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  1. Mongoose by Kostic, $40.00
    Mongoose is a condensed sans serif, made for posters, headlines and logotypes. Caps and x-height were made to match the ultra wide Briller, so it could be fun to combine these two highly contrasting type families. Thanks to the OpenType features, figures come in both tabular and proportional widths, fractions and superior/inferior positions.
  2. Rough Cut NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    An old Art Nouveau typeface named "Daphne" provided the inspiration for this decidely different font. This version is upright, but the linocut treatment employed visually suggests the slight rightward slant of the original typeface. Bold, unusual and distinctive. Both versions of the font include 1252 Latin, 1250 CE (with localization for Romanian and Moldovan).
  3. Mansel by Prominent and Affluent, $30.00
    Mansel – an exquisite sans serif font that takes inspiration from retro design. Boasting an impressive range of weights, widths, and italic angles in both classic and variable formats, Mansel offers unparalleled flexibility for creating stunning visual compositions. With support for most Latin-based languages, this versatile font is perfect for professional projects with global reach.
  4. Grape Feud by PizzaDude.dk, $17.00
    The name Grape Feud is obviously a wordplay, and is derived of the, sometimes, mistaken of the orange and the (often) purple fruits. But Grape Feud is also a playful and charming no-nonsense comic style font. The x-height is quite unpredictable, and I've added ligature for the most common double letter combinations.
  5. Greycliff Devanagari CF by Connary Fagen, $35.00
    Greycliff Devanagari CF is an adaptation of the original Greycliff typeface to the Devanagari script. The geometric, monolinear design of the original sans serif is recreated in full, allowing for cohesive multilingual applications between English and Hindi, Marathi, Nepali, Sanskrit, and more. Nine weights cover both Latin and Devanagari, including numerals, conjuncts, and punctuation.
  6. Moxy Rush by Alit Design, $21.00
    Introducing "Moxy Rush" Font: Redefining Modern Blackletter Elegance Unleash the power of typography with "Moxy Rush," a remarkable font that seamlessly blends the timeless essence of blackletter style with a captivating contemporary twist. This font is a true masterpiece, meticulously designed to elevate your designs, projects, and artworks to new heights of sophistication and creativity.
  7. Briery by HeadFirst, $16.99
    Briery is a unique san serif family, crafted for both display & body copy use — Available in 5x weights. It is a blend of original & functional, with a range of alternative characters created to inspire your design imagination. Designed by Morice Kastoun this typeface incapsulates his commitment, craft and expertise in typeface design for over 20years.
  8. Orion by Linotype, $29.99
    Hermann Zapf made his first scetches for Orion in 1963. Zapf's aim was to create a neutral textface which can be ideally used as a newspaper face. Its strokethickness and open letterforms also fits well for book and magazine production. The final two weights of Orion were released in 1974 for the Linofilm photocomposing machine.
  9. Manifest by Yasin Yalcin, $12.00
    Manifest is a geometric typeface family based on the principles of simplicity, modernity and functionality. With a low-contrast design approach, it performs excellently in any project from print to digital. It comes in five weights with an extended character set including 240+ glyphs per typeface which supports Western and some Central European languages.
  10. Futuriata by Tadiar, $14.00
    Futuriata is Elegant Futuristic Conceptual Font Family of four fonts different weights. It has unusual look which will make your title phrase unique, stylish, fashionable and hi-tech. Use it in your projects in such areas as robots & androids, hi-tech, future, virtual reality, space, fashion and others. Multilingual Extended Latin characters and symbols included.
  11. Benoa by Creativemedialab, $20.00
    Benoa is a versatile font family for your design, consist of 6 weights from thin to black with dozens of alternates. Benoa works well with any style of design concept, from branding to a nice bold modern look! Benoa also available in Variable format, multilingual support, numbers, and currency symbols, and dozens of alternates.
  12. Rétrospectif by Vincenzo Crisafulli, $29.00
    Rétrospectif is a tribute to the fonts of the Thirties and Forties. It consists of two families, Rétrospectif and Rétrospectif faible. The two families differ in height: Rétrospectif is particularly stretched, Rétrospectif Faible is lowest. The latter, compared to Rétrospectif, presents shorter ascending and descendants and more rounded eyelets. The glyphs' structures are modular.
  13. ALS Direct by Art. Lebedev Studio, $63.00
    ALS Direct is an open and dynamic typeface with clear-cut letterforms that make it instantly readable. It lends text a neutral, yet agreeable and modern feel. Direct has nine font styles convenient for the purposes of navigation signage. Regular-style letterforms are rather wide, because direction signs are likely to appear before readers at an angle, so the type needs to withstand perspective distortions. And as signs and boards may vary in size, Direct was developed to include several width variations. Condensed fonts can be used where horizontal space is limited, allowing you to keep proper height and readability of the characters. A signage typeface must be easily readable from some distance away and have simple letterfoms with clear-cut features to quickly identify characters. Designing a type for a potentially wide range of purposes calls for a universal approach. If not destined to be used for navigation in a particular building, it shouldn’t incorporate any peculiar elements to agree with certain design or architecture. All of the above determined our choice of a sans serif with large apertures and definite features allowing readers to instantly recognize letters. Descenders are made compact not to interfere with the line below. And the low contrast between thick and thin strokes renders all elements equally perceptible. The x-height is significant, close to the cap height, which inhances readability of the lowercase type. There are two reasons why directions must not be set in all caps. Firstly, lowercase letters are more diverse and include ascenders and descenders identifying some of the letters in the line. And secondly, having learned to read, people recognize word shapes rather than individual letters, which makes lowercase text more readable. With Direct being a signage typeface, first to be developed were its width variations, and different weight styles and italics were added later. Another thing to be kept in mind was that signs often use dark background colors, and black type on a white background appears smaller than white type on a black background. Direct is the first Cyrillic typeface created for navigation purposes. Before that, designers could use the Cyrillic version of Frutiger (Freeset) developed by Adrian Frutiger for the Paris Charles de Gaulle International Airport, and a number of other, mostly body copy, neutral sans serif types. However, signs and boards were dominated by Arial, which Direct would be glad to replace offering elegance and lucidity of form instead of type bluntess. Direct was designed as a signage typeface, but its neutral style and clear-cut letterforms suggest various other ways of application.
  14. Shout by HiH, $12.00
    Shout is a “Hey, Look at ME” font. It is an attention-getting font for posters, flyers and ads. Its lineage includes the Haas Type Foundry’s 19th century advertising font, Kompakte Grotesk, which Jan Tschichold (1902-1974) dryly described as “extended sans serif” and which graphic designer Roland Holst (1868-1938) would have disapprovingly referred to as a “shout,” as opposed to the quiet presentation of information that he believed was the proper function of advertising. In 1963 Letraset released what appears to be an updated variation in multiple weights designed by Frederick Lambert called Compacta. Shout draws heavily on Compacta, as well as other similar fonts of the 50s and 60s like Eurostile Bold Condensed and Permanent Headline. In weight, it falls about halfway between Compacta Bold and Compacta Black, but with a relatively heavier lower case that is not so easily pushed around by the upper case. After all, one can shout while sitting down. Shout is the first font released with our new encoding, as noted in the All_customer_readme.txt. The Euro symbol has been moved to position 128 and the Zcaron/zcaron have been added at positions 142/158 respectively. Otherwise, Shout has our usual idiosyncratic glyph selection, with the German ch/ck instead of braces, a long s instead of the Greek mu and our usual Hand-in-Hand symbol. There are also left and right glyphs of a big mouth ]ing (135/137) and left and right glyphs of an angry man shouting (172/177). Please use Shout with discretion. Folks get tired of being yelled out. After awhile, they stop listening. Shout ML represents a major extension of the original release, with the following changes: 1. Added glyphs for the 1250 Central Europe, the 1252 Turkish and the 1257 Baltic Code Pages. Add glyphs to complete standard 1252 Western Europe Code Page. Special glyphs relocated and assigned Unicode codepoints, some in Private Use area. Total of 355 glyphs. 2. Added OpenType GSUB layout features: pnum, ornm, liga, hist & salt. 3. Added 266 kerning pairs. 4. Revised vertical metrics for improved cross-platform line spacing. 5. Revised hyphen, dashes & math operators. 6. Minor refinements to various glyph outlines. 7. Inclusion of both tabular & proportional numbers. Please note that some older applications may only be able to access the Western Europe character set (approximately 221 glyphs). The zip package includes two versions of the font at no extra charge. There is an OTF version which is in Open PS (Post Script Type 1) format and a TTF version which is in Open TT (True Type)format. Use whichever works best for your applications.
  15. Winslow Title by Kimmy Design, $25.00
    Winslow Title is a high contrast modern type family comes in two styles and a monolinear script family. The traditional proportions of Winslow Title are historical in nature and follow the design and style of Winslow Book as a high contrast variant. The Winslow Title Mod family is a contemporary take on the style, with tapering terminals and less pronounced finials. Each family includes both styles, to be accessed through the opentype panel as a stylistic alternate. If preferable, you can purchase the entire family collection to have easier access to both styles, but it's not necessary. The typeface family comprises of roman and italic styles in six weights from Thin to Black and two widths in the roman style: Regular and Narrow. The accompanying script family has a single weight but offers five tracking widths, from Narrow to Wide. The bundle is an elegant combination of styles perfect for titling and display design. The serif typeface is packed with features that make ideal titling styles. Not only do they include the Stylistic Alternates, but also Titling Alternates, Discretionary Ligatures, Small Capitals, Swashes and Contextual Ligatures. As noted previously, the typeface comes in two styles, Traditional and Modern. Each can be accessed either by the Stylistic Alternates or Stylistic Sets. Titling Alternates are alternates that expand the ball terminals to K, R, V, W, and Y (see Titling Alternates slide). Contextual Ligatures are for capital combinations with A that tighten the gap created by the extended serifs. It connects characters with a pairing serif (the lower right serif of the M with the lower right serif of the A) and bridges them together. This combination works for single and multiple A combinations. It is turned on automatically in the Opentype panel and shouldn’t need to be accessed individually. Alternatively, the Discretionary Ligatures feature combines diagonal or baseline stems with lifted small capitals, creating a unique combination of characters. Swashes is an extensive feature that offers up to five swash options per many of each character. These can be selected via the Glyphs panel or as character alternates in Adobe programs. The Script family has a feature set of it’s own, with initial and final swashes on lowercase letters, middle swashes for select characters, and a titling feature that joins words together by replacing the space with a line. Stylistic alternates create a bouncing baseline on connecting strokes. *Note: there is no great need to purchase both families as all styles can be accessed via Opentype features, but if customers prefer to purchase both styles, it can be done by selecting the Complete Typeface Family collection.
  16. VTC-KomikaHeadLinerChewdUp - Personal use only
  17. Rusty Frozee - Personal use only
  18. Jatina Script - Personal use only
  19. Motion Picture Personal Use - Personal use only
  20. Vimland Black - Personal use only
  21. Kidie Monster - Personal use only
  22. South Amsterdam DEMO - Personal use only
  23. My Witcher - Personal use only
  24. CONFLICT DRIPS PERSONAL USE - Personal use only
  25. Ordinatum Medium - Personal use only
  26. Fibel Nord - Unknown license
  27. Art-Decoretta - Unknown license
  28. Roman Flames - Personal use only
  29. the chemical parade - Personal use only
  30. KG Ray of Sunshine - Personal use only
  31. Jacked Eleven Highlight - Personal use only
  32. Fmiring Campotype One - Personal use only
  33. Roskrift Clean - Personal use only
  34. HVD Peace - Unknown license
  35. Esquivel Trial - Unknown license
  36. KG A Thousand Years - Personal use only
  37. WC Mano Negra Bta - Unknown license
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