10,000 search results (0.046 seconds)
  1. Whomp by Sudtipos, $59.00
    Whomp takes its inspiration from the work of an American master in sign painting and alphabet manipulation: Alf Becker . In 1932, Becker began designing a series of alphabets to be published in Signs of the Times magazine at the rate of one alphabet per month. Nine years later, 100 of those alphabets were compiled in one book that became an enormous success among sign painters. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, many Alf Becker alphabets were digitized with blurbs that falsely credit an “Alf Becker typeface”. Alf Becker was not really a typeface kind of guy. He was more of a calligrapher and sign painter. His alphabets were either incomplete or full of variations on different letters, and didn't become typefaces until the digital era. This particular Becker alphabet was quite incomplete. In fact, it wasn't a showing of an alphabet, but words on a poster. Alejandro Paul took the challenge of drawing, digitizing, restructuring, and finally building a complete usable typeface from that partial alphabet. He then extended his pleasure by once again playing with the wonderful possibilities of OpenType. Whomp comes with more than 100 alternates, tons of swashy endings and ligatures, all built into the font and accessible through OpenType palettes in programs that support such features. This is the in-your-face kind of font that stands among other Becker-based alphabets as paying most homage to the vision of this great American artist who saw letters as live ever-changing beings. Whomp is right at home when used on packaging, signage, posters, and entertainment related products.
  2. Kontext V by Elster Fonts, $20.00
    Imagine a font that is easier to read the smaller it is – or the further away the text is. There are already many line screen fonts, I wanted to take it to the extreme and use as few lines as possible, while keeping the grid of the fonts metrics. The result is a typeface that lives up to its name. Each individual line makes no sense on its own; individual letters are only recognisable in the context of all associated lines, individual letters are most likely to be recognised in the context of whole words. Attached to a building wall, text would be readable from a great distance and become increasingly difficult to decipher the closer you get to the building. Placed on the ground or on a large flat roof, text would only be readable from an aeroplane or - depending on the size - in Google Earth. Kontext has old style figures, superscript numerals, case-sensitive questiondown and exclamdown and an alternative ampersand, 390 glyphs at all. Use the same value for font size and line spacing to keep the lines in the grid, or change the line spacing in 10% steps. Change the spacing in 50-unit or 25-percent increments to keep the grid. The »V« in the font name stands for vertical (lines). The numbers in the font name refer to the brightness of the background and letters themselves, with the first number describing the background and the second the letters. Starting with »00« (white) to »200« (dark) See also my family Kontext Dot
  3. Arsapia by URW Type Foundry, $49.99
    Michael Hoffmann manufactures digital fonts for 30 years. At URW++ he contributed to the technological progress. Over the years, he also specialized in the ideal representation of fonts on screen and the complex assembly of international fonts with scripts of all countries. In his latest project he put the emphasis on developing a highly readable typeface. Less interested in the design as in the functionality of this typeface, he designed Arsapia which he has now installed as a system font on all his computers. Michael Hoffmann studied Japanology at the University of Hamburg and traveled in the early years of his professional activity frequently to Japan, there to train the IKARUS font production tools to Japanese customers. In his spare time he plays guitar or golf depending on the weather. The typeface Arsapia has been designed in such a way that all three font styles Light, Regular and Bold have the same width. When a user therefore opts for the use of Arsapia Light, even though he has already written his text in Regular, nothing changes with respect to the letter tracking. When choosing the Bold for emphasis: Nothing changes except the blackness of the letters. A font change does not engender unwanted line and page breaks of itself. All letters can be clearly distinguished from each other. 1 l I O 0 are all different. For programmers and lovers of monospaced fonts Michael Hoffmann has developed a fourth typeface: Arsapia Mono. This is the perfect terminal font.
  4. LaFarge by Typetanic Fonts, $39.00
    LaFarge is a typeface primarily inspired by the historic mosaic titling capitals found in the New York City Subway, designed by architect Squire J. Vickers and his staff between 1915-1927. These elegant but industrial signs are characteristic of early-20th century American architectural lettering, and show an evolution of the classical Roman capitals to lower contrast, bolder serifs, and more regular character widths. The majority of this lettering still remains in subway stations today, and though elements of the style vary from sign to sign, many carry the unique features that are reflected in LaFarge: high-waisted crossbars with angled serifs, elegantly curved “R” leg, and distinctive trapezoidal serifs. LaFarge expands this style into a lower case, taking cues from contemporary typefaces like Bookman, Cheltenham, and Della Robbia. A number of typographic features are included, such as small caps, ordinal indicators / superscript letters, arrows, and a set of borders inspired by early subway tile. The result is a fashionable, architecturally-minded typeface that is just as at home on the façade of a grand public building as it is on packaging, magazines, or the web. LaFarge works well in both text and display settings, remaining readable at small sizes but showing off its elegant details in larger uses. LaFarge has received the Communication Arts Typography Award, the ADC Annual Merit Award, is included in the 2020 STA 100, and was part of designer Greg Shutters’ winning portfolio in the 2019 Type Directors Club Ascender Awards. You can download a PDF specimen of LaFarge, and also view a video of LaFarge in action.
  5. Swarha by Gumpita Rahayu, $18.00
    Built in 1930 - 1935 by Dutch architect Wolff Schoemaker, the Swarha Islamic Building was originally used as a lodging for the honoured guest country and the journalists for Asia-Africa Conference in 1955. This building has an important role as one of Bandung historical art deco heritage, with the art deco typefaces styles on it's singage in this building, giving it a more classic west and east taste. Wolff Schoemaker was trying to combine the elements between eastern and western culture in design. One of his works was the Swarha Islamic Building in a circular design with rounded and high dynamic angle. Unfortunately the Swarha Islamic Building has been abandoned and and less attentioned by the local people itself to preserve this historic building. So I'm trying to raise the value of the historical heritage by creating this typefaces. This typefaces was inspired by the Swarha Building characteristic itself with its solid construction and dynamic, by adding classic taste on each characters. Available in two styles, Neue and Rounded represents the classic architectural Swarha Islamic Building styles with tropical Bandung Art Deco taste. This typeface is highly usable as a display type for your designs, and will fit with movie titles, magazines, your classic shops logo and signage designs, or you can use this typefaces as your web pages headlines. The characters of this typefaces are only in uppercase style, but it built with small caps on the lowercase featured, and additional Opentype Features were loaded, some stylistic alternates, accessible catchwords in the discretionary ligatures, and standard ligatures.
  6. Deibi - Personal use only
  7. Sacnoth by Intellecta Design, $23.90
    Sacnoth is a font inspired in the old knots celtic visual.
  8. Emuna MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Please check these advanced features in this link: https://tinyurl.com/ybgdsxme
  9. Pitshanger by Device, $29.00
    Pitshanger is loosely derived from a shop sign in Limogues, France.
  10. Slam Dunk by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A wild and wacky font that falls in that extreme catagory.
  11. Kabel DT Condensed by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1992.
  12. Blozend by Thinkdust, $10.00
    Blozend is a display font designed by Dani Montesinos in 2010.
  13. Balloon by Bitstream, $29.99
    Another informal script designed in 1939 by M.K. Kaufmann for ATF.
  14. Graphicus DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1992.
  15. Goudy Old Style DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1992.
  16. Impuls by Bitstream, $29.99
    A vigorous brush design by Paul Zimmermann for Wagner in 1954.
  17. Convex DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1999.
  18. Tali MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Finesse and style in this condensed hand drawn elegant type forms.
  19. Ad Lib by Bitstream, $29.99
    Designed for informal effects in 1961 by Freeman Craw for ATF.
  20. Garamond DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1992.
  21. Newhouse DT by DTP Types, $89.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1992.
  22. Pelham DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1992.
  23. Stencil by Bitstream, $29.99
    Gerry Powell’s stencil version of Clarendon designed for ATF in 1938.
  24. Speedball Metropolitan Caps by Intellecta Design, $6.00
    a decorative caps font based in designs of old Speedball booklets
  25. KG Inimitable Original by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    A bold kid-friendly title font in a whimsical unicase style.
  26. EcoNomico by FSD, $50.00
    Eco-nomico is the pop version of Eco , designed in 2001.
  27. Antiqua Shaded by Intellecta Design, $24.90
    a well crafted font inspired in classic wood type fonts heritage
  28. Macarena DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1999.
  29. DB Circles-Frilly by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    DB Circles - Frilly is an adorable DoodleBat placed in uniform circles.
  30. Italican Oblique by Typotheticals, $9.00
    Italican Oblique is an unconnected script style font. Updated in 2022
  31. KG Drops Of Jupiter by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Pretty handwriting in an upright, classic feminine style. Nice and neat.
  32. American Advertise 013 by Intellecta Design, $9.00
    inspired in classic wood type heritage fonts from old America's foundryes
  33. Untitled Wood Type by Intellecta Design, $13.90
    a classic wood type font, in an attractive set of variations
  34. Engravers DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1990.
  35. Agartal MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Flexible elegance in one font, as creamy as you can imagine...
  36. Art Nouveau 2 BA by Bannigan Artworks, $19.95
    This is an original font designed in the Art Nouveau style.
  37. Triest DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    Based on custom design work by DTP Types Limited in 1990.
  38. KG Life Is Messy by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    A messy, markered, painted font in pure whimsical and messy style.
  39. TimeClocks by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Contains 4 clock designs in quarter hour increments totaling 192 clocks.
  40. Sindelar by Willerstorfer, $95.00
    Please note: Sindelar webfonts are exclusively available at willerstorfer.com Sindelar is a capable, contemporary text face addressing today’s news design requirements. Its large x-height, low contrast and robust serifs grant a high legibility in small sizes. The balanced, well chosen proportions make the typeface economic (i.e. space saving) without giving it a too narrow appearance. These characteristics make it the ideal choice for extensive text setting in newspapers and magazines – on paper and on screen. Named after famous Austrian football (soccer) player Matthias Sindelar (1903–1939), one of the best players of his time, the typeface shares two major qualities with its namesake: their technical brilliance and their way of performing aesthetically to the last detail. The football player’s nickname »Der Papierene« (the Paper-man) elegantly refers to the media too. Although optimised for small sizes, Sindelar’s low contrast and robust serifs give the typeface a strong impact and an unmistakable personality in larger sizes. Sindelar’s calligraphic influences can be noticed in the Italics best. The italic letters are inclined by slightly different angles, respecting the letters’ shapes and proportions and resulting in a balanced, yet vivid appearance. Sindelar comes in 18 styles – nine weights in Roman and Italic each. Each font is equipped with a huge character set of about 980 glyphs and various OpenType features.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing