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  1. Outside by PintassilgoPrints, $24.00
    Alternates, ornaments, ligatures and two casual stylish faces. This is Outside. Where we'd absolutely rather be. * Released during the inside times of 2020 *
  2. Buddy Parts by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    52 cool Buddy Parts, each one with it's own goofy looks on his face. Can you tell which one reminds of you? *g*
  3. PL Brazilia by Monotype, $29.99
    PL Brazilia from Albert Boton is an elegant extended sans serif face in two weights. Usable in headlines on books, journals and posters.
  4. Orbit-B by Bitstream, $29.99
    A second VGC face, this one by S. Biggenden, borrowing from the structure of MICR figures to lend computer associations to the page.
  5. Blackwood by Alan Meeks, $40.00
    Blackwood is a sans serif headline face with a woodgrain effect. Based loosely on Grotesk, it has strong, solid forms with distinctive style.
  6. Woodlawn JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Woodlawn JNL is based on an open face wood type. A bold outline sans, this design is excellent for headline and titling applications.
  7. Ellen by Lebbad Design, $29.95
    Ellen is a charming elegant serif face. Great for headline display and text use. Many alternates and ligatures are included with this font.
  8. Montreal Architect Px by Letradora, $15.00
    Inspired from blueprints of old Montreal buildings, this font is a hand lettered, all caps face with influences from the arts & crafts movement.
  9. el&font gohtic! - Unknown license
  10. walk the plank - Unknown license
  11. Everytime I Miss You - Unknown license
  12. Caligraf by Mans Greback, $29.00
    Caligraf is a classical calligraphy script. It was drawn and created by Måns Grebäck during 2019 and 2020. The character design blends traditional soft flowing handwriting with a modern, sharp look, and its angle and weight balance gives it a determined and progressive pace. Caligraf is a multistyle font family, composed of Thin, Light, Regular, Bold and Black. Its range ensures usability in any context, while also giving the ability to emphasize phrases or words. Use it in an invitation, a diploma, a logotype or in a decorative body text. Being a font with over 850 glyphs, it is guaranteed to contain all characters you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers. It has an extensive lingual support, covering European and Asian Latin scripts.
  13. Arapix by Anatoletype, $69.00
    Arapix is a 12 pixel high multilingual Latin-Arabic pixel font with incredible capabilities. The Arapix is an almost traditional Naskh. It is elegant and easy to read even in very small sizes. It includes almost every feature you would expect from a high range Naskh font. Its humanistic look and feel fit perfectly to its Latin counterpart. Arapix was originally designed for a web project that didn't see the light a few years back. It started with the idea of fitting both Latin and Arabic into a 12 pixel vertical grid. The latin glyphs fit properly within the vertical limits, but when it came to the arabic glyphs, it proved to be more challenging. Arabic letters with lower diacritic dots like the (Yeh-fina) or letters with accents above like the (Alef-Hamza-above) need much more space than any Latin letter. Add to this the fact that accents needs to be positioned above and below the glyphs. It is technically impossible to fit a (Yeh-fina-kasratan) or a (Alef-Hamza-above-shadda-damma) into 12 pixels. Initially the accents were dropped and not included in the design. Although it seemed impossible at the start, Sylvain found a solution in the end, including as many contextual alternates and contextual kerning as needed to avoid every collision between letters and diacritics, letters and accents, and diacritics and accents. The contextual kerning was added to achieve an even letter and word spacing in longer text. Arapix is amazingly legible in small size on screen and in print. On the other hand, it also works perfectly as display titling font due to its unique and contemporary pixel approach. It can be used for screens with very low resolution as well as for high resolution screens and prints. The new Arapix comes with various new features and new glyphs including Persian and Urdu letters, stylistic set, old style figures, contextual kerning, contextual alternates and a few icons too. Enjoy the new Arapix and have fun with it.
  14. Junkyard by Victory Type, $-
    Inspired by the local city dump is Junkyard, a fat, chunky, boxy and delightful font made by Victory Type. It's surprisingly easy and enjoyable to read! It adds pizzazz to any document
  15. Harrumph by Hanoded, $20.00
    Harrumph is a fat poster style font with a retro look. It comes with contextual and stylistic alternates for every letter and has more diacritics than you can poke a stick at.
  16. Obsessed by Zang-O-Fonts, $25.00
    Eroded, skeletal and gaunt, Obsessed was one of Zang-O-Fonts first typefaces, and is loosely based on a couple of Art Deco faces.
  17. Andron Freefont by SIAS, $-
    Try out one of the most distinguished text faces for free! Andron is a new design inspired by the best of classical Roman typefaces.
  18. Swing Bill by Monotype, $29.99
    The Swing Bill font was designed as a display face for sport material or pop music posters, but has also been seen on TV.
  19. Manita Px by Letradora, $10.00
    Manita is a quirky, humorous unicase face, reminiscent of comic lettering. Supports most Central and Western European scripts. Includes ligatures and several fun dingbats!
  20. Allotropic by The Flying Type, $24.00
    Allotropic is a pretty decorative face with a remarkable art nouveau flair. It loosely draws inspiration from a 1914 untitled alphabet by J.M. Bergling, a then "Modern Alphabet", and from its interpretation by Photo-Lettering, from the sixties. Allotropic comes in two styles, regular and bold, both with extended language coverage, as well as stylistic alternates and a couple of ornaments. It's decidedly a fab choice not only for vintage and retro designs (ça va sans dire!), but also for creative contemporary uses in print and on screen. Play it on book covers, packaging, branding, editorial, web, advertising, apparel, uses are endless. Just give Allotropic a go, let the inspiration flow, and keep on creating!
  21. Målestok by Wilton Foundry, $39.00
    The Målestok family (Light, Light Italic, Bold, Bold Italic) is an eclectic solution for a broad range of applications. The rounded outer corners combined with select stencil effects makes for an interesting and friendly face. In large sizes, the bold version is strong and engaging, while the lighter weights are stylish and friendly. Thanks to its distinctive slightly technical style, both print and interactive designers will find that Målestok provides a multitude creative options with the perfect solution to draw attention with style. Målestok family his ideal for branding, collateral, advertising and packaging design. Målestok also fits comfortably in fashion , retail and sport related categories. Målestok family was designed in Norway, The Netherlands and USA.
  22. Kigali by Monotype, $50.99
    Designed by Arthur Baker in 1994 for URW, Kigali is a wide-bodied display type with bold, uneven, pen-drawn strokes that taper dramatically downward. This unusual theme creates a unique, recognizable look. Furthering the effect, the Kigali typeface family contains additional decorative design fonts, one with a zigzag pattern filling the spacious strokes, and another with the letters in black squares for use as ornamental initials. The regular and italic versions include two alternate faces: one with long, tall ascenders and regular-length descenders, and one with shortened ascenders and descenders that allow it to fit where its companion might not. Use Kigali sparingly in display advertising, labels, flyers, and other incidental work.
  23. Xylo by ITC, $29.99
    Xylo is a rugged, no-nonsense typeface that was originally designed in 1924 by the Benjamin Krebs type foundry in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Even back then, Xylo must have been very popular; the design made it at least as far as England. In 1995, after finding its design in an old London printer's reference book, the Letraset Type Studio faithfully converted Xylo into digital format. A time-proven display face, Xylo will convey a feeling of power and strength in any application. Best used big in headlines or logos; Xylo exudes an expressionistic and art deco spirit that just as much at home today as it was during the roaring 20s!
  24. ITC Hornpype by ITC, $29.99
    ITC Hornpype is the work of California freelance designer Mott Jordan, a cheerful display face inspired in part by the cartoons of the 1920s and 30s. According to Jordan, the typeface's name and three-dimensional quality can be traced to an early cartoon in which a cat blows on a horn with such force that the instrument bulges out. For the three-dimensional look, Jordan added highlights to the thicker strokes to create letters that look as though they were, in his words, squeezed from a toothpaste tube". Jordan suggests his eye-catching font for shorter words in larger point sizes. ITC Hornpype is a lively font perfect for anything needing a "fun, goofy" look."
  25. Chevron by Altered Ego, $45.00
    For that tight fit, STF Chevron is perfect. An ultra-condensed display font, with a complete character set. The name? It's named after an oil company, but the shapes of the serifs reflect that as well. With some art deco overtones, try Chevron in places that you might want a simple art deco typeface. How should you use it? It's perfect for posters, packaging and advertising, CD covers and publications. Fully hinted and exquisitely kerned, Chevron will be one of your favorite faces for tall copy that need to get noticed. It's really ideal for calendars, when you want big numbers without losing space for writing in the date fields. License it today!
  26. Kondes by Tour De Force, $25.00
    Kondes is our "101 Dalmatians" – it's 101th release in our catalog! And it is the 1st one that belongs to variable typefaces. Kondes (which is made up word as mixture of "condensed" and "kondezovan" on Serbian) is simple, compact, straight-in-your-face sans serif family with 9 weights and 9 Italics. It was designed with purpose to serve and to be use in any project, from editorial to website. For example, Black weight could be used effectively as poster type, in big sizes while Regular fits perfectly as main webfont. Stem joining is done with generous ink trap that divides and opens letter contours, so letter breaths in smaller sizes. Contains extended Latin character set. Enjoy!
  27. RoundWhy by Ingrimayne Type, $6.95
    Font breeding is much like animal breeding, where stallion and mare, or bull and cow, or boar and sow are carefully matched in hopes of yielding a robust and useful offspring. When typefaces RoundUp with fat, rounded serifs and WyomingSpaghetti with fat, squarish serifs were chosen to be parents, it was clear that their offspring would inherit large serifs. But to discover exactly what the offspring would look like, the pairing needed to be consummated, which was done with the “Blend Fonts” commend in Fontographer. The two styles of RoundWhy are the result.
  28. Argillites - Personal use only
  29. Hotel Coral Essex - Personal use only
  30. Retro Stereo Thin - Unknown license
  31. peach sundress ~ - Unknown license
  32. peach sundress ~ - 100% free
  33. colour me purple - Personal use only
  34. Dismembered - Personal use only
  35. king cooL KC - Personal use only
  36. Spinach - Unknown license
  37. SL Panzerkardinal - Unknown license
  38. Ed's Market by Laura Worthington, $29.00
    It’s like hiring your own professional sign painter with a solid repertoire of styles; each one is distinctive, yet clearly by the same hand. No variants were created on the computer – each weight and version was individually hand-lettered. Ed’s Market lets you evoke the warm, inviting vibe of classic 20th-century grocery posters and showcard lettering right from your type menu. Smart programming ensures that digital perfection doesn't trump human charm: each display face features three variations of each letter, to ensure a natural hand-painted look when characters repeat. Ed’s Market includes three script styles, each with more than 100 alternate characters and swash forms. Seven display faces feature three variations of each letter, to ensure a natural hand-painted look when characters repeat. Design Elements offer expandable arrows, rules and ribbons; along with badges, swashes, scribbles, clouds and snipes. See what’s included! http://bit.ly/1Mzurs3 *NOTE* Basic versions DO NOT include swashes, alternates or ornaments These fonts have been specially coded for access of all the swashes, alternates and ornaments without the need for professional design software! Info and instructions here: http://lauraworthingtontype.com/faqs/
  39. King Tut by Canada Type, $24.95
    King Tut is a restoration and expansion of the original Egyptian Expanded, a single bold face cut in 1850 by Miller & Richard, the famous Edinburgh founders. This aesthetic, though originally issued to help drive simple print advertising of those days, is perhaps the longest lasting genre of typeface. This aesthetic flourished in the later part of the 19th century, helped by the surge of similar faces from England (such as Figgins' Antique 6 and Expanded Antique), and became the defining index of the old American wild west that continues to this very day. King Tut serves up its impact through a balance between the wide, compact letterforms and elegant curvature that manages to come through even in confined areas. The family's weight variety allows for more options in counterspace use as well as precision in the amount of curve definition and contrast needed by the typographer. The lighter weights completely oppose that 19th century boldness and expose the alphabet's skeleton in a strive for simplicity that fits modern applications. With generous language support to boot, King Tut's diverse offerings make it an essential addition to today's designer repertoire.
  40. Tuscaloosa by Greater Albion Typefounders, $7.00
    Tuscaloosa is a classic American 'Wild West' Tuscan typeface-we thought it would make a suitable Independence Day tribute to our many American clients. It's ideal for wherever that 'Western' feel is wanted. Posters, signage, the sides of stagecoaches etc... Three faces are offered, a pristine and sharp regular form, a somewhat distressed 'Rustic' face and the rather more distressed 'Extremely Rustic'. So why not mosey on down the saloon with Tuscaloosa!
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