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  1. Culpepper by Galapagos, $39.00
    I've always admired the work of Rudolph Koch. Culpepper is what I think Neuland would have looked like if it had been developed with lowercase, small caps and a range of weights. I started work on this series in the late 80’s and, like so many of my ideas, it was shelved when life drew me in another direction. Culpepper is the name of one of the islands in the Galapagos chain.
  2. Jenriv by Linh Nguyen, $25.00
    Inspired by designs of the early Renaissance, Jenriv brings out a sedate atmosphere and generous inner spaces. Starting with the idea of mixing straightforward strokes and curves, it results in kind masculine figures, but calm and humble. It reminds some archaic air but a simplified one. Jenriv embraces text flows, multiple languages, and various styles with standard OpenType features. It is well adapted to various applications, from medium body text to large headlines, or logotypes.
  3. Routemaster by Work by Dan, $12.00
    Routemaster is a hand-drawn condensed title font by the graphic designer Daniel Thomas. Found under the stairs, hand painted on a dusty rolled up bus route canvas. Re-created and refined with additional glyphs, Routemaster is old, bold and unique. A characterful font. Pleasant for posters, lovely for a logo, brilliant for branding, tasteful for t-shirts, playful for packaging and becoming for book cover design. Enjoy your design journey with Routemaster
  4. Qafidut by Twinletter, $18.00
    Qafidut Groovy is a psychedelic-inspired retro typeface with a bold and playful character. It’s ideal for branding, product packaging, or even just to add a little flair to your editorial work. This elegant typography has a simple and contemporary look but with a touch of beautiful simplicity to give a modern feel to every curve of the letter. what are you waiting for start using this font to create your own special project now!
  5. Sabre by Alias, $60.00
    I generally refer to our typefaces as ‘graphic’ rather than typographic. By that I mean their starting points are usually ways of constructing shapes and systems of shapes. As with other Alias typefaces, Sabre has stone and wood cut letterforms as a starting point. What is interesting about lettercutting is the connection between shape and material. These beautifully crafted letterforms have a particular sharpness which reflects, of course, how they were made. The idea of constructing letters from a kit of parts we first explored in early fonts Elephant and Factory. These are different in that they were very much grid-based, with a geometric structure. For Sabre I also had Fred Smeijers’ stencil construction drawings in mind. These show how a set of components can be the basis for a crafted, elegant typeface. Sabre is quite a loose interpretation of this idea. Sabre’s graphic shape means it works well at large sizes, with a dramatic, angular impact. Its aim is to be typographic enough to function for blocks of small-size text too.
  6. Rialto Piccolo dF by CAST, $305.00
    Rialto dF is a book face inspired by calligraphic tradition. Named after the famous bridge in Venice, it was conceived as a bridge between calligraphy and typography, roman and italic. It can also be thought of as an imaginary bridge between Italy and Austria, since it is the result of collaboration started in 1995 between the Austrian Lui Karner and Venetian Giovanni de Faccio. The letterforms of Rialto dF were drawn directly in digital format with a starting point deriving from humanistic letterforms memorized in the hearts, minds and the manual ability of its designers… As tradition demands, uppercase, numerals and punctuation are used in combination with italics – the same solution adopted by Francesco Griffo when he cut his first italic for the Virgil, the first of the octavo series printed and published in Venice by Aldus Manutius in 1501. Rialto dF comes in two optical weights: Piccolo, for up to 14 pt, and Grande for 16pt and above. Alternate characters and various dingbats are also provided and these are available through OpenType features developed by type designer and technician Karsten Luecke.
  7. Mommie by Hubert Jocham Type, $59.90
    In the early 1980s, at the start of my career, I had the opportunity to work in a print shop with classic lead setting. In those days I would study issues of U&lc magazine from ITC. What really caught my attention were scripts in the Spencerian style. I’ve been fascinated by this American penmanship tradition ever since. A few years ago I developed a font. Boris Bencic used it when he was redesigning L’Officiel magazine in Paris. I took these initial forms and developed them into the font Mommie when I started my own foundry. Although I usually design text typefaces, working on Mommie taught me how complex it can be to create a script headline font. The biggest challenge in this process has been to keep it alive and fresh. The Regular weight is only made for very big headlines. The thin lines with the bold drops are very elegant. For smaller sizes use the Medium and Small weight. It won the TDC 2008 award and was Judges Choice of Christian Schwartz.
  8. Mauritius by Canada Type, $29.95
    Ten years or so after his unique treatment of Garalde design with Trump Mediaeval, Georg Trump took on the transitional genre with Mauritius, which was to be his last typeface. He started working on it in 1965. The Stuttgart-based Weber foundry published a pamphlet previewing it under the name Barock-Antiqua in 1967, then announced the availability of the metal types (a roman, a bold and an italic) a year later. The global printing industry was already in third gear with cold type technology, so there weren't that many takers, and Weber closed its doors after more than 140 years in business. Subsequently, Trump’s swan song was unfairly overlooked by typography historians and practitioners. It never made it to film technology or scalable fonts. Thus, one of the most original text faces ever made, done by one of the most influential German type designers of the 20th century, was buried under decades of multiple technology shifts and fading records. The metal cuts of Mauritius seem to have been rushed in Weber’s desperation to stay afloat. So the only impressions left of the metal type, the sole records remaining of this design, show substantial problems. Some can be attributed to technological limitations, but some issues in colour, precision and fitting are also quite apparent, particularly in Mauritius Kursiv, the italic metal cut. This digital version is the result of obsessing over a great designer’s final type design effort, and trying to understand the reasons behind its vanishing from typography’s collective mind. While that understanding remains for the most part elusive, the creative and technical work done on these fonts produced very concrete results. All the apparent issues in the metal types were resolved, the design was expanded into a larger family of three weights and two widths, and plenty of 21st century bells and whistles were added. For the full background story, design analysis, details, features, specimens and print tests, consult the PDF available in the Gallery section of this page.
  9. Ah, the illustrious Writers Bold – a font that struts into the room with the confidence of a novelist who knows they've penned the next bestseller. Imagine if the letters on your screen were wearing ...
  10. As an optimistic and helpful guide on your creative journey, let me paint you a vivid picture of the font: Resurrectio Hydro.Seven.Four, a masterpiece that instantly captivates the eye and inspires t...
  11. De Rotterdam by Roland Hüse Design, $20.00
    This font is a clean, modern sans serif bold. Named after “De Rotterdam”* this huge and super cool building (read the story below). Great for headlines, Posters, Flyers but also well legible at small size in large texts. Contains All European language accents and characters. --- The Story --- *This complex is located in the Kop Van Zuid district of Rotterdam, on Wilhelminapier. I was lucky to see this building from the beginning (2009) growing up (2013) That time when I was working and living here. I was always amazed by the design and how huge it is every time I took a look at it while driving or walking on the Erasmus Bridge. When I was going to work or just hiking around the city. It has a special meaning and message for me: I started creating fonts in my free time in 2010 when I came to this city to work. I was factory worker, dishwasher etc. I grew together with this amazing construction from brick to brick, step by step. By the time its construction finished, I was able to quit my day job and become a full time freelance designer.
  12. Boxy by Hackberry Font Foundry, $24.95
    In my on-going quest for display fonts to be used with my books and on my book covers, I decided I need a squared sans serif. I started the build off of Fiscal, a font I designed back in 2006. I never liked the font, plus my tastes have changed. So, I opened it, made it narrower, increased the x-height, and various stuff like that. I made it much heavier—an ended up with Boxy. Then my brain slapped me and said, "Why don't you make a sorta modern version?" So, I did and decided to call that style Chic. But then I wanted a thin version also. Fiscal was always too heavy and ponderous for me. So, I made the Thin style. Finally, I felt I needed an italic of Chic. OpenType features didn't seem to work well with the family, so all I added was oldstyle figures. So, I ended up with another of my unique families—with two unmodulated fonts: Thin and Medium, and two modulated fonts: Chic and Chic Italic. But, I'm pleased with it. My hope is that you will like it also.
  13. Diaconia Old Style by Hackberry Font Foundry, $24.95
    Diaconia Old Style is a new rendition of my workhorse body copy font that I originally designed to use for the body copy of "Printing in a Digital World." I became increasingly upset with the lack of lowercase numbers and true small caps. Diaconia started life as a modification of one of the Dutch Bible fonts I traced. It has changed a lot since then (although I have a hard time telling how much because I have lost the original). The plain and italic work especially well when used in very large sizes as display faces. The other four variants (small caps, heavy, heavy italic, and black) are designed for use in book production. Because I format all my own books, I was able to design fonts that met my needs exactly: lowercase numbers, SMALL CAPS font, Mac Command, Option, and Control symbols, ballot box in the section slot, and several other special characters. DiaconiaPro is the OpenType family of my body copy workhorse. This is the first font family I ever created: classic, elegant, easy to read. 583 characters: small caps, oldstyle figures, numerators, denominators, lining figures, accents and a lot more.
  14. Pickatoon by Colllab Studio, $14.00
    "Hi there, thank you for passing by. Colllab Studio is here. We crafted best collection of typefaces in a variety of styles to keep you covered for any project that comes your way! Pickatoon is a fun display font that we made because we knew what people wanted. Pickatoon has the look of your favorite childhood markers. It's not just for comic books, it's for EVERYTHING. It's for your Instagram selfies, it's for school projects, it's for your business logo, it's for your coloring books—it even works great with watercolors! We put a lot of time into making Pickatoon perfect. We knew you'd need it to be thick and thin and fat and skinny, so we did our best to make sure all those variations were available in every letter. And when you're drawing, you don't just want to draw the same thing over and over again—you want to be able to change things up with some simple tools. So we made sure that Pickatoon had different ways you could vary the thickness and give your work some character. Start create with this font!! A Million Thanks www.colllabstudio.com
  15. Ugroh Black by Saffatin.co, $12.00
    Get ready to jazz up your design game with the brave Ugroh Display Black font include Italic! Armed with a whopping 260 glyphs, it's got all the languages covered and comes with a bonus of ligatures and alternative glyphs. So, whether you want to add a fancy twist or a subtle tweak, it's got you covered and will make your designs shine like a star! With its bold and modern look, Ugroh Display Black font is a perfect choice for any design project that requires a touch of elegance. Its clean lines and sharp edges will give your designs a professional look that will impress any audience. Whether you're creating a logo, a poster, or a website layout, Ugroh display black font will give your project a unique and stylish look. Its versatile character set makes it a great choice for a variety of design styles, from minimalistic to ornate. And with its extensive language support, you can be sure that your message will be heard loud and clear, no matter where your audience is located. So, why settle for a dull and uninspired design when you can jazz it up with Ugroh display black font? Try it out today and see your designs shine like never before!
  16. Nouveau Showcard JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The 1920 song “Noah’s Wife Lived a Wonderful Life (‘Cause Noah Had to Stay Home)” is another example of one of those overly-worded song titles from early 20th Century composers. What’s more important for type enthusiasts is that the title was hand lettered with a round nib pen in a slightly ragged Art Nouveau style. Cleaning up the ragged design, the end result became Nouveau Showcard JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  17. Carpe Noctem by Hanoded, $20.00
    Carpe Noctem (Latin for ‘Seize The Night’), was a bit of a surprise. Someone asked me if I could create a lower case for my Closet Skeleton font. I began working on it and lo and behold, a beautiful font started taking shape. So, if you’re in need of a slightly scary fairytale font, complete with angled edges, swirly bits, a couple of alternate - even more curly - glyphs and an alternate medieval ampersand, then Carpe Noctem is your typeface!
  18. Keswick by Hanoded, $15.00
    Keswick is a beautiful small town in the English Lake District. It is a good place to hang out for a while and explore the surrounding National Park. During your stay you could visit the Keswick Pencil Factory - which brings us to this nice font… Keswick font was created using a 6B pencil (the crumbly, soft kind) and a lot of patience. I have to admit, the pencil used was not made in Keswick. Sorry 'bout that…
  19. Benton Sans Std by Font Bureau, $40.00
    In 1903, faced with the welter of sanserif typefaces offered by ATF, Morris Fuller Benton designed News Gothic, which became a 20th-century standard. In 1995 Tobias Frere-Jones studied drawings in the Smithsonian and started a redesign. Cyrus Highsmith reviewed News Gothic, and with the Font Bureau studio expanded it into Benton Sans, a far-reaching new series, with matched weights and widths, offering performance well beyond the limits of the original; FB 1995-2012
  20. Sahitya by Sulthan Studio, $19.00
    Sahitya Script is a stylish calligraphy font that features a varying baseline, smooth line, classic and elegant touch. It can be used for various purposes such as headings, signature, logos, wedding invitation, t-shirt, letterhead, signage, labels, news, posters, badges etc. Sahitya Script is built with OpenType features and includes start and end. It comes with OpenType Stylistice set, Initial, swashes, ligatures and everything to add a touch to your design and also supports other languages :)
  21. Acmatic by Twinletter, $14.00
    Introducing our newest display font, its name is Acmatic. This font is designed to answer the needs of a beautiful and unique project. This font is perfect for gaming, sports events, branding, banners, posters, movie titles, book titles. This font is suitable for your various design projects because this font is equipped with a font family that complements each other, both for titles and sub-titles and sentence text. start using Acmatic font for your extraordinary project
  22. Tomate by Re-Type, $45.00
    Tomate started in 2006 as a brush lettering exercise for a poster and was later used for the ReType identity. In 2008 its author decided to turn it into a super fat typeface suitable for packaging and mass consumption products. The possibilities of ultra heavy forms are explored in this alphabet; trying to solve the design problems that these sort of forms present. Tomate shows influences from the beautiful Goudy Heavyface Italic which is a design the author admires.
  23. Zholud's Modern Ghotic by Vladzh, $30.00
    The first ideas about creation this font appeared in spring 2005. I took gothic fonts and a technique of feather as the base and create something unusual. Zholud's Modern Ghotic font has only A-Z, a-z, 0-9 and . , : ; ' " ! ? - characters. I recommed you to use this font in headers. It looks better if you'll start each word with Caps. Please use an application that supports kerning in order to display the spaces between characters correctly.
  24. Galdana by Eurotypo, $30.00
    Galdana font family is a Roman serifs typeface, whose most relevant characteristic is the slanted angle of its true italic, at seventeen degrees. Its design was inspired by one of the most prominent American calligraphers of the last century, the book designer Oscar Ogg. Galdana contains 18 styles: starting from thin to ending in a fat typeface. This family is completed with multilingual support and a set of OpenType features such as stylistic alternates, swashes, and ligatures.
  25. Alonso Flair by BA Graphics, $45.00
    This font, as indicated by its namesake, was designed and started by the late Bob Alonso. It represents the first of his unfinished work to be completed by friend and colleague John Bomparte, following Bob's passing in December of 2007. It is a font that speaks with a distinctively robust voice; and would be a great choice for a wide variety of uses. Central European languages are supported through OpenType, and Windows/Mac OSX TrueType versions.
  26. DreamTeam by Resistenza, $43.00
    Lining up on the start line is Resistenza’s DreamTeam! This fit font’s long limbs, nimble movement and shifting weight make the multiline-display (inspired by bestseller Afrobeat ) perfect to grab attention on signage, print advertising and editorial applications like book covers. DreamTeam’s distinctive forms also make it ideal for branding applications and obviously with its directional movement and the suggested speed DreamTeam’s 4 styles would be DreamSolutions on athleisure apparel and clothing lines. Check out also “Voguing” & “Afrobeat”
  27. Wascally Wabbit by Comicraft, $49.00
    This cunning, conniving, chattering font is devious, devilish and dashing! It's a toon town tattler that will lend a flippant insouciant personality to your comic books and animated features. These handsome letterforms will nab you, jab you, grab you and may even stab you with their sly wily guile. Our advice: Be Very Very Qwiet when tracking down this Wascally Wabbit. Features: Automatic alternate uppercase alphabets Western & Central European language support Manga characters & Crossbar I Technology™
  28. Stuph by Tail Spin Studio, $25.00
    Stuph Light is a collection of drawings pulled from one of the many sketch books Steve Zafarana is always doodling in. Because they are in a font, the drawings can be used in font format or opened and manipulated in vector programs like Freehand or Illustrator. Stuph Light continues to inflict upon an unsuspecting public Steves’ cockeyed outlook on the world that was started with ITC Fontoonies, ITC Gargoonies and ITC Backyard Beasties. Will this lunacy ever end?
  29. Generisch Sans by Akufadhl, $29.00
    Generisch - a german equivalent of generic - sans serif typeface has gain its own place among designers and earn such popularity due to its "simple" design. Generisch is influenced by early grotesk typefaces from early 1900's when sans was starting to get popular and used as a body type. Some old ligatures such as ch ck and ng are present in generisch (not the ct and st tho), old style numeral for better typesetting experience and more.
  30. Work Yard Stencil by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The image of a set of vintage French tin stencils spotted online was the starting point in designing Freight Yard Stencil JNL. A more traditional ‘B’ and ‘R’ replaces the original characters (which looked kind of awkward due to extra ‘stencil breaks’ within the letters). However, there are a few interesting variants in other characters to set the design apart from similar stencil fonts. Work Yard Stencil JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  31. Epic by Positype, $30.00
    What started out as a typographic exercise to produce the TypeTrust logotype turned out to be the product of obsession. Epic is the culmination of two years of work that has yielded a versatile and respectful contemporary garalde. With a full complement of six weights and true italics, the family offers itself as a true workhorse. Numerous standard and discretionary ligatures, majuscule ligatures, stylistic alternates and swash characters ensure visual interest as an effective headline face.
  32. Happenstance by Just My Type, $25.00
    Happenstance came out of a play session with Bezier curves with a sense of fun built into its being. First came play, then came work. Thomas Edison once said,”Creativity is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.” Nikola Tesla thought the opposite. In this case, what started as inspiration took a lot of perspiration to corral into a usable font. So maybe the reality is a) different for different people or b) somewhere in the middle. Just sayin’.
  33. Eagle by Font Bureau, $40.00
    The Eagle series realizes the ideas behind Morris Fuller Benton’s famous titling face, Eagle Bold, which was drawn in 1933 for the National Recovery Administration and became the symbol of American recovery. Font Bureau’s Eagle was started in 1989 for Publish magazine. David Berlow designed a lowercase, finished the character set, and in 1990 added Eagle Book for setting text. In 1994, Jonathan Corum added Eagle Light and Eagle Black to form a full series; FB 1989–94
  34. Angustina by Diego Massaro, $30.00
    Angustina is an elegant display typeface, it takes inspiration from classic letter styles. I chose the font name after reading the classic Italian novel “The Tartar Steppe”. I was inspired by the sickly, stoic and mysterious man who differs for his willingness to stay at Fort Bastiani. Angustina conveys distress and stinging sensation with extreme contrasts between thick and thin strokes and exasperated serifs. The alternate of hairline and bracketed serifs gives Angustina a modern and military appearance.
  35. Antea by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    Antea is named after "Antaeus" the giant of Libya in Greek mythology, son of Poseidon and Gaia (mother earth), whose wife was Tinjis. He was extremely strong if he stayed in contact with the earth, but once lifted into the air he became weak and liquid. So is this font, strong if grounded and weak if floating in the air. I will in due course add different weights for different purposes. Your designer of very mysterious fonts, Gert Wiescher
  36. Cat Finger by TypoGraphicDesign, $9.00
    The typeface Cat Finger is designed from 2021 for the font foundry Typo Graphic Design by Manuel Viergutz × Carmen Thiemer. The display font based on the human hand. Started analog with acrylic paint, a finger and a white paper. After scanning, a digital brush was created. With the help of a touch tablet, this brush was used as a writing tool. One font-stlye written with the left hand (left) and one with the right hand (right).
  37. Jeenull by Twinletter, $15.00
    Jeenull is a distinctively appealing typeface with a thick character that gives a distinct impression ideal for a variety of serious and casual applications. What are you waiting for? Get this font and enjoy the beauty of letter combinations in words that you may use in a variety of projects. This font is perfect for games, sporting events, branding, banners, posters, movie titles, book titles, quotes, logotypes, and more. Start using our fonts for your amazing projects.
  38. Contamination by Kenn Munk, $42.00
    Vowels produce 'end-characters'. These are used whenever a string of symbols start or end. Consonants make 'middle-characters'. Numerals are zero-width characters. these can be used whenever you feel like it, they will float above and below the string of symbols. Puncuation adds extra spice. Hold down 'shift' and you get the individual symbols mirrored. (very useful with the vowels.) Check my website for a more graphic representation and play, for gods sake, play!
  39. Vilonti by Owl king project, $39.00
    Vilonti a new font family from the Owlking project Vilonti designed by ilen nalishawa. a font that carries 20 weights including italics in it. Vilonti inspired by the legendary logo of sports products, so our desire arose to create a font that looks clean, simple, professional, and can be applied more broadly, both for font based logo design needs, or for making paragraphs or sentences. We hope Vilonti can collaborated with your imagination. Let's start desiging. be happy.
  40. Ewofi by Twinletter, $12.00
    We call this san serif font Ewofi This font is designed with attention to the uniqueness and harmony in its use, has a distinctive character in every word that is written using this font. not only that, but we also complete this font with ligatures and alternates that enhance visuals. This handwritten font is perfect for children’s magazines, drink banners, games, posters, beverage, outdoor events, thumbnails, food banners, cheerful writing, film titles, quotes, titles, logos, and various kinds of projects you need, of course, your various design projects will be perfect and extraordinary if you use this font because this font is equipped with a complimentary font family, both for titles and subtitles and sentence text. start using our fonts for your amazing projects.
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