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  1. Hebrew Ariel Std by Samtype, $59.00
    This is a beautiful, modern, and super readable font. You can use it in any kind of text, from folders to prayer books. This font also has modern punctuation: shevana, kamats katan, dagesh hazak, and holam chaser.
  2. Grozel by Krakenbox Studio, $17.00
    Grozel is Gaming display font. It has fancy, playful, and Cool. It’s a great font for gaming, product, fashion, apparel projects, signature, album cover, logo, branding, magazine, social media, & advertisements, but also works great for other projects.
  3. Kiara by RodrigoTypo, $25.00
    Kiara typeface is a typeface designed for informal titles with very expressive letters. It also contains more than 12 variants (Thin, Light, Regular, Bold, Black) as letter alternatives and options such as "Black Shadow-Black Shadow Alternative".
  4. Venus by Linotype, $29.00
    The Venus type family is a historic hot metal face with left slanted weights that is used for the german cartographic map production. There are also special typefaces required like the Roemisch and Topografische Zahlentafel type family."
  5. Watershed by Epiclinez, $18.00
    Watershed is a stylish script font. It has Open Type features such as Stylistic Sets, Ligatures, and Swashes. This font is also multilingual and PUA encoded. Use it for any design projects that require a charming appearance!
  6. Spookyman by Krakenbox Studio, $12.00
    Spookyman is a halloween Font. It has spooky, mysterious, horror, classic. It’s a great font for events, halloween, fashion, apparel projects, signature, album cover, logo, branding, magazine, social media, & advertisements, but also works great for other projects.
  7. Westin Black by Miller Type Foundry, $19.00
    Westin Black is a great alternative to Cooper Black. Heavily influenced by clarendon typefaces, Westin Black also has a slight humanistic touch. It comes with open type features like old style figures, tabular figures and some ligatures.
  8. Venus Egyptienne by Linotype, $29.00
    The Venus type family is a historic hot metal face with left slanted weights that is used for the german cartographic map production. There are also special typefaces required like the Roemisch and Topografische Zahlentafel type family."
  9. Instabread by Motokiwo, $12.00
    Instabread, a bold script font that is suitable for headline, logotype, apparel, invitation, branding, packaging, advertising etc. This typeface is comes in uppercase, lowercase, large range of punctuation, symbols & numerals, contextual alternates and ligatures, also support multilingual.
  10. Scratoon by ZetDesign, $14.00
    Scratoon is our latest font created for cartoon and comic-themed design work. This font is perfect for displaying posters, banners, flyers, and also suitable for cloothing. I hope this font really helps your creative working.. ... Thanks ...
  11. Bokarms Stencil by SMZ Design, $19.00
    Bokarms stencil is a condensed font with a distinctive look Created for military-themed design. Perfect for industrial projects. It will also work as a universal typeface for promotional poster designs, branding, logo design, and clothing branding.
  12. Gans Titania by Intellecta Design, $19.95
    See also other font families inspired by Gans' original typefaces: Gans Tipo Adorno , Gans Lath Modern , Gans Titular Adornada , Gans Ibarra , Gans Antigua , Gans Antigua Manuscrito , Gans Fulgor , Gans Radio Lumina , Gans Carmem Adornada , and Gans Italiana .
  13. Melasthi by Yoga Letter, $16.00
    "Melasthi" is a modern sans serif font. This font is very elegant and beautiful. Equipped with uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, punctuations, and also multilingual support. Very suitable for brochures, invitations, posters, banners, stickers, branding, and more.
  14. Aaarp by Drawwwn, $15.00
    Aaarp's an arty farty cut paper display font - inspired by Jean Arp & Henri Matisse’s amazing work. Get creative with extra glyphs and shapes... Aaarp also has alternative letters so you can make all your designs look unique.
  15. Stitching of Children by Wildan Type, $9.00
    Stitching of Children is a fun and quirky handwritten font with a unique style, playful look & feel! embodies fun. Use this gorgeous and unique font to bring any DIY. you also can enjoy many unic alternate style
  16. Abdo Screen by Abdo Fonts, $49.50
    Abdo Screen is a very simple Naskh font for satellite channels, presentations, videos and advertisements. it comes in sixth weights Thin, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold and Black. This font also contains some of Stylistic Sets and Ligatures.
  17. Gans Titular Adornada by Intellecta Design, $14.95
    See also other font families inspired by Gans' original typefaces: Gans Tipo Adorno , Gans Lath Modern , Gans Titular Adornada , Gans Ibarra , Gans Antigua , Gans Antigua Manuscrito , Gans Fulgor , Gans Radio Lumina , Gans Carmem Adornada , and Gans Italiana .
  18. Salt & Pepper by Almarkha Type, $29.00
    Salt & Pepper is cute handwritten, but also Crafty. This versatile script font has a wide range of applications ranging from greeting cards to kids’ crafts, and is guaranteed to add a sweet touch to your next design.
  19. Auberge Script by Sudtipos, $79.00
    It took me a long time, but I think I now understand why people of my generation and older feel the need to frame current events in an historical context or precedents, while most of the young couldn't care less about what happened ten years ago, let alone centuries back. After living for a few decades, you get to a point when time seems to be moving quite fast, and it’s humbling to see that your entire existence so far can be summed up in a paragraph or two which may or may not be useful to whoever ends up reading the stuff anyhow. I suppose one way to cope with the serenity of aging is trying to convince yourself that your life and work are really an extension of millenia of a species striving to accept, adapt to, and improve the human condition through advancing the many facets of civilization -- basically making things more understandable and comfortable for ourselves and each other while we go about doing whatever it is we are trying to do. And when you do finally convince yourself of that, history becomes a source of much solace and even a little premonition, so you end up spending more time there. Going far back into the history of what I do, one can easily see that for the most part it was ruled by the quill. Western civilization’s writing was done with quill pens for more than thirteen centuries and with newer instruments for about two. By the mid-18th century, the height of the quill experience, various calligraphy techniques could be discerned and writing styles were arranged in distinct categories. There are many old books that showcase the history of it all. I recommend looking at some whenever the urge comes calling and you have to get away from backlit worlds. Multiple sources usually help me get a better perspective on the range of a specific script genre, so many books served as reference to this quill font of mine. Late 17th century French and Spanish professional calligraphy guides were great aides in understanding the ornamental scope of what the scribes were doing back then. The French books, with their showings of the Ronde, Bâtarde and Coulée alphabets, were the ones I referenced the most. So I decided to name the font Auberge, a French word for hotel or inn, because I really felt like a guest in different French locales (and times) when I going through all that stuff. Because it is multi-sourced, Auberge does not strictly fit in a distinct quill pen category. Instead, it shows strong hints of both Bâtarde and Coulée alphabets. And like most of my fonts, it is an exercise in going overboard with alternates, swashes, and ornamental devices. Having worked with it for a while, I find it most suitable for display calligraphic setting in general, but it works especially well for things like wine labels and event invitations. It also shines in the original quill pen application purpose, which of course was stationery. Also, as it just occurred to me, if you find yourself in a situation where you have to describe your entire life in 50 words or less, you may as well make it look good and swashy, so Auberge would probably be a good fit there as well. This is one quill script that no large bird had to die for. A few technical notes The Auberge Script Pro version includes 1800 glyphs, everything is included there. Also latin language support. We recommend you to use the latest design application to have full access to alternates, swashes, small caps, ornaments, etc. The images from the gallery uses this version. For better results use the fonts with “liga” feature on. Awards During 2014 the early develop of Auberge Script was chosen to be part of Tipos Latinos, the most important type exhibition in South America.
  20. Immortal - Alternates - Unknown license
  21. Sonrisa by CastleType, $59.00
    Sonrisa is a design that evolved from my sketches of the skeletal structure of Jakob Erbar’s Koloss, trying to discover its underlying essence without all the contrast and bulkiness of the original design. Sonrisa Thin was the resulting font, from which the other weights of the family were developed. Gentle curves, open counters, generous x-height, and sleekly tapered terminals give Sonrisa a very legible, modern, elegant appearance. When she saw the first draft of this typeface, the smile on my friend Jennifer’s face gave me the idea to call it “Sonrisa” (Spanish for “smile”). Jennifer, a clinical psychologist, described Sonrisa’s personality as: "happy, clean, clear, open, joyful, spacious, playful, calm. I can see it being used for body product lines such as oils and lotions. Can see it being used in home/travel magazines or even Architectural Digest. Yoga magazine, definitely." Sonrisa is what some foundries call a “Pro” typeface family with all the bells and whistles that provide typographic versatility: true small caps, oldstyle numerals, arbitrary fractions, discretionary ligatures, and other powerful OpenType features. All fonts in the family, except Sonrisa Titling, support most European languages, including modern Greek and languages that use the Cyrillic Alphabet. (Cyrillic glyphs designed in consultation with Ukrainian type designer, Sergiy S. Tkachenko.) Sonrisa is available in the original Thin, monoline version as well as six weights (Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Extra Bold, Black), and a Titling font that is essentially a display font construction kit. If you enjoy using Sonrisa even half as much as I enjoyed creating it, then I know you will have a “sonrisa” (smile) on your face!
  22. Ongunkan Archaic Etrusk by Runic World Tamgacı, $50.00
    Etruscan was the language of the Etruscan civilization, in Italy, in the ancient region of Etruria (modern Tuscany, western Umbria, northern Latium, Emilia-Romagna, Veneto, Lombardy and Campania). Etruscan influenced Latin but was eventually completely superseded by it. The Etruscans left around 13,000 inscriptions that have been found so far, only a small minority of which are of significant length; some bilingual inscriptions with texts also in Latin, Greek, or Phoenician; and a few dozen loanwords. Attested from 700 BC to AD 50, the relation of Etruscan to other languages has been a source of long-running speculation and study, with its being referred to at times as an isolate, one of the Tyrsenian languages, and a number of other less well-known theories. The consensus among linguists and Etruscologists is that Etruscan was a Pre–Indo-European,and a Paleo-European language and is closely related to the Raetic language spoken in the Alps, and to the Lemnian language, attested in a few inscriptions on Lemnos. Grammatically, the language is agglutinating, with nouns and verbs showing suffixed inflectional endings and gradation of vowels. Nouns show five cases, singular and plural numbers, with a gender distinction between animate and inanimate in pronouns. Etruscan appears to have had a cross-linguistically common phonological system, with four phonemic vowels and an apparent contrast between aspirated and unaspirated stops. The records of the language suggest that phonetic change took place over time, with the loss and then re-establishment of word-internal vowels, possibly due to the effect of Etruscan's word-initial stress. Etruscan religion influenced that of the Romans, and many of the few surviving Etruscan language artifacts are of votive or religious significance.
  23. Serling Galleria by Mans Greback, $39.00
    Serling Galleria is a classy, classic serif font that exudes an air of fine art and high-end creativity. With its clear, legible letterforms and modernist inventiveness, Serling Galleria brings a touch of strict creativity to your designs, making them stand out in sophistication. This versatile font family is perfect for projects that require a refined, elegant aesthetic. With its variable font feature, you have the flexibility to fine-tune the font to your specific needs and create a truly bespoke typographical experience, or use the pre-defined font styles: Thin, Thin Italic, Extra Light, Extra Light Italic, Light, Light Italic, Regular, Regular Italic, Medium, Medium Italic, SemiBold, SemiBold Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Extra Bold, Extra Bold Italic, Black, Black Italic The diverse styles in the Serling Galleria font family provide unmatched versatility, allowing you to adapt your typography to various design contexts and moods seamlessly. With this array of weights and styles at your fingertips, you can effortlessly create a visual hierarchy, emphasize key elements, and establish a cohesive, engaging design language across your creative projects. Also includes a variable font! Only one font file, but the file contains multiple styles. Use the sliders in Illustrator, Photoshop or InDesign to manually set any weight and width. This gives you not only the predefined styles, but instead more than a thousand ways to customize the type to the exact look your project requires. Built with advanced OpenType functionality, Serling Galleria ensures top-notch quality and provides you with full control and customizability. It includes stylistic and contextual alternates, ligatures, and other features to make your designs truly unique and tailored to your needs. Serling Galleria offers extensive lingual support, covering all Latin-based languages, from Northern Europe to South Africa, from America to South-East Asia. It contains all the characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  24. Ahoura by Naghi Naghachian, $58.00
    The Ahoura font family, designed by Naghi Naghashian, was developed considering specific research and analysis on Arabic characters and definition of their structure. The Ahoura innovation is a contribution to modernisation of Arabic typography; gives the Arabic font letters real typographic arrangement and provides for more typographic flexibility. This step was necessary after more than two hundred years of relative stagnation in Arabic font design. Ahoura supports Arabic, Persian, and Urdu and includes proportional and tabular numerals for the supported languages. The Ahoura Font family is available in three weights; Light, Regular and Bold. Each has two different styles-- normal and italic. Ahoura is the first real italic Arabic typeface known until now and its intuitive design arrangement fulfils the following needs: - It is precisely crafted for use in electronic media and it fulfils the demands of electronic communication. Ahoura is not based on any pre-digital typefaces and it is not a revival. Rather, its forms were created with today’s ever-changing technology in mind. - Ahoura is suitable for multiple applications, and gives the widest potential for acceptability. - It is extremely legible not only in its small sizes, but also when the type is filtered or skewed, e.g., in Photoshop or Illustrator. Ahoura's simplified forms may be artificially obliqued with In Design or Illustrator, without any degradation of its quality for the effected text. - Ahoura is an eye-catching and classy typographic image that developed for multiple languages and writing conventions. - Ahoura uses the very highest degree of geometric clarity along with the necessary amount of calligraphic references. The Ahoura typeface is of a high vibration that is finely balance between calligraphic tradition and the contemporary sans serif aesthetic commonly seen in Latin typography.
  25. Taca by Rúben R Dias, $42.00
    Taca is a typeface built around a shape that Portuguese designer Rúben R Dias calls a “squircle” — neither square nor circle. We usually associate the rounded, convex box with the television screens of the 1960s and Aldo Novarese’s classic typeface, Eurostile. But whereas Eurostile is cold and machined, Taca is warm and rugged, as if it was molded from clay or carved from stone. Taca’s organic nature is also derived from another unique feature: rounded crotches at the right angles where perpendicular strokes meet. This subtle finish, along with blunt stroke endings, softens the otherwise rigid skeleton. With such a strong conceptual vision, Taca could be relegated to the bin of experimental designs, severely limited in their application. But that fate is usually born of a less experienced maker. As a teacher, designer, and letterpress printer, Dias is a type user, keenly aware of the functional requirements of good type. Taca is therefore not a slave to its concept, but a working font family, effective in various sizes and environments. Its lettershapes break away from the base shape whenever it makes sense for legibility, while still maintaining the flavor of the design as a whole. That said, a set of squircle-shaped alternates give the user the flexibility to get more stylized if the situation calls for it. Fitting to its functional aims, Taca has many of the features one expects of a proper text font: upper and lowercase figures, case-sensitive punctuation, and Extended Latin language support. The simplicity, openness, and squareness of Taca’s forms also make it an ideal design for the pixel grid of screen displays.
  26. Die Lara by Ingo, $27.00
    A girl’s handwriting written on the iPad Writing changes – throughout history over centuries, but also from generation to generation. Each new generation of students learns to write the basic forms of the letters a little differently than their predecessors. The role model is also changing. The cursive handwriting taught in school is getting closer and closer to printed type. The children no longer learn the forms of cursive handwriting required for connected writing, but first the “block letters”, only later should they develop their own individual handwriting from this, which many of them no longer do. And the writing tool is also changing. Of course, script looks different when children no longer learn to write on paper with a fountain pen, but on a tablet computer with the “pencil”. The writing experience is completely different, and the “material properties” are different too. There is practically no writing resistance that would make it difficult to move against the direction of writing. "Die Lara" was created based on the template by Lara Mörwald from the winter of 2023. The font version "Black" corresponds to the handwritten original, all thinner variants up to the wafer-thin "Hairline" are derived from it. In the variable font, the intermediate forms can be selected steplessly. In order to preserve the handwritten character of the font, "Die Lara" contains several alternates to most letters and numerals, so that different character forms alternate in the typeface. If the "ligatures" function is activated in the app (which is the default in most programs), these alternates appear automatically as you type. There is also an alternative "swashed" variant of some letters. So you can set somewhat livelier accents at the beginning or end of a word. "Die Lara" also contains fractions and tabular figures.
  27. Duende by Aerotype, $49.00
    Created with headline, logo and other short display work in mind, Duende comes in two weights with alternates for the upper and lowercase, consecutive characters are controlled with the OpenType Ligature feature. Display bigger lowercase crossbars as the surrounding characters allow with OpenType Contextual Alternates on, or create your own custom lowercase f or t with a non-crossbar character and one of the included crossbar options Other features include case-sensitive quotes and smart apostrophes. Duende has an alternate for every capital letter and multiple alternate options for the lowercase including swashy terminal characters and non-connecting alternates. Also included are a few clip-on swash elements that can be used to create initial and terminal forms. Duende uses smart crossbars for common situations, unifying Af, Aft, At, Att, Aff, tt and ff with a single crossbar when the OpenType Ligature feature in on. The Ligature feature also ensures subtle baseline variation when two lowercase characters are keyed twice in a row. Enable Contextual Alternates in your OpenType menu and Duende uses bigger f and t crossbars as the surrounding characters allow. Enable Discretionary Ligatures for lowercase o connections. You can also make your own lowercase f and t to fit any situation combining one of the included crossbars and non-crossbar f or t characters (available as ‘Alternates for Current Selection’ when f or t is selected). Just select the crossbar you want from the glyph table as a separate text element and move it anywhere. Also included are ten tt ligatures with crossbars and one without. Duende also has a few other swashy things that can be used to cross the lowercase f and t. Customize alternate capitals U, V, W, X and Y with any one of the swash options available in the glyph table for those characters.
  28. Japanese Brush Master by Okaycat, $29.95
    Japanese Brush Master was developed directly from the hand-written brushstrokes of experienced calligrapher, Shigeru Nomura. Feel the artistic brushstrokes. Japanese Brush Master is extended, containing West European diacritics & ligatures, making it also suitable for multilingual environments & publications.
  29. Something Weird by Trustha, $17.00
    Something Weird is a playful handwritten font, written with fun and relaxation. Something Weird comes with six styles, and 400+ glyphs, which also include multilingual languages. Something Weird is perfect for headlines, branding, packaging, quotes, and many more.
  30. NK Fracht Square by HouseOfBurvo, $15.00
    NK_Fracht Square (meaning Cargo or Freight) is a stylized version of Neue Konstrukteur Square. It is more suited for headline and display purposes, but can also be used quite successfully for short blocks for running text and captions.
  31. Tolkien Certar by Deniart Systems, $10.00
    Based on the more usual pen stroke form of 'runes', (translation of Elvish Certar and Cirth). The richest form was also known as the Alphabet of Daeron. NOTE: this font comes with an interpretation guide in pdf format.
  32. Tolkien Tengwanda Gothic by Deniart Systems, $15.00
    A gothic style script based on a writing system devised by J.R.R. Tolkien, also known as the Tengwar of Feanor, used for many languages in Middle-earth. NOTE: this font comes with an interpretation guide in pdf format.
  33. Decade Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Decade Nouveau JNL is based on examples of an Art Nouveau wood type with a bit of Latin/Western typographic flare, and yet it is also reminiscent of the style's revival during the hippie movement of the 1960s.
  34. Ross by Elemeno, $25.00
    Ross, named after Harold Ross, is also available as part of the Algonquin Collection at a special price. Six font families inspired by the great wits of the Algonquin Round Table. Buy all six and get two free!
  35. Hello Aster by madjack.font, $13.00
    Hello Aster is a new font brushed textured script which is also equipped with additional swashes. It is perfect for brand projects, logos, product packaging, posters, invitations, greeting cards, news, blogs, or anything to feature a persona charm.
  36. Hindia by Lafontype, $14.00
    Hindia is a casual handwritten font with a pleasant shape and taste on every glyph. Hindia also supports multiple languages so this font is suitable for any design such as branding, fashion, print templates, quotes, wedding and more.
  37. Wilhelmschrift by Aerotype, $29.00
    The 1927 Klingspor Foundry specimen book debuted one of Rudolf Koch's greatest achievements, the original Wilhelm-Klingspor-Schrift, the source for the patinaed Wilhelmschrift. Companion Wilhelmschrift Ornaments features 36 flowers and other decorative elements also designed by Koch.
  38. Construct by Breitenlauf, $20.00
    Construct is a technically based headline font that can also be used as body text. The font has some new ligatures that are automatically applied. Construct particularly suitable for headlines which should have a urban and technical character.
  39. Belinday by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $25.00
    Belinday is a Monoline Script Font with Retro Vintage Style. This font is perfect for fashion brand, apparel, shoes company, wedding invitation, business card, logo brand, clothing, and also business brand name like barber shop or taylor. Thanks.
  40. Magic Bright Script by Typestory, $10.00
    Magic Bright is a stunning and comprehensive duo font (script and serif), ideal for giving your projects a branded but friendly feel. The two included styles can be combined together perfectly but are also beautiful on their own.
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