10,000 search results (0.038 seconds)
  1. Pecot Spacewarp - Unknown license
  2. Iconified - Unknown license
  3. Foxjump - Unknown license
  4. FoxGrunge2 - Unknown license
  5. Highlander - Unknown license
  6. Stencil Allround by Letterwerk, $20.00
    Stencil Allround is a rounded capital letter font made for display use.
  7. Pligo by Mans Greback, $29.00
    Pligo - a balloon, graffiti, liquorice, party and cartoon typeface by Måns Grebäck.
  8. Brashee by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Brashee is a serif font with characters made up of straight lines.
  9. Beautiful ES - 100% free
  10. Futurex Striped - Unknown license
  11. Futurex Alienated - Unknown license
  12. Futurex Punched - Unknown license
  13. Queenzy by ZetDesign, $15.00
    Introducing my new font "Queenzy" Queenzy is made by paying attention to details on each letter so that it produces a beautiful arrangement of letters that can be used in each of your design work. I hope you like my creation.This font is also made in an italic version
  14. Type Wronger JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A typewriter gives you clean, crisp text from its keys, but Type Wronger JNL does anything but this. A distressed typewriter font, this font emits a rough, crude imprint as if the original had been photocopied, copied from that copy and re-copied until the original message had degenerated.
  15. Futurex - AlternatLC - Unknown license
  16. Futurex - AlternateTC - Unknown license
  17. Whatnot 22 by Hanoded, $15.00
    In 2014 I made a font called Whatnot. I think I made with with a roller ball pen, but I am not sure, as it was a long timer ago. I have always liked Whatnot font and I think it deserves a second lease on life, so I made a new (and improved) version of it, called Whatnot 22. Not Catch 22... It now comes with better kerning, multilingual support (including Vietnamese, Sami and Greek) and a cool set of contextual alternates that cycles as you type.
  18. Cheesy Fingers by PizzaDude.dk, $18.00
    I love cheese snacks in all kinds of variations. As a kid I even loved having chessy fingers, but as an adult I prefer to wash my hands (instead of licking and sucking each finger "clean") So, as a loving memory of an all time favourite snack, I made this all caps organic looking sans. Obviously handmade, and cleaned up digitally...just a little bit. Furthermore I have made 5 different versions of each letter and made sure that there is plenty of multilingual support!
  19. Eurofurence Modified - Unknown license
  20. Zyphyte - Personal use only
  21. SirClive - Unknown license
  22. Street Corner - Personal use only
  23. ABC-LongLegs - Personal use only
  24. Aquaduct Warp - Personal use only
  25. Czaristite - Personal use only
  26. Ptarmigan - Unknown license
  27. Daze - Unknown license
  28. Street Quaked - Unknown license
  29. Aquaduct Italic - Unknown license
  30. Bardour - Unknown license
  31. Tomate - Unknown license
  32. Story Lovers by Forberas Club, $16.00
    A font that is purposely made for writing romantic memories or important stories.
  33. Trsc by Konrad Trzeszczkowski, $5.00
    This font was based on calligraphic letters I made with pen size 2B.
  34. Kulli by Volcano Type, $19.00
    This font is based on a simple sketch made during a phone call.
  35. Celonius Mark XIX by Vic Fieger, $2.99
    This is a squarish, compact font that may help create an interesting logo.
  36. Komfortabel by Bogstav, $13.00
    Say hello to my fancy handmade font - made with in a scribllelicious mood.
  37. Cider by Suomi, $25.00
    Cider is based on a logo I made for a Finnish cider brand.
  38. Sadnez by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    A grungy and narrow bad-boy tagfont. Take it to the streets, home!
  39. Haarlemmer by Monotype, $29.00
    Haarlemmer is a recreation of a never-produced Jan Van Krimpen typeface that goes one step beyond authentic: it shows how he wanted it to be designed in the first place. The original, drawn in the late 1930s, was created for the Dutch Society for the Art of Printing and Books and was to be used to set a new edition of the Bible, using Monotype typesetting. Hence the problem: fonts for metal typesetting machines like the Linotype and Monotype had to be created within a crude system of predetermined character width values. Every letter had to fit within and have its spacing determined by a grid of only 18 units. Often, the italic characters had to share the same widths as those in the roman design. Van Krimpen believed this severely impaired the design process. The invasion of Holland in World War II halted all work on the Bible project, and the original Haarlemmer never went into production. Flash forward about sixty years. Frank E. Blokland, of The Dutch Type Library, wanted to revive the original Haarlemmer, but this time as Van Krimpen would have intended. Blokland reinterpreted the original drawings and created a typeface that matched, as much as possible, Van Krimpen's initial concept. While Van Krimpen's hand could no longer be on the tiller, a thorough study of his work made up for his absence. The result is an exceptional text family of three weights, with complementary italic designs and a full suite of small caps and old style figures. Van Krimpen would be proud.
  40. Wedding by HiH, $10.00
    Wedding Regular was originally designed by Morris Fuller Benton for ATF and released as Wedding Text in 1901. It is a lighter version of his ENGRAVER'S OLD ENGLISH of the same period. Wedding Regular is based on the Textura style of blackletter that continued in popularity in England into the 16th century, long after the Dutch, French and Italians had moved to a Roman model that expressed the Renaissance humanism of the period. Wedding Headline is a still lighter version of the regular text face, suitable for setting larger sizes while still preserving the delicacy of the decorative hairlines. Textura continues in use in England and the United States for newspaper mastheads, gift shop signs, wedding invitations and programs and other applications where a feeling of tradition is desired. I recently saw an 1980ish photo of a “Tubby Isaac” sign in London using textura. I believe Benton’s design captures that feeling without being heavy-handed and still remaining quite readable for eyes accustomed to Roman lettering. Both Wedding Regular and Wedding Headline convey a comfortable familiarity. These two fonts may be purchased together at an attractive discount or they may be purchased separately. The full character set may be found in the pdf file that you can download from the gallery section. The two monks (alt-0172 and alt-0177) are from a set of sixteenth century decorative initial letters by Gering and Renbolt. Please note that there are two different eszetts, the blackletter style at alt-0126 and the antiqua style at the alt-0223.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing