeYellow - 100% free
  3. Symbologica JL - Unknown license
  4. Dreamspeak - Unknown license
  5. Surfin'ta Mars - Unknown license
  6. Nipple - Unknown license
  7. Tart by Suomi, $35.00
    Headline font with extremely tight kerning with more than 1600 kerning pairs. Also with some discretionary ligatures and lining figures. That’s Tart. Sweet.
  8. Unique Wood by Solotype, $19.95
    Wood type maker W. H. Page designed this in 1870. Caps, figures and points only. A great decorative for old-timey poster work.
  9. Stay ALive by Storictype, $17.00
    Stay Alive Typeface is Inspired by victorian style, poster, sign painter, 1800s bring classic touch on this decade, which is combining modern and classic typography with some awesome features that have a strong shapes so it will create more attention for people to look more closely. You can use this font for various purposes.such as logo, t-shirt, posters, lable, letterhead, book cover, and many more.
  10. Martial Arts JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The 1946 foreign publication entitled "100 Alphabets Publicitaires" ("100 Advertising Alphabets") collects a number of interesting and attractive lettering samples for design inspiration. One such example is Asian-inspired and was re-drawn as the digital type face now named Martial Arts JNL.
  11. ATF Garamond by ATF Collection, $59.00
    The Garamond family tree has many branches. There are probably more different typefaces bearing the name Garamond than the name of any other type designer. Not only did the punchcutter Claude Garamond set a standard for elegance and excellence in type founding in 16th-century Paris, but a successor, Jean Jannon, some eighty years later, cut typefaces inspired by Garamond that later came to bear Garamond’s name. Revivals of both designs have been popular and various over the course of the last 100 years. When ATF Garamond was designed in 1917, it was one of the first revivals of a truly classic typeface. Based on Jannon’s types, which had been preserved in the French Imprimerie Nationale as the “caractères de l’Université,” ATF Garamond brought distinctive elegance and liveliness to text type for books and display type for advertising. It was both the inspiration and the model for many of the later “Garamond” revivals, notably Linotype’s very popular Garamond No. 3. ATF Garamond was released ca. 1918, first in Roman and Italic, drawn by Morris Fuller Benton, the head of the American Type Founders design department. In 1922, Thomas M. Cleland designed a set of swash italics and ornaments for the typeface. The Bold and Bold Italic were released in 1920 and 1923, respectively. The new digital ATF Garamond expands upon this legacy, while bringing back some of the robustness of metal type and letterpress printing that is sometimes lost in digital adaptations. The graceful, almost lacy form of some of the letters is complemented by a solid, sturdy outline that holds up in text even at small sizes. The 18 fonts comprise three optical sizes (Subhead, Text, Micro) and three weights, including a new Medium weight that did not exist in metal. ATF Garamond also includes unusual alternates and swash characters from the original metal typeface. The character of ATF Garamond is lively, reflecting the spirit of the French Renaissance as interpreted in the 1920s. Its Roman has more verve than later old-style faces like Caslon, and its Italic is outright sprightly, yet remarkably readable.
  12. PF Tempesta Five - Unknown license
  13. DreamerOne - Unknown license
  14. BeckerBlackNF - 100% free
  15. Yes:Union - Unknown license
  16. DreamerOne - Unknown license
  17. Triangularity - Unknown license
  18. Zoloft - Unknown license
  19. Halter - Unknown license
  20. Teleprinter - Unknown license
  21. Sports Jock JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Sports Jock JNL brings you a serif-style sports font built on the classic design of an early-1900s block font with chamfered angles.
  22. MoreLeaves by Ingrimayne Type, $14.95
    In 1990 I designed the font XLeafMeAlone. In 2006 I decided that it was time to improve it. Instead of adding to it, I created two new fonts containing almost 200 leaves: MapleOaks and More Leaves. Among the leaves you will find in MoreLeaves are elm, cottonwood, tulip tree, ash, hickory, locust, ginko, aspen, sassafras, hawthorn, beech, and birch. There are also a few that come from shrubs and I am not sure what they are, but they looked interesting so I put them in. You will not find oaks, maples, or sycamores--they are in MapleOaks. Why leaves? Because people like them. As a large part of the biological world that is all around us, leaves are fascinating in their shapes and endless variations. In XLeafMeAlone I took about 50 shapes and rotated them 180 degrees to give a typeface with approximately 100 glyphs. In each of these two typefaces, MoreLeaves and MapleOaks, there are almost 100 glyphs. Each of those glyphs is rotated in 90-degree increments to yield two families of four typefaces that should be very useful if one wants to create borders of leaves.
  23. Avante Go - Personal use only
  24. Sea Dreams - 100% free
  25. USIS 1949 - Personal use only
  26. 2 Lines - Personal use only
  27. Avante Return - Unknown license
  28. PaddingtonSC - Unknown license
  29. 2006 Team - Unknown license
  30. Derek by Monotype, $40.99
    Thought to have developed from a display face first listed in 1890, the Derek Italic font is a heavy face ideal for short titling purposes.
  31. Hundo - Personal use only
  32. NeoTrash - Personal use only
  33. Fashion Passion - Unknown license
  34. DreamerOne - Unknown license
  35. PF Tempesta Five Condensed - Unknown license
  36. Dreamspeak - Unknown license
  37. Dreamspeak - Unknown license
  38. Pillbox Opaque - Unknown license
  39. 5 cent - Unknown license
  40. Silom - Unknown license
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