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  1. Gaban - Personal use only
  2. Kingthings Annex - 100% free
  3. FALLING SKIES - Personal use only
  4. Nova SOLID - Personal use only
  5. Nuixyber Glow Next - Personal use only
  6. WHEN THE GOES SUN . SCENE - Unknown license
  7. Trek - Unknown license
  8. Web Serveroff - 100% free
  9. Oramac - Personal use only
  10. Ab Fangs - Unknown license
  11. Romance Fatal Sans - Personal use only
  12. Display Dots - 100% free
  13. TooneyNoodle - 100% free
  14. Pabellona (B) Dúplex - Personal use only
  15. JICAMA - Unknown license
  16. Pinniepoker - Personal use only
  17. BIRTH OF A HERO - Unknown license
  18. Docteur Atomic - Personal use only
  19. Nascent - Unknown license
  20. SF Big Whiskey - Unknown license
  21. Squeeze Me Baby! - 100% free
  22. loco - Personal use only
  23. Green Fuz - Unknown license
  24. Bullpen 3D - Unknown license
  25. Certified - Unknown license
  26. Komika Text Kaps - Unknown license
  27. Umbrage - Unknown license
  28. Parafuse - 100% free
  29. CosmosCaps - Unknown license
  30. Hardcore - Unknown license
  31. ACED IT - Personal use only
  32. Refuse - Unknown license
  33. WALLRIDER - Personal use only
  34. Husky Stash - Unknown license
  35. !PaulMaul - Personal use only
  36. Sonic Mega Font - Unknown license
  37. Pudgy Puss NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Here’s a new take on an old favorite, the Lubalin-Carnase classic Fat Face. This version, intended for large headlines, cranks the original’s very high contrast up another notch. Both versions of this font contain the complete Unicode Latin A character complement, with support for the Afrikaans, Albanian, Basque, Bosnian, Breton, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Finnish, Flemish, French, Frisian, German, Greenlandic, Hawaiian, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Maltese, Maori, Moldavan, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Provençal, Rhaeto-Romanic, Romanian, Romany, Sámi, Samoan, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Turkish and Welsh languages, as well as discretionary ligatures and extended fractions.
  38. Oak Street by Three Islands Press, $39.00
    There's a little restaurant in an old house on a sidestreet in town (Rockland, Maine, USA) called Cafe Miranda. The staff is friendly, the setting intimate, and the appetizer a basket of hot bread fresh from a brick oven. Its ample menu features such entries as "Quasi-Cassoulet" and "Gentle Sole." It's among my favorite local places to dine out. But the menu got photocopied once too often, and Cindy's personable handlettering got faded and broken. So I took matters into my own hands. And here's what I delivered to the newly computerized folks at the little restaurant on Oak Street. You, too, can travel in rather heavy felt-tip style.
  39. Song Publisher JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Song Publisher JNL features a design based on the 1945 Art Deco-era hand lettered sheet music title "When the Old Gang's back on the Corner (Singin' Sweet Adeline Again)". It's a good thing sheet music wasn't sold by the word count found in song titles, because this twelve word example would have been more costly than titles such as "Nola", "Tenderly" or "Ciribiribin".
  40. Sugar Pie by Sudtipos, $79.00
    When Candy Script was officially released and in the hands of a few designers, I was in the middle of a three-week trip in North America. After returning to Buenos Aires, I found a few reactions to the font in my inbox. Alongside the congratulatory notes, flattering samples of the face in use, and the inevitable three or four “How do I use it?” emails, one interesting note asked me to consider an italic counterpart. 

I had experimented with a few different angles during the initial brainstorming of the concept but never really thought of Candy Script as an upright italic character set. A few trials confirmed to me that an italic Candy Script would be a bad idea. However, some of these trials showed conceptual promise of their own, so I decided to pursue them and see where they would go. Initially, it seemed a few changes to the Candy Script forms would work well at angles ranging from 18 to 24 degrees, but as the typeface evolved, I realized all the forms had to be modified considerably for a typeface of this style to work as both a digital font and a true emulation of real hand-lettering. Those were the pre-birth contractions of the idea for this font. I called it Sugar Pie because it has a sweet taste similar to Candy Script, mostly due to its round-to-sharp terminal concept. This in turn echoes the concept of the clean brush scripts found in the different film type processes of late 1960s and early 1970s.
 
While Candy Script’s main visual appeal counts on the loops, swashes, and stroke extensions working within a concept of casual form variation, Sugar Pie is artistically a straightforward packaging typeface. Its many ligatures and alternates are just as visually effective as Candy Script’s but in a subtler and less pronounced fashion. The alternates and ligatures in Sugar Pie offer many nice variations on the main character set. Use them to achieve the right degree of softness you desire for your design. Take a look of the How to use PDF file in our gallery section for inspiration.
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