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  1. Ottocento by Eurotypo, $39.00
    Ottocento is an elegant chancery cursive, derived from XIXth century Italian calligraphy. Slightly inclined and with a fast and marked ductus, this font is well balanced between thick and thin strokes and shows marked ascendings and descendings.
 Ottocento is rich in stylistic variations with its elaborated upper cases, and stylistically different in traits and different ligatures are considered to make the most of the many OpenType features.
  2. Stud - Unknown license
  3. Mottek - Personal use only
  4. TallDeco - Unknown license
  5. Comaro - Personal use only
  6. Marbold - Personal use only
  7. ATROX - Unknown license
  8. Inscruta - Personal use only
  9. Gael - Personal use only
  10. Pisan - Personal use only
  11. AddLoops - Unknown license
  12. Romanche - Personal use only
  13. RikyTiky - Personal use only
  14. Fettash - Personal use only
  15. BeesWax - Personal use only
  16. Balloons - Personal use only
  17. Giambattista by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    Giambattista is a long-time project of mine finally come to an end. After redesigning all of Giambattista Bodoni's work and then some additional cuts I started a long time ago with this Non-Bodoni Bodoni. The idea came to me while redesigning the original Chancellerosa (chancery). I thought Bodoni just didn't have the right approach to a chancery, this was just not his cup of tea! Maybe that is why he never used the Chancellerosa very much for his own printshop in Parma. So I thought someone has to design a script, that looks like Bodoni could have designed it but is more lively than his. Over the years I have been working on and off on the face and it turned out to become three typefaces which can be freely mixed. Here is my modern version of a script in the style of Giambattista, meant as an hommage, I called it Giambattista. Your modern scribe Gert Wiescher
  18. HVD Edding 780 - Unknown license
  19. Starcraft - Unknown license
  20. Skeksis - Unknown license
  21. Turok - Unknown license
  22. Thalia - Unknown license
  23. Dalelands - Unknown license
  24. Emulator - Unknown license
  25. Chinyen - Unknown license
  26. Transmetals - Unknown license
  27. Nightwarrior - Unknown license
  28. Gutcruncher - Unknown license
  29. Sands of Fire - Unknown license
  30. Adventure - Unknown license
  31. Warlords - Unknown license
  32. Utusi Star - Unknown license
  33. Urfa Rounded by Ahmet Altun, $19.00
    Urfa Rounded Font family is the rounded version of Urfa Typeface. The Urfa Rounded font family comes in nine weights of Normal and Italic. In addition, all weights contain small caps in both italic and normal. With the Urfa Rounded font family, you can create beautiful works for the web, including logos, banners, body copy, and presentations. Urfa Rounded typeface also works nicely in print formats such as posters, T-shirts, magazines, and affiches. Because of its eye-pleasing style, this font is both effective and versatile. It supports a wide range of languages, including Extended Latin and Cyrillic.
  34. Beba by Eurotypo, $28.00
    Beba is based on geometric structures, where the same formal characteristics are applied to as many letters as possible. It is a sans-serif monoline typeface. It has a modern, clean and minimalist image; ideal to use for advertising, printed or digital graphics and signage system design.
  35. Pokemon - Unknown license
  36. Jedi - Unknown license
  37. Tsa - Unknown license
  38. Ysgarth - Unknown license
  39. ITC Flora by ITC, $40.99
    ITC Flora is the work of Dutch designer Gerard Unger, and is named for his daughter. He started by doing calligraphy experiments with felt-tip and ballpoint pens, and developed these drawings into a formalized script typeface. Swiss typographer Max Caflisch advised the Dr.-Ing Rudolf Hell GmbH technology firm to add a new round-nibbed script face to their Digiset type library, and in 1984, Flora was released by Hell. Unger used a chancery cursive skeleton in this design, which imparts grace and movement. Flora was also intentionally designed to be simple and sturdy, and with its minimal variation in thick/thin stroke ratio, it worked well on the early digital typesetting machines. In 1989, the International Typeface Corporation released the font. ITC Flora continues to work well on current printers and typesetters, and it has an enduring popularity for uses that range from short text passages to display headlines.
  40. Beast Machines - Unknown license
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