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  1. Neue Helvetica World by Linotype, $149.00
    Corporate design and branding across global markets requires a universal typographic identity. The timeless, world-famous classic Neue Helvetica® typeface is now available as World fonts in the six most important styles. With support for a total of 181 languages, Monotype’s Neue Helvetica® World typeface family is suitable to meet the typographic and linguistic demands of large international brands, corporations, publishing houses, and software and hardware developers. Neue Helvetica World’s language support covers the pan-European area (extended Latin alphabet, Cyrillic and Greek) as well as Arabic, Hebrew, Armenian, Georgian, Thai and Vietnamese. The Cyrillic alphabet contains not only the standard options, but also the complete Unicode block u+0400. In addition, a large number of new global currency symbols have been included such as the Russian ruble, Turkish lira, Indian rupee and Azerbaijani manat. Neue Helvetica World is offered as OpenType font with TrueType (.ttf) or PostScript CFF (.otf) outlines. The files size are reasonably small, ranging from 140 to 270 KB depending on format and style. The uprights each include 1708 glyphs and the italics have 1285 glyphs (some scripts, such as Arabic, do not have an italic design). Typeface pairings for further global support Should the language support of Neue Helvetica World still not be sufficient for your markets, there are numerous other typefaces available which perfectly complement Neue Helvetica World. These are our recommendations for South and East Asia languages: - Devanagari: Saral Devanagari - Japanese: Tazugane Gothic or Yu Gothic - Korean: YD Gothic 100 or YD Gothic 700 - Simplified Chinese: M Ying Hei PRC or M Hei PRC - Traditional Chinese: M Ying Hei HK or M Hei HK Please contact a Monotype representative for other pairing recommendations or typographic consultations.
  2. Leifa by Identity Letters, $39.00
    A flare-serif socialite. Elegant and affable at once. Leifa is a flare-serif typeface that strikes a balance between elegant and affable. It’s pleasant to read in text sizes yet takes center stage in headlines and display applications. With its higher-than-usual contrast, Leifa might evoke Didone typefaces at first. However, it differs from strictly Didone designs in the details: flattened serifs and deeply incised, tapered spurs provide an organic effect. These humanist elements are restrained and almost inconspicuous in body copy. It’s in display sizes that they realize their full potential. Set your message in Leifa, set it large, and it will get noticed. A true socialite, Leifa is a most welcome guest on any party. With its dual character and a range of weights that allow for fine-tuning the desired visual voice, it’s a brilliant choice for branding and editorial design. Its good-natured yet sophisticated character makes Leifa the perfect typeface for fashion, sports, lifestyle, social media, food and cooking, health, beauty, architecture, interior design, art, literature, theater, and travel. (And any other topic that you’d love to talk about at a dinner in good company.) The entire font family consists of eight weights. Each comes with an italic counterpart, totaling 16 styles. Leifa’s italics are oblique, optically corrected versions of the upright styles. Each style comprises a character set of 883 glyphs that includes small caps, a set of ligatures, tabular and old-style figures, case-sensitive forms, fractions, symbols, and many other features. Four stylistic sets allow you to adjust the appearance of the Leifa fonts: a single-story a (SS01), a simple f (SS02), a triple-story g (SS03), and thin punctuation marks (SS04) are at your disposal. If you’re looking for a typeface with some debonair spirit, look no further than Leifa.
  3. PB Capitalis Rustica IVc by Paweł Burgiel, $32.00
    PB Capitalis Rustica IVc is a font face designed for imitate latin writing style found in manuscripts from 1st to 9th century. All characters are handwritten by use ink and reed pen (calamus), scanned, digitized and optimized for best quality without lost its handwritten visual appearance. Character set support codepages: 1250 Central (Eastern) European, 1252 Western (ANSI), 1254 Turkish, 1257 Baltic. Include also additional characters for Cornish, Danish, Dutch and Welsh language, spaces (M/1, M/2, M/3, M/4, M/6, thin, hair, zero width space etc.) and historical characters (overlined Roman numerals, I-longa, historical ligatures for "nomina sacra" and "notae communes"). OpenType TrueType TTF (.ttf) font file include installed OpenType features: Access All Alternates, Localized Forms, Fractions, Ordinals, Superscript, Tabular Figures, Proportional Figures, Stylistic Alternates, Stylistic Set 1, Historical Forms, Historical Ligatures. Include also kerning as single 'kern' table for maximum possible backwards compatibility with older software. Historical ligatures for "nomina sacra" and "notae communes" are mapped to Private Use Area codepoints. Use of OpenType features to get historical characters: ïTo get "I-longa" use Stylistic Alternates for: "I"(U+0049), "i"(U+0069), "dotless i"(U+0131). ïTo get "nomina sacra" use Historical Ligatures and write uppercase letters: DS for: "Deus", DMS or DNS for: "Dominus" EPS for: "Episcopus", IHS for: "Iesus", PBR for: "Presbiter", SCS for: "Sanctus", SPS for: "Spiritus", XPS for: "Christus". ïTo get "notae communes" use Historical Ligatures and write: B(U+0042) + "middle dot"(U+00B7) for: "-BUS", Q(U+0051) + "middle dot"(U+00B7) for: "-QUE". ïTo get "scriptio continua" (writing without words separation) use Historical Forms (regular spaces are replaced by zero width spaces between words). ïTo get "middle dot" for separate words use Stylistic Set 1 (regular spaces are replaced by middle dot between words).
  4. MVB Solitaire Pro by MVB, $39.00
    A typeface is a tool. Sure, there are frilly fonts that are more art than craft, showy faces that exist merely to call attention to themselves. But, in the end, any functional typeface worth its salt lives to serve one thing first: the text, the content. Everything else—the fashion of the moment, the allure of individual words and letters—is secondary. MVB Solitaire™ epitomizes this universal typographic mandate. As a tempered sans serif somewhere between a humanist and a gothic, MVB Solitaire captures a 21st-century neutrality. But practical doesn’t have to mean banal. MVB Solitaire has a soul. While some “neutral” type is dead the moment the ink hits the page, MVB Solitaire delivers text that feels lively, contemporary, relevant. Readers will not tire of this type. Behind the useful exterior is an arsenal of thoughtful technical features. It’s no surprise that this family’s creator, Mark van Bronkhorst, was first a graphic designer before becoming a type designer. Mark built all the goodies into MVB Solitaire that he would appreciate as a user: case-sensitive punctuation; alternate forms that can be invoked individually or together; oldstyle and lining figures in both tabular and proportional widths; slightly shorter lining figures that don’t stand out in running text, but also cap-height figures for all-cap settings; and the ability to speak nearly any Latin-based language. MVB Solitaire aspires to be the sort of workhorse that a designer keeps installed on their system at all times. It is a family bound to have a permanent spot in the font menu, always at the ready for projects (those most common of all) where the typography mustn’t mask the message. It has that quality that all truly useful typefaces have: the capacity to get the job done without getting in the way.
  5. Lektorat by TypeTogether, $35.00
    Florian Fecher’s Lektorat font family is one for the books, and for the screens, and for the magazines. While an editorial’s main goals are to entertain, inform, and persuade, more should be considered. For example, clear divisions are necessary, not just from one article to the next, but in how each is positioned as op-ed or fact-based, infographic or table, vilifying or uplifting. From masthead to colophon, Lektorat has six concise text styles and 21 display styles to captivate, educate, and motivate within any editorial purpose. Magazines and related publications are notoriously difficult to brand and then to format accordingly. The research behind Lektorat focused on expression versus communication and what it takes for a great typeface to accomplish both tasks. In the changeover from the 19th to 20th century, German type foundry Schelter & Giesecke published several grotesque families that would become Lektorat’s partial inspiration. Experimentation with concepts from different exemplars gave birth to Lektorat’s manifest character traits: raised shoulders, deep incisions within highly contrasted junctions, and asymmetrical counters in a sans family. After thoroughly analysing magazine publishing and editorial designs, Florian discovered that a concise setup is sufficient for general paragraph text. So Lektorat’s text offering is concentrated into six total styles: regular, semibold, and bold with their obliques. Stylistic sets are equally minimal; an alternate ‘k, K’ and tail-less ‘a’ appear in text only. No fluff, no wasted “good intentions”, just a laser-like suite to focus the reader on the words. The display styles were another matter. They aim to attract attention in banners, as oversized type filling small spaces, photo knockouts, and in subsidiary headings like decks, callouts, sections, and more. For these reasons, three dialed-in widths — Narrow, Condensed, and Compressed — complete the display offerings in seven upright weights each, flaunting 21 headlining fonts in total. If being on font technology’s cutting edge is more your goal, the Lektorat type family is optionally available in three small variable font files for ultimate control and data savings. The Lektorat typeface was forged with a steel spine for pixel and print publishing. It unwaveringly informs, convincingly persuades, and aesthetically entertains when the tone calls for it. Its sans serif forms expand in methodical ways until the heaviest two weights close in, highlighting its irrepressible usefulness to the very end. Lektorat is an example of how much we relish entering into an agreed battle of persuasion — one which both sides actually enjoy.
  6. Vendetta by Emigre, $69.00
    The famous roman type cut in Venice by Nicolas Jenson, and used in 1470 for his printing of the tract, De Evangelica Praeparatione, Eusebius, has usually been declared the seminal and definitive representative of a class of types known as Venetian Old Style. The Jenson type is thought to have been the primary model for types that immediately followed. Subsequent 15th-century Venetian Old Style types, cut by other punchcutters in Venice and elsewhere in Italy, are also worthy of study, but have been largely neglected by 20th-century type designers. There were many versions of Venetian Old Style types produced in the final quarter of the quattrocento. The exact number is unknown, but numerous printed examples survive, though the actual types, matrices, and punches are long gone. All these types are not, however, conspicuously Jensonian in character. Each shows a liberal amount of individuality, inconsistency, and eccentricity. My fascination with these historical types began in the 1970s and eventually led to the production of my first text typeface, Iowan Old Style (Bitstream, 1991). Sometime in the early 1990s, I started doodling letters for another Venetian typeface. The letters were pieced together from sections of circles and squares. The n, a standard lowercase control character in a text typeface, came first. Its most unusual feature was its head serif, a bisected quadrant of a circle. My aim was to see if its sharp beak would work with blunt, rectangular, foot serifs. Next, I wanted to see if I could construct a set of capital letters by following a similar design system. Rectangular serifs, or what we today call "slab serifs," were common in early roman printing types, particularly text types cut in Italy before 1500. Slab serifs are evident on both lowercase and uppercase characters in roman types of the Incunabula period, but they are seen mainly at the feet of the lowercase letters. The head serifs on lowercase letters of early roman types were usually angled. They were not arched, like mine. Oddly, there seems to be no actual historical precedent for my approach. Another characteristic of my arched serif is that the side opposite the arch is flat, not concave. Arched, concave serifs were used extensively in early italic types, a genre which first appeared more than a quarter century after roman types. Their forms followed humanistic cursive writing, common in Italy since before movable type was used there. Initially, italic characters were all lowercase, set with upright capitals (a practice I much admire and would like to see revived). Sloped italic capitals were not introduced until the middle of the sixteenth century, and they have very little to do with the evolution of humanist scripts. In contrast to the cursive writing on which italic types were based, formal book hands used by humanist scholars to transcribe classical texts served as a source of inspiration for the lowercase letters of the first roman types cut in Italy. While book hands were not as informal as cursive scripts, they still had features which could be said to be more calligraphic than geometric in detail. Over time, though, the copied vestiges of calligraphy virtually disappeared from roman fonts, and type became more rational. This profound change in the way type developed was also due in part to popular interest in the classical inscriptions of Roman antiquity. Imperial Roman letters, or majuscules, became models for the capital letters in nearly all early roman printing types. So it was, that the first letters in my typeface arose from pondering how shapes of lowercase letters and capital letters relate to one another in terms of classical ideals and geometric proportions, two pinnacles in a range of artistic notions which emerged during the Italian Renaissance. Indeed, such ideas are interesting to explore, but in the field of type design they often lead to dead ends. It is generally acknowledged, for instance, that pure geometry, as a strict approach to type design, has limitations. No roman alphabet, based solely on the circle and square, has ever been ideal for continuous reading. This much, I knew from the start. In the course of developing my typeface for text, innumerable compromises were made. Even though the finished letterforms retain a measure of geometric structure, they were modified again and again to improve their performance en masse. Each modification caused further deviation from my original scheme, and gave every font a slightly different direction. In the lower case letters especially, I made countless variations, and diverged significantly from my original plan. For example, not all the arcs remained radial, and they were designed to vary from font to font. Such variety added to the individuality of each style. The counters of many letters are described by intersecting arcs or angled facets, and the bowls are not round. In the capitals, angular bracketing was used practically everywhere stems and serifs meet, accentuating the terseness of the characters. As a result of all my tinkering, the entire family took on a kind of rich, familiar, coarseness - akin to roman types of the late 1400s. In his book, Printing Types D. B. Updike wrote: "Almost all Italian roman fonts in the last half of the fifteenth century had an air of "security" and generous ease extremely agreeable to the eye. Indeed, there is nothing better than fine Italian roman type in the whole history of typography." It does seem a shame that only in the 20th century have revivals of these beautiful types found acceptance in the English language. For four centuries (circa 1500 - circa 1900) Venetian Old Style faces were definitely not in favor in any living language. Recently, though, reinterpretations of early Italian printing types have been returning with a vengeance. The name Vendetta, which as an Italian sound I like, struck me as being a word that could be taken to signifiy a comeback of types designed in the Venetian style. In closing, I should add that a large measure of Vendetta's overall character comes from a synthesis of ideas, old and new. Hallmarks of roman type design from the Incunabula period are blended with contemporary concerns for the optimal display of letterforms on computer screens. Vendetta is thus not a historical revival. It is instead an indirect but personal digital homage to the roman types of punchcutters whose work was influenced by the example Jenson set in 1470. John Downer.
  7. Roller Cores by Sarid Ezra, $15.00
    Introducing, Roller Cores - a paint roller typeface! Roller Cores is a paint roller inspired font. This font will give you roller and dry brush vibes. Suitable for any project. With unique characters make this font more special! Caps Only Fonts. Happy Creating!
  8. Bubble Rainbow by Balpirick, $15.00
    Bubble Rainbow is a Fun Monoline Handbrushed font. Bubble Rainbow is a fun and whimsical paint brushed display font. This font is perfect for children themed designs, especially when combined with bright colors. This font includes TTF, Bubble Rainbow also has multilingual support.
  9. Scratchedman by OCSstudio, $12.00
    Scratchedman Font is a natural handwritten font. This All Caps typeface is strong to stand out in your design projects. Scratchedman Font has two font styles Regular and Italic so you can customize it in your design project, as well as multilingual support.
  10. Ving Smith by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $25.00
    Ving Smith is a Script Font with Handwritten Style. The Ving Smith font made with digital brush pen strokes that making this font look authentic. This font is perfect for fashion brand, wedding invitation, business card, logo brand, signature, and then calligraphy.
  11. Sophia Reign by Angele Kamp, $26.00
    Meet Sophia Reign, the perfect font duo! She's got a handwritten signature font and an all-caps font that pairs perfectly with it. Use it for logos, magazines, Instagram quotes, branding, advertisement, and more. Buy this awesome font duo now and start creating!
  12. Shiny Aisyah by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $25.00
    Shiny Aisyah is a Script Font with Handwritten Style. The Shiny Aisyah font made with digital brush pen strokes that making this font look authentic. This font is perfect for fashion brand, wedding invitation, business card, logo brand, signature, and then calligraphy.
  13. Hebrew Amanda Std by Samtype, $59.00
    This is a modern, wonderful, and beautiful font. This font is super readable and can be used from Posters to books. The readability of this font is amazing. This font has the modern Hebrew punctuation: Shevana, Kamatz Katan, Dagesh Hazak, and Cholam Chaser.
  14. Franky Toys by Balpirick, $15.00
    FRANKY TOYS is a Playful Hand-brushed Font. display font. This font icolorful perfect for children themed designs, especially when combined with bright colors. FRANKY TOYS also multilingual support. Enjoy the font, feel free to comment or feedback, send me PM or email.
  15. Hysteria by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $25.00
    Hysteria is a Script Font with Stylish Textured Brush Style. The Hysteria font made with digital brush pen strokes that making this font look authentic. This font is perfect for fashion brand, wedding invitation, business card, logo brand, signature, and then calligraphy.
  16. Rational Mood by Pixel Colours, $18.00
    Rational Mood is a handwritten font trio that includes an uppercase font that combines perfect with a script font and is loaded with tons of cute extra illustrations. This is a perfect font to create quotes or texts with a handwritten, natural style.
  17. Melvens by Ronny Studio, $21.00
    Melvens is an experimental combination font. includes 2 fonts that have very different styles and appearances, but make this font look unique. This font is perfect for your design needs such as poster design, logo design, branding, social media design, books, magazines, etc.
  18. Hebrew Sefer Std by Samtype, $59.00
    This is a modern, wonderful, and beautiful font. This font is super readable and can be used for Posters to books. The readability of this font is amazing. This font has modern Hebrew punctuation: Shevana, Kamatz Katan, Dagesh Hazak, and Cholam Chaser.
  19. Justmine by GlyphStyle, $15.00
    Justmine is a signature style font that is casual and easy to read. Luxurious and premium looking fonts. This signature font is perfect for, watermarks, branding, business, business cards, product logos, etc. – Font feature Uppercase, Lowercase, Numerals & Punctuations, Stylistic Alt, Ligature, Multilanguage
  20. Santy Ehisa by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $25.00
    Santy Ehisa is a Stylish Script Font with Handwritten Style. The Santy Ehisa font made with digital brush pen strokes that making this font look authentic. This font is perfect for fashion brand, wedding invitation, business card, logo brand, signature, and then calligraphy.
  21. Hebrew Laila Std by Samtype, $59.00
    This is a modern, wonderful, and beautiful font. This font is super readable and can be used for Posters to books. The readability of this font is amazing. This font has modern Hebrew punctuation: Shevana, Kamatz Katan, Dagesh Hazak, and Cholam Chaser.
  22. Willgets Calligraphy by Soft Creative, $20.00
    Willgets Calligraphy is a classic calligraphy font. This is a classic thin font with an italic style. Here you will get a beautiful classic font. This font is available in several modern swirls that can make your work look elegant, sweet and perfect.
  23. People Dingbat by Beewest Studio, $30.00
    People Dingbats Font is high quality dingbats font. Whether you’re using it for crafts, digital design, fashion design, presentations, book cover, magaizine or making greeting cards, this font has the potential to become your favorite go-to font, no matter the occasion!.
  24. Pejuang Cinta by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $25.00
    Pejuang Cinta is a Script Font with Handwritten Style. The Pejuang Cinta font made with digital brush pen strokes that making this font look authentic. This font is perfect for fashion brand, wedding invitation, business card, logo brand, signature, and then calligraphy.
  25. Canker Sore - Unknown license
  26. Roughler by Forberas Club, $16.00
    Roughler is brush font with clean and simple font. This font can apply to banner, wallpaper, tees, music theme, cover and party moment with brush style.
  27. Antoni Bokir by Forberas Club, $16.00
    Antoni Bokir is brush font with clean and simple font. This font can apply to kids tees, banner, wallpaper, cover and party moment with brush style.
  28. Ampersands by CastleType, $39.00
    Each font contains 101 decorative ampersands. These fonts include ampersands from various display fonts in the CastleType Library as well as antique, ornate and calligraphic ampersands.
  29. Joyeux by Angele Kamp, $20.00
    Joyeux is a font family of an all caps font and a dingbat font with 52 cute clipart illustrations which will make crafting so much fun.
  30. Amaro Fleurie by Autographis, $29.50
    Amaro Fleurie is the first decorative addition to my Amaro font. Yes the font can be mixed with all Amaro fonts. Enjoy and cheers to you!
  31. Fishbones by Funk King, $5.00
    Fishbones is a font set consisting of fish-bone font-bats. Nothing fishy here – an extensive set of characters makes this an unusual and versatile font.
  32. Perpetua by Monotype, $41.99
    Eric Gill’s personal version of the Lapidary letterform. Perpetua® font field guide including best practices, font pairings and alternatives. Featured in: Best Fonts for Tattoos
  33. LaPointe's Road¼, crafted by the talented Albertine Nerevan, emerges as a genuinely expressive font, embodying a perfect blend of vintage charm and contemporary flair. This font is a tribute to the a...
  34. Babylon5 - Unknown license
  35. Cyrillic Old Face - Unknown license
  36. Ballsye by Putracetol, $28.00
    Say Hello to Ballsye, a Superb bold display font. This font is a very bold font so it has a strong impression. But other than that, this font can also be a fun and playful font. Ballsye is perfect for branding design, posters, apparel, for logotype, website header, fashion design and any more. Come with Opentype feature with a lot of alternates, its help you to make great lettering. This font is also support multi language.
  37. RT Dyans by Veteran Type, $14.00
    Dyans Font Family is a type of font that is inspired by vintage handwriting art that is often used in signwood, signpainting and others, usually this font is very suitable for manual hand lettering or hand painting art. This font uses the open type feature so you can explore alternative types in certain letters. Enjoyed This font conssist of: Stylistic Set Alternate Character Multilingual Support Math Symbol Numeral & Punctuation Hope your enjoy using this font Thank You.
  38. Click Brother by Grontype, $15.00
    Click Brother is an awesome and elegant script font which is first made by hand and deliver an unique style. This font comes with multiple ligatures and alternates to give you an extra creative work. Click Brother font support multilingual languages. The font is very good for logo tagline, Invitation Header, Flyer, magazine titles, etc. Make an amazing work with Click Brother Font. Features: Ligature and alternates Multilingual Support Numeral and punctuation Enjoy The Font. Regard Grontype
  39. SF Hussein by Sultan Fonts, $19.99
    SF Hussein font is designed to be used in broad writing and short sentences. It is an ornate heading font with minimal details. Its domain is stationery, logos, branding, ad design, and posters, and it can be paired with a range of other font styles to create different moods. This font is an improvement of the Hussein font that was presented by designer Sultan Al-Maqtari in 2013 The Hussain font supports Arabic, Latin, Persian, and Urdu.
  40. Firon by Maulana Creative, $14.00
    Firon is a modern Decorative Display font. Bold strokes, fun character with a bit of ligature and alternates. To give you extra creative work. Firon font support multilingual more than 100+ language. This font is good for logo design, Social media, Movie Titles, Books Titles, short text even long text letters, and good for your secondary text font with script or serif. Make stunning work with Firon font. This is all caps font style. Cheers, Maulana Creative
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