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  1. Flamingo by URW Type Foundry, $35.99
    The design of the typeface Flamingo by Dior Sirous was inspired by this beautiful bird, creating long slim lines with soft curves at the ends. It is best suited for display use in Art Deco style.
  2. Futuristic by WAP Type, $10.00
    Futuristic is modern display font with an incredibly futuristic feel. Whether you’re looking for fonts for Instagram or calligraphy scripts for DIY projects, this font will turn any creative idea into a true piece of art!
  3. French Wine JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    French Wine JNL is an Art Deco thick-and-thin type design based on the hand lettering from a vintage poster for Monarch Cabernet Sauvignon wine. The typeface is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  4. Sveva by astype, $58.00
    Sveva Versal is a light swinging art nouveau caps only headliner, with swash like alternates and lots of special combinations. It's well suited to set a short and fancy block or line of text. PDF Specimen
  5. Northbrook JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A monoline spurred sans serif typeface named “Elandkay” from the 1895 Cleveland Type Foundry specimen book was the design model for Northbrook JNL. This Art Nouveau-influenced design is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  6. Death Festival by Yoga Letter, $18.00
    "Death Festival" is a unique and elegant graffiti font. This font contains uppercase, lowercase, numerals, punctuation, and multilingual support. Very suitable for banners, posters, stickers, tattoos, wall street, wall art, murals, Christmas, Halloween, Valentine's, and others.
  7. Melodie Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The Art Nouveau hand lettering on the sheet music for 1915's "I'm Glad It was Only A Dream" served as the inspiration for Melodie Nouveau JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  8. Pumkinpie by Balpirick, $15.00
    Pumkinpie is a cute and lovely handwritten font. Fall in love with its simple and neat style and use it to create gorgeous wedding invitations, beautiful stationary art, eye-catching social media posts, and much more!
  9. Camera by Dharma Type, $19.99
    Legible, simple and very lovely sans serif is based on art deco advertisement from 1800s to early 20th. The sweetest sans for your retro-style project. This font include ligatures and small capital for advanced typography.
  10. Advertisers Gothic by SoftMaker, $8.99
    With Advertisers Gothic, SoftMaker revives a 1917 design by Robert Wiebking. Inspired by Art Nouveau (Jugendstil) lettering, this typeface is as fresh as it was back then and is well-suited for advertising and display work.
  11. Faux Decaux JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Faux is false or phony in French and Decaux is a spoof spelling of Deco, thus "False Deco". Faux Decaux JNL will still fit your Art Deco revival project and blends well with complimentary font designs.
  12. Via Roma Display by Font&Co., $19.00
    A font inspired by regime propaganda inscriptions found in Italian institutional and civic architecture of the 20’s and 30’s. Bold, severe lettering, suggestive of pre-war Italian Art Deco and American Depression Modern aesthetics.
  13. Gray Light by Ali Hamidi, $10.00
    Gray Light is a fun and friendly brushed display font. Whether you’re looking for fonts for Instagram or calligraphy scripts for DIY projects, this font will turn any creative idea into a true piece of art!
  14. Wet Dog by Leimone Design, $8.00
    Wet Dog is the ultimate fur font reflecting the global movement of street pop art, Playful, yet with attitude. A versatile display font for making strong, loud statements, just about as shy as a wet dog!
  15. Susanna by K-Type, $20.00
    A light sans serif designed for Susanna Lakner’s 22 Days mail art project. The characters were drawn on each of 22 evenings throughout November 2004. In December the drawings were scanned to create the Susanna font.
  16. Summerville JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Summerville JNL is a condensed Art Nouveau slab serif design inspired by a typeface called “Superior” [found in the Barnhart Brothers & Spindler type specimen book circa 1897], and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  17. PXL3287 by BW90, $25.00
    PXL3287 is pixel art font inspired by '80s space and sci-fi cartoons and arcade games. It contains more than 220 glyphs (capitals, lower-case letters, numbers, plus many other characters) and supports many european languages.
  18. Hymers JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Born on May 8, 1892 in Reno Nevada, Lewis Franklin (“Lew” ) Hymers left an indelible mark as a caricaturist, cartoonist and graphic artist. At the age of twenty [in 1912] he worked for the San Francisco Chronicle. During World War I he worked for the Washington Post. He even was employed for a time by Walt Disney as an animator - but most of his life was spent in either Tujunga, California or his birthplace of Reno, Nevada as a self-employed illustrator. Hymers inked a feature for the Nevada State Journal called “Seen About Town”, which was published during the 1930s and 1940s. In this panel, he caricaturized many of the familiar faces around Reno. He also designed signs, logos, post cards and numerous other commercial illustrations for clients, but what has endeared him to a number of fans was his vast library of stock cuts (the predecessor to paper and electronic clip art) which feature his humorous characters in various professions and life situations. So popular is his work amongst those “in the know” that a clip art book collection of over seven hundred of his drawings that was issued by Dover Publications [but long out of print] commands asking prices ranging from just under $15 to well over $100 for a single copy. Lew Hymers passed away on February 5, 1953 just a few months shy of his 61st birthday. Although his artwork depicts the 1930s and 1940s lifestyles, equipment and conveniences, more than sixty years after his death they stand up amazingly well as cheerful pieces of nostalgia. The twenty-seven images (and some variants) in Hymers JNL were painstakingly re-drawn from scans of one of his catalogs and is but just a tiny fraction of the hundreds upon hundreds of illustrations from the pen of this prolific artist.
  19. Maiandra by Galapagos, $39.00
    The Maiandra family of typefaces were inspired by an early example of Oswald Cooper's hand-lettering, as seen in an advertisement for a book on home furnishing, circa 1909. Although many of Oz Cooper's letterform designs were cast in metal type, this particular one was not. Cooper's design itself was inspired by examples of letterforms he had admired in his study of Greek epigraphy (inscriptions). Cooper combined those ancient forms with the flair characteristic of design styles of his time. The result was an attractive design possessing subtle, purposeful irregularities, or "meanders" in his skilled brushwork. The Cooper design exhibits a unique warmth and harmony in text, while presenting a compelling rhythm, color and texture on the page. "Realizing the presence of this uniform warmth and readability," notes Dennis, "I decided to expand the design into a family of three weights with companion italics." The weights for the Maiandra family were selected for their versatility in usage over a broad range of output device resolutions. Indeed, "the consideration of eventual display resolutions, be they for screen or printer, provided the greatest challenge in the design of this typeface family," explains Dennis. Creating shapes that conform to the rigors of digital letterforms and modern rendering environments, without losing the unique characteristics of Oz Cooper's original design, is what Dennis has accomplished with his tribute to this great designer of the past. Maiandra, whose name derives from the Greek 'maiandros', meaning 'meander,' is intended for extended text use, as well as for informal subject matter, such as business correspondence, brochures and broadsides. "An example of a good use for Maiandra," notes Dennis, "is in printed matter relating to the turn-of-the-century art period known as the Arts and Crafts Movement. It can stand alone or be used with designs that complement its shape and color."
  20. Olymp80 by Konst.ru, $10.00
    Dedicated to the XXII summer Olympic Games. I was inspired by the icons of these games when creating font Olymp80. This is an excerpt from the official report of the Moscow Olympics: "Sports pictographs, as we know, are pictographic drawings symbolising sports. They serve as points of reference and help overcome language barrier. Over the past few years, they have been integrated into the decoration of Olympic cities, and have been depicted in Olympic posters, commemorative medals, postage stamps, tickets, souvenirs, etc. On the OCOG-80’s request, graduates from several art colleges took up the design of the pictographs of the insignia as the theme of their dissertations. With the help of the research institute of industrial aesthetics, the Organising Committee chose the work submitted by Nikolai Belkov, Mukhina Art School graduate from Leningrad. The State Committee for Inventions and Discoveries under the USSR Council of Ministers recognised the new design as a production pattern. Though highly stylised, the new signs are easily comprehensible. They are smoother in outline because they are constructed at an angle of 30-60 (previously the angle was 45-90). Another merit of the new system is that the designs can be adapted for use in four representations: direct (solid, black against a white background), reverse (solid, white against a black background), contour (black contour against a white background), and reverse-contour (white contour against a black background), and permit several colour and shade and size variations." All text and pictures you may see on 1980 Moscow, Volume 2, Part 2, Page 420. Monospaced font for names, logotypes, titles, headers, topics etc. Font includes only uppercase letters with two alternative designs for each letter.
  21. Lempicka by Molly Suber Thorpe, $17.99
    Lempicka is a ligature-rich typeface duo with support for Latin and Greek. Lempicka Display and Small Caps are a pair of light, clean fonts with strong Art Deco character. Lempicka Display has over 150 ligatures and alternates (in Greek, too!), so it's extremely customizable and versatile. Lempicka Small Caps is Display's little sister: the perfect complement for creating hierarchy in a layout.⁠⠀ This is a beautiful typeface for wedding invitations and personal stationery, as well as unique logo design and branding projects. The name of this type family is an homage to Art Deco painter Tamara de Lempicka.
  22. Bandleader JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    How does one arrive at a font name? With the thousands of digital typefaces available, it's not an easy process. Bandleader JNL was modeled from the hand-lettered title on a piece of sheet music called "Largo", which means "slow tempo". Since the names "Largo" and "Tempo" were already taken, what other musical theme would fit? The lettering is in an Art Deco style, and Big Band was all the rage of the Art Deco period; therefore "Bandleader". Sometimes the road to naming a font takes on many twists and turns but the end result is always gratifying.
  23. New Daily by URW Type Foundry, $39.99
    Marit Otto about New Daily: This typeface design has a modern but yet classic appearance. That is why she listens to the name New Daily. I took some elements from the Art Nouveau and Art Deco (type) styles. And modernized it by cultivating the beautiful curved features of both styles and playing with the stylish fluid lines and open structures. By adding a bit of the no-nonsense office look of a typeface like Nimbus Sans a new but familiar look occurs. This typeface is very readable and useful for many purposes. It has a playful distinguished character.
  24. Absolute Graffiti by Nirmana Visual, $22.00
    Introducing our vibrant and edgy graffiti style font, designed to unleash your creativity and make a bold statement. With its urban-inspired letterforms and street art aesthetics, this font is perfect for adding an energetic and rebellious touch to your designs. Inspired by the vibrant graffiti culture, this font captures the raw and expressive nature of spray-painted lettering. Its dynamic and fluid strokes, along with the signature drips and splatters, give your designs an authentic street art vibe. Whether you're designing album covers, posters, or urban-themed branding materials, this font is sure to grab attention.
  25. Moai Variable by Unio Creative Solutions, $16.00
    A neo-brutalist variable typeface conceived with flexible proportions and a singular heavy weight, including the oblique. Useful for any quirky display uses. Designed with extra-wide contrasting shapes, as a result of an extreme simplification of traditional typographic letterforms, “Moai” has a variable width that adapts to your needs, pushing for maximum readability. It's perfect for logos, headlines, posters, art projects, social media, visual identity, corporate image, film posters, music cover art, and books. Specifications: - Files included: Moai Variable including obliques - Multi-language support (Central, Eastern, Western European languages) - OpenType Features Thanks for viewing, Unio.
  26. Used Servers by AltaTech, $17.99
    Jump back to the future with both faces of the Used Servers family. This blocky titling font comes ready with ligatures and diacritics for all of your English, French, and German retro-future needs. Art Deco density combines with subtly-weighted horizontals for a slight 3D effect. As a retro omni-technical font with roots in OCR and n-segment displays, Used Servers is equally at home as: Titling in an 80s cassette-punk text adventure Environmental advertising in a cyberpunk megalopolis Art Deco filigree worked into a sacred orb Glyphs holding secrets from before time
  27. Calle 26 by Christian Gamba Pardo, $9.90
    This group of icons has graffiti as central theme, based on the most representative images and styles of the artists; Guache, Toxicomano and DjLu. In addition, the 26th Street corridor (also known as El Dorado Avenue) was taken as the main reference because it brings together the work of many important exponents in this type of art; at least locally and nationally. Some icons are characterized by have a similar appearance with the Stencil technique or by have a loose stroke with high contrast. This font can be used in projects and works related to street art.
  28. SK Klyaksa by Shriftovik, $32.00
    SK Klyaksa is an experimental font inspired by the most striking and unusual artistic techniques of graffiti art. Its non-standard shapes, rounded points and hypnotic curved lines immerse you in the world of bright colors and unlimited creative freedom on the streets of the city. The SK Klyaksa font plays on the contrast between lightness and heaviness, creating an effect of brightness and dynamism, creating bright and emotional compositions that perfectly emphasize youth and individuality. Like graffiti art, the font speaks its own language and provokes bold decisions in graphic design, bringing originality and character to any project.
  29. Sour Crunch by DM Studio, $15.00
    Introducing Sour Crunch! It's a 'crunchy' comical Display Font, inspired by pop art style comic fonts. It's a good choice for both personal and commercial project purpose, for creating logos, packaging, posters, headers, wall arts, cafe banners, t-shirt designs, advertisements, kids stuff, social media posts and much more! Sour Crunch feature : - All in CAPS with standard character set, including numeric and symbols. - Multilingual Supports ( Afrikaans, Albanian, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Norwegian, Portugese, Spanish, Swedish, Zulu ) If you have any question please kindly send us a message. Hope you enjoy this font. Thanks and Stay Creative!
  30. Craft Roman by Baseline Fonts, $24.00
    From scrapbooking to intensive graphic design applications, Craft Roman is a wonderful choice for charming and lighthearted communications. Craft Roman is based on Speedball and signpainter books from the 1920s and 30s, and reminiscient of the style of some of the lettering accompanying Mary Engelbreit artwork. Craft Roman is perfect for capturing the feel of vintage posters and retro stylings dating back to simpler times or handworked arts & crafts projects- even elementary school and childhood art. Extended character sets and intensive kerning provide foreign language support for many regions, plus bonus glyphs for quick stylistic flair.
  31. Glitzy by Ingrimayne Type, $9.95
    Glitzy is a caps-only font with extreme contrast. It was inspired by Art Deco typefaces, especially Broadway by Morris Fuller Benton, but Glitzy is not an attempt to reproduce that typeface. The letters on the lower-case keys differ slightly from the letters on the upper-case keys. The large black interiors invite decoration and the family includes four faces with interior decoration. These four faces with interior decoration can be used in layers with the base font to add color to lettering. (OakPark is a another attempt to do high-contrast lettering with an Art Deco feel.)
  32. Period Piece JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A period piece is something of or pertaining to a specific era or time. Anything evoking a knowledge or feeling of an era can be labeled as such. The aptly named type font Period Piece JNL reflects the hand lettering found on the cover of early 20th century vintage sheet music entitled "My Baby's Arms" (from the stage production of "Ziegfeld Follies of 1919"). Although strongly akin to the coming Art Deco movement in its lettering style, Period Piece JNL still contains a strong influence of the Art Nouveau era of the 1900s through the 1920s.
  33. Luks Deco by Nasir Udin, $24.00
    Luks Deco took inspiration from the glory of Roaring 20’s when the Art Deco style rose to its heyday. The strong geometric shape emphasizes the touch of retro yet modern style. Luks Deco is a good choice who wants to give Art Deco vibes to their designs. Luks Deco’s weight range from light to black, suitable to cater of all you need. The O,C,G and Q letters (and all glyphs that have circle form) have a bit different shape from light to black which will give unique display look for overall design. - Uppercase
  34. Dancing Marathon JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered title found on the cover of the 1932 sheet music for “Dancing Marathon” inspired the digital revival of this unusual lettering as well as the font’s name. This eccentric Art Deco design (with a slight bit of Art Nouveau mixed in) is a thin, monoline typeface. Dancing Marathon JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions. Dance marathons got their start during the Great Depression as people desperate to earn a few dollars would enter into contests that went on for hours until the last couple remained standing on the dance floor.
  35. Aronia by Struvictory.art, $14.00
    Aronia is a thin line uppercase font with floral motives. The typeface includes a Decorative and a Symbol version. To get an elegant and unique design, combine letters with elements. The font is easy to use in various design programs or without any program. Aronia is suitable for feminine business branding, eco-friendly and minimalistic art, social media design. The font works great for craft products branding and packaging (organic cosmetics and food, jewelry, handmade soap ect.) Also use individual letters and symbols to create logos and monograms. Aronia combines well with modern graphics: abstract shapes and line art.
  36. Naga by Canada Type, $24.95
    Naga is Hans van Maanen's original creation of art deco shapes interected with intricate mazes of what could be Celtic or Mesoamerican knotwork art. The totality of the typeface borders on the mysterious, exotic and yet clearly discernible as far as readability is concerned. Naga comes with a companion outline style that emphasizes its intricacy. Both fonts hold up quite strongly when combined with photo/illustration masks. The Naga family comes in both OTF and TTF formats, and includes an extended range of characters covering most Latin-based languages. A few unicase forms are also included.
  37. Pacaembu by Naipe Foundry, $60.00
    Pacaembu is a sans serif typeface that finds its roots in Brazilian football. This seven weight family began as a study of the stone lettering found in the Paulo Machado de Carvalho Municipal Stadium, affectionately known as the Estádio Pacaembu, a real gem of the Art-Deco style inaugurated in 1940. These art-deco letters, like football itself, were brought to Brazil by Europeans and out there in the tropics found a totally unique personality. Pacaembu is a celebration of Brazilian Football, it’s unique flavours, moves, sights and colors which have been delighting fans for generations.
  38. Concierge JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    On occasion, one type design's influence can result in a completely different end result. Take the hand lettering found on a 1920s piece of sheet music for the song "Let Me Call You Sweetheart". The simple sans with a few Art Nouveau-inspired characters started out as the basic design of Concierge JNL, but shortly after beginning the project, the lettering took on more of an Art Deco flavor. Add to this the many rounded-edge characters that have a bit of a techno look to it and the typeface takes on many different design characteristics.
  39. Manhattan Midnight by Scholtz Fonts, $19.95
    Manhattan Midnight owes its style to Art Deco fonts of the early 20th century. It has the opulence of New York City in the 20s and 30s, the glitter of city lights, the glamour of movie stars, the razzmatazz of Manhattan in the bad old days. You can use Manhattan Midnight for all advertising with an art deco flavor, for music media needing a bluesy, retro look, for movie posters reminiscent of the era, and so many more applications. The font has all the features usually included in a fully professional font. Language support includes all European character sets.
  40. Take The Money by Kitchen Table Type Foundry, $15.00
    Take The Money is a wonky all caps font, made with a Sharpie pen. The name was inspired by something I read in the newspaper: apparently a Danish artist received €72.000 from a museum to create two works of art. The works of art should depict the average income of someone from Austria and someone from Denmark - in real money. The museum then loaned him the €72.000 and told him he'd receive €3.300 for his work. The artist decided that €3.300 would merely cover the costs, so he delivered two empty canvases and called the work: Take The Money And Run.
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