10,000 search results (0.055 seconds)
  1. BECROSS - Unknown license
  2. Mouth Breather BB - Personal use only
  3. Half Cut - Unknown license
  4. Vinyl Smooth BV - Unknown license
  5. Um Sticks Alienated - Unknown license
  6. Darkenstone - Unknown license
  7. BzzzBee - Unknown license
  8. Zodillinstrisstirust - Unknown license
  9. Kosmonaut - Unknown license
  10. Bamboo - Unknown license
  11. FlatTopSCapsSSK - Unknown license
  12. Arcanum - Personal use only
  13. Assimilate - Unknown license
  14. Cat Cat - Unknown license
  15. Victor - Unknown license
  16. LYNX BRK - Unknown license
  17. Ragey - Unknown license
  18. SteelTown - Unknown license
  19. Anglo-Saxon, 8th c. - Unknown license
  20. JoliScript - Unknown license
  21. Orbus - Unknown license
  22. Dungeon - Unknown license
  23. Koch Rivoli - Unknown license
  24. Leafyshade - Unknown license
  25. 1980 Portable - Unknown license
  26. Candy Kisses - Unknown license
  27. Fairytale - Unknown license
  28. Bedaax - Personal use only
  29. FR Warrior Plain - Personal use only
  30. Lemonstyle Sweet - Personal use only
  31. Enchanted Land - Personal use only
  32. Fujita Ray - Personal use only
  33. Use Your Words by Joanne Marie, $10.00
    Here’s a different kind of font for the hand lettered look! Use Your Words is a catchwords font family consisting of 3 fonts: 1.) Use Your Words Circles 2.) Use Your Words Arrows 3.) Use Your Words Banners It’s all hand drawn and hand lettered in a monoline script font with a shadow effect to boot. This font will be perfect to include on designs such as mugs, t-shirts, bags, notebooks, inspirational quotes for the home and office, and more. There are 215 words (no more than 4 letters per word) in both upper and lowercase, plus numbers, ampersand, question and exclamation marks in all three styles. There are 444 glyphs per font. I love using this font in my hand lettering designs and I hope you will too!
  34. VanishInTheHeat - Unknown license
  35. Shlop - Unknown license
  36. Parallello - Unknown license
  37. Rafaella by Lián Types, $37.00
    To Rafaella, a menina dos cachos. We, designers, have grown accustomed to seeing that lowercase letters—not only in calligraphy but also in typography (1)—may be very playful and decorative. Almost every part of them can become a potential swash, ligature or decorative accolade (2) if the designer has some expertise regarding this matter. However, since we are living in an era that elevates the status of handcrafts, lettering has gained a lot of ground in different kinds of mediums, and with it there’s a sort of overuse of capitals. This may be due to the reason that lettering pieces need a high impact to convey their messages and many times why big capitals are the only solution. With this in mind, I started Rafaella: A font consisting entirely of capitals which go from unadorned to very decorative. Rafaella has ductus and forms vaguely based on the 1970s Bookman-like styled fonts. The presence and behaviour of serifs and ball terminals in this style were the perfect excuse to make really attractive aternates which the user can choose from the glyphs panel. The result is a font full of life. Able to be both very playful and formal due to its roman style which can be combined with (and between) a wide range of other styles of expressive scripts or geometric fonts with nice results (3). Also try Rafaella Shade Solo combined with Rafaella or Rafaella Bold for a layer effect to emphasize any given word or phrase. NOTES (1) See my fonts Erotica from 2013 or Dream from 2014. (2) Accolades is a wonderful word that refers to the ornaments made around the words in the spencerian style of calligraphy (3) Combinations often seen in different pieces of lettering were usually a contrast of style is wanted.
  38. Pea Shirley - Unknown license
  39. Pea Susan - Unknown license
  40. Pea Neffer - Unknown license
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