3,447 search results (0.02 seconds)
  1. Qurve Wide - Unknown license
  2. Qurve Hollow Thin - Unknown license
  3. Teenick - Unknown license
  4. Assimilation - Unknown license
  5. KookyRegular - Unknown license
  6. Damage™ Bludgeon - Unknown license
  7. ROCKY - Unknown license
  8. Angioma AOE - Unknown license
  9. Sanity - Unknown license
  10. Sanity - Unknown license
  11. Qurve Thin - Unknown license
  12. Psychoart by Nirmana Visual, $19.00
    Psychoart Typeface , contemporary of Psychedelic Serif font, inspired by 1970’s era. Psychoart offers beautiful typographic harmony for a diversity of design projects, including logos & branding, social media posts, advertisements & product designs.
  13. Vector by Reserves, $39.99
    Vector is inspired by the 1979 Atari Asteroids video game UI screen font, yet it has been completely reworked to achieve a more balanced and refined visual aesthetic, loosely adhering to the original source. Letterform widths, angles, metrics and kerning are thorougly tweaked throughout in an effort to recreate a modern classic anew and extend it's functionality. Stylistically, Vector accurately reflects it's name, exuding a uniform sense of flatness and rectangular geometry defined by it's retro-modernist origins.
  14. ITC Bottleneck by ITC, $39.00
    Tony Wenman designed the display typeface Bottleneck in the early 1970s and its figures reflect the spirit of the times. Its distinguishing characteristic is the extreme heaviness of the serifs in the lower third of the characters, a trait which the viewer could associate with the plateau shoes of the 1970s. Bottleneck is a carefree, playful typeface which can be found even today on entertainment fliers and retro advertisements. When used sparingly in headlines and slogans, it is a real eye-catcher. Similar typefaces are Julia Script, by David Harris, and Candice, by Alan Meeks.
  15. Futura Black by Bitstream, $39.99
    Josef Albers drew a stencil sanserif form at the Bauhaus in 1923 (published in 1926); Paul Renner and the Bauer design office made a similar design into a typeface in 1929, and rather confusingly included it in the Futura series. Many websites erroneously attribute the stencil design to Josef Albers, but there is no evidence that the two met or collaborated on Futura Black. In 1929 Josef Albers and Jan Tschichold corresponded on the “Transito” typeface (another very similar stencil typeface, while Paul Renner was working with Jan Tschichold.
  16. Koch Schrift by Ingo, $42.00
    A heavy blackletter; Rudolf Koch’s first type from 1909. On an old page full of type specimen from the 1930s, the type is described as ”Schwabacher (used by the Deutsche Reichsbahn [German Imperial Railway]).“ As a matter of fact, it is the first print of the Offenbach script master Rudolf Koch, who came out with this typeface in 1909. At that time, it was given the name ”Neudeutsch“ (New German). Later, it became very popular under the name Koch-Schrift, and was at times the official typeface of the Deutsche Reichsbahn (German Imperial Railway).
  17. Magistral by ParaType, $30.00
    The first three weights of the family were designed at ParaType (ParaGraph) in 1997 by Dmitry Kirsanov . They were based on the artworks of Moscow graphic designer Andrey Kryukov (1923-1997). The original version was developed by Kryukov at the end of the sixties for Russian railways. The proportions and elements of construction were inspired by Eurostile (1962) by Aldo Novarese. It is intended for use in advertising and display typography. In 2009, Dmitry added the new styles, corrected the old ones, and enhanced them with extended character sets.
  18. Blown Droid - Unknown license
  19. Interdimensional - 100% free
  20. Qurve Hollow Thin - Unknown license
  21. Komika Text - Unknown license
  22. Komika Text - Unknown license
  23. Pharmacy - Unknown license
  24. Back ttf - Unknown license
  25. Calvin and Hobbes - Unknown license
  26. Sanity Wide - Unknown license
  27. Sanity Wide - Unknown license
  28. Qurve Hollow Wide - Unknown license
  29. Sanity - Unknown license
  30. ITC Isadora by ITC, $29.99
    This calligraphic typeface, designed by Kris Holmes in 1989, manages to look both confident and relaxed, while showing great intricacy and beauty upon closer inspection; it is named after the dancer Isadora Duncan.
  31. Postillon by RMU, $30.00
    Herbert Post’s (1903-1978) blackletter fonts redesigned for nowadays’ use. Both font styles contain adorning swash caps. Typing N, o, and period, and activating the OT feature Ordinals produces an oldstyle number sign.
  32. Eco by FSD, $50.00
    Eco is a personal development of the lettering used in a 1970s logo of a little known company named Ageco. The only letters faithful to the logo's ones are E, C and O.
  33. Cubissimo by Hanoded, $15.00
    Cubissimo is a geometric font inspired by a 1929 poster advertising a museum exhibition. It is an all-caps cubist typeface designed to look good on posters. It comes with extensive language support.
  34. Pierrot by Linotype, $29.00
    Günter Jäntsch designed Pierrot in 1973. Its irregular flowing letterforms express the design from this time, where many personal irregular designs had been made. Pierrot is suitable for invitation cards, posters and signage.
  35. Vacation Mexicana JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    An image for a travel poster for the resort of Tulum, Mexico with its 1970s-era highly stylized semi-stencil type design inspired Vacation Mexicana JNL; available in both regular and oblique versions.
  36. Curly Coryphaeus - Unknown license
  37. Orlock Demo - Unknown license
  38. Monstered - Unknown license
  39. Sans Culottes - Unknown license
  40. Abiscuos - Unknown license
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