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  1. Edward Edwin by Ingrimayne Type, $8.95
    EdwardEdwin a is simple but elegant rendition of a formal, calligraphic script.
  2. Picuxuxo by Intellecta Design, $16.90
    Picuxuxo is a slab fun font, good to kid's story tale books.
  3. Clearmont by BA Graphics, $45.00
    An exciting new contemporary serif face; very powerful but yet very elegant.
  4. Sahara Bodoni by BA Graphics, $45.00
    An ultra heavy redesigned Bodoni look, extremely powerful but yet very elegant.
  5. Toothpaste by Funk King, $5.00
    Toothpaste is a fun swirly font with lots of pizzazz and energy.
  6. Licorice by TypeSETit, $24.95
    Handwritten letters are great for scrapbooking, cards, invitations and other fun things.
  7. Janda Silly Monkey by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Cute and fun handwriting inspired by the playful antics of a child.
  8. Brazarri Pro AOE by Astigmatic, $24.00
    The Brazzari Pro AOE is an unusual but fun geometric typestyle design. It is the historical revival and elaboration of the "Bizarre" typeface created by MacKellar, Smiths, & Jordan Co. in 1884. What began as a basic character set of Capitals, lowercase, numerals, and a small handful of punctuation characters has been expanded to a full character set including unlimited fractionals, superiors & inferiors, ordinals, tabular & proportional figures, and an expanded language glyph set, all with a smallcaps and Caps to Smallcap set to match. Definitely a niché use typeface, however, it has some great appeal. The letterforms of Brazarri Pro AOE are easy to convert to paths and extend various stems, making this revival something you can really let your imagination run wild with for your designs. WHAT'S INCLUDED: Enable the Stylistic Alternates feature for standardized letterforms without the extensions. Extensive language support. Invocation has accented and special characters that support the following languages: Afrikaans, Albanian, Basque, Bosnian, Breton, Catalan Cornish, Corsican, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Embu, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Faroese, Filipino, Finnish, French, Galician, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Irish, Indonesian, Italian, Kurdish, Leonese, Luxenbourgish, Malay, Maltese, Manx, Maori, Meru, Morisyen, North Ndebele, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, Nyankole, Occitan, Oromo, Polish, Portuguese, Rhaeto-Romanic, Romanian, Scottish Gaelic, Scots, Serbian (Latin), Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Turkish, Walloon, & Welsh. One of my guilty pleasures is in taking the time to recreate historical typefaces as digital fonts, and expand on their character sets to enable them to be used more widely than their limited originals. A lot of incredible historical typestyles created as wood or metal type with bare bones character sets have been lost or only exist as limited specimen proofs in old books. These typefaces may have more niché uses than modern typefaces, but I believe it is important nonetheless to preserve these typefaces for future generations. These typefaces, if nothing else, can often inspire new creations.
  9. Cadho Toys by Alit Design, $20.00
    Introducing CADHO TOYS, an exciting and playful bubble display font that will add a touch of whimsy to your designs. This font features a unique alternate ligature style that combines bubbles and letters, creating a fun and engaging visual experience. With its lively appearance, CADHO TOYS is perfect for various design projects, especially those aimed at children, toys, games, or anything that requires a cheerful and vibrant aesthetic. This font is carefully crafted with 707 characters, ensuring versatility and multilingual support. Whether you’re designing in English, French, Spanish, German, or any other language, CADHO TOYS has got you covered. The font includes special characters, punctuation marks, numerals, and a wide range of glyphs, allowing you to express your creativity without limitations. One of the standout features of CADHO TOYS is its support for PUA Unicode. This means that you can access the font’s extensive character set through private use area codes, giving you even more freedom to customize and personalize your designs. Let your imagination run wild as you combine different characters and ligatures to create captivating typographic compositions. CADHO TOYS will bring joy and excitement to any project it graces. Whether you’re designing posters, logos, packaging, websites, or any other creative endeavor, this bubble display font is bound to make a lasting impression. Its alternate ligature style adds a touch of uniqueness and flair, setting your designs apart from the crowd. So why wait? Get your hands on CADHO TOYS today and unlock a world of creativity, fun, and boundless possibilities. Let this font take your designs to new heights and bring smiles to the faces of your audience. Language Support : Latin, Basic, Western European, Central European, South European,Vietnamese. In order to use the beautiful swashes, you need a program that supports OpenType features such as Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe Photoshop CC, Adobe Indesign and Corel Draw. but if your software doesn’t have Glyphs panel, you can install additional swashes font files.
  10. BrushtipTerrence by JOEBOB graphics, $19.00
    A spontaneous, fresh, honest and non-doctored brush script font with an almost complete set of extra characters. Excellent for people that want to put their statement on the wall, but don't have the hand for it, but it's also great for use in poster design, bookcovers and scrapbooking.
  11. Drab by Pesotsky Victor, $12.00
    Drab is a neutral grotesque, but with decorative elements. Suitable for texts and titles. When you do not need a strong accidental but a boring set, Drab is also not suitable. Drab supportsBasic Latin, Cyrillic and more than 100 languages all together. The font was designed by Viktor Pesotsky.
  12. Candymore by Epiclinez, $18.00
    Candymore is a fun and playful handwritten font. Its simple and friendly style is suitable for your DIY or crafting projects. This font has 197 glyphs and its supporting 66 languages, from English to Zulu. Have fun with this super cute font and explore its awesomeness. Thank You!
  13. Ramp Age by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Ramp Age was originally made with a brush, but I wanted a more rough look to it. I manually traced the brush-strokes with short, straight lines, making the font more characteristic in its look. Can be used for grafitti things, but fits in the horror-genre as well!
  14. Patternistic by Joanne Marie, $10.00
    Follow me on Instagram for weekly FREEBIES @joannemarie_cm PATTERNISTIC is a cute and fun, all caps font for any hand lettering style projects. There are 2 fonts included in this family and the uppercase are different to the lowercase (one is solid and one is outline). Have Fun!
  15. Type Wronger JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A typewriter gives you clean, crisp text from its keys, but Type Wronger JNL does anything but this. A distressed typewriter font, this font emits a rough, crude imprint as if the original had been photocopied, copied from that copy and re-copied until the original message had degenerated.
  16. Ladoni by Diogo Pisoeiro, $15.00
    This typeface is inspired on Bodoni, but this is like his gross sister, because it has angles instead of curves. Is a typeface with personality, strong and robust but at the same time sweet with his italics. This typeface has 5 weights, regular, italic, bold, poster and poster italic.
  17. Oh Livey by Angele Kamp, $28.00
    Oh Livey is a casual brush script that has a fun, modern vibe. Put it on everything from quotes and websites, and use the extra clipart to make designing so much easier and fun. Oh Livey contains lots of ligatures which will give it that authentic handwritten feel.
  18. Casual Font Bundle by Konstantine Studio, $12.00
    Please welcome, Casual Font Bundle. A pack of fun and variative fonts for your playful design. Every single fonts have their own personality and characters. Would be a perfect mate for your fun and casual design projects. Pair up each of them and you'll never disappointed at all!
  19. Boys on mopeds by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Sometimes you just want to have fun, and "Boys on mopeds" will take you there! Boys on mopeds are a simple-minded serif font with a fun and loose twist. I've added several versions of each lowercase letter: you have 4 different versions to choose from. Enough to make your invitations, diary, posters, postcards, novels, stickers ... ahhh ... the list is long - and the use of Boys on mopeds is almost endless! Comes with a bunch of international letters, so fun is available in many languages! :)
  20. Chewy Bubble by Balpirick, $15.00
    Chewy Bubble is a fat and handy font, a fun typeface that adds a cheerful and vibrant touch to your designs. This font features bold and rounded letterforms, reminiscent of fat bubbles floating in the air. Carefully crafted curves and generous spacing create a sense of fun and whimsy, giving your text a lively and interesting look. Whether you're designing a logo, poster, or children's book cover, this fat and cheerful font is sure to grab attention and add some fun to your designs
  21. Bong God by Loaded Fonts, $7.50
    Following rules, perhaps too closely. The first full font created by Ray Mullin who strongly believes a font need not be pretty to be valid. Each capital shares similar angles, as does each lowercase, making for a typeface only a mother could love. The rounded style was the true inspiration for the original, but logically it had to come second. Based entirely around Bong God but losing the harsh edges to become a usable futuristic type. Legible, but not readable, recommended in small doses.
  22. Monly by WildOnes, $10.00
    The main idea behind creating Monly typeface was to combine playfulness with a strong letter construction backbone, so all the letters would stand tall and firm, but not to lose the playfulness. Like people, who grow up but try to save their inner child. By doing so and combining all this, the typeface achieves a great readability and appealing look. Monly font suits best for logos, headlines and small text blocks, but can also be used for big text blocks if the style suits the purpose.
  23. AbbeyRoad - Personal use only
  24. ROSETTA STONE - Personal use only
  25. Zar - Unknown license
  26. Umbles - Unknown license
  27. Pink - Unknown license
  28. SkinnyDrip - Unknown license
  29. Spoonge Punk - Personal use only
  30. Life Support - 100% free
  31. Bubblegum Superstar - Unknown license
  32. Pea Stacy's Doodles - Unknown license
  33. bubblii - Unknown license
  34. Semilla by Sudtipos, $79.00
    I spend a lot of time following two obsessions: packaging and hand lettering. Alongside a few other minor obsessions, those two have been my major ones for so many years now, I've finally reached the point where I can actually claim them as “obsessions” without getting a dramatic reaction from the little voice in the back of my head. When you spend so much time researching and studying a subject, you become very focused, directionally and objectively. But of course some of the research material you run into turns out to be tangential to whatever your focus happens to be at the time, so you absorb what you can from it, then shelf it — like the celebrity bobblehead that amused you for a while, but is now an almost invisible ornament eating dust and feathers somewhere in your environment. And just like the bobblehead may fall off the shelf one day to remind you of its existence, some of my lettering research material unveiled itself in my head one day for no particular reason. Hand lettering is now mostly perceived as an American art. Someone with my historical knowledge about lettering may be snooty enough to go as far as pointing out the British origins of almost everything American, including lettering — but for the most part, the contemporary perspective associates great lettering with America. The same perspective also associates blackletter, gothics and sans serifs with Germany. So you can imagine my simultaneous surprise and impatience when, in my research for one of my American lettering-based fonts, I ran into a German lettering book from 1953, by an artist called Bentele. It was no use for me because it didn't propel my focus at that particular time, but a few months ago I was marveling at what we take for granted — the sky is blue, blackletter is German, lettering is American — and found myself flipping through the pages of that book again. The lettering in that book is upbeat and casual sign making stuff, but it has a slightly strange and youthful experimentation at its heart. I suppose I find it strange because it deviates a lot from the American stuff I'm used to working with for so long now. To make a long story short, what’s inside that German book served as the semilla, which is Spanish for seed, for the typeface you see all over these pages. With Semilla, my normal routine went out the window. My life for a while was all Bezier all the time. No special analog or digital brushes or pens were used in drawing these forms. They're the product of a true Bezier process, all starting with a point creating a curve to another point, which draws a curve to another point, and so on. It’s a very time-consuming process, but at the end I am satisfied that it can get to pretty much the same results easier and more traditional methods accomplish. And as usual with my fonts, the OpenType is plenty and a lot of fun. Experimenting with substitution and automation is still a great pleasure for me. It is the OpenType that always saves me from the seemingly endless work hours every type designer must inevitably have to face at one point in his career. The artful photos used in this booklet are by French photographer and designer Stéphane Giner. He is very deserving of your patronage, so please keep an eye out for his marvelous work. I hope you like Semilla and enjoy using it. I have a feeling that it marks a transition to a more curious and flexible period in my career, but only time will tell.
  35. Cure- Wild Mood Swings - Unknown license
  36. Lunasequent - Unknown license
  37. Puritan - Unknown license
  38. Ruutu by Morganismi, $9.00
    Ruutu is a square but queer font presenting odd faces. Supports multiple tongues.
  39. Ringa by Melvastype, $25.00
    Ringa is extra bold slab serif typeface with a fun and sympathetic feel.
  40. DB Girly Girl by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    DoodleBat Girly Girl is everything girl. Join in the fun with this DoodleBat.
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