10,000 search results (0.024 seconds)
  1. Ohio Player - Unknown license
  2. Flim-Flam - Personal use only
  3. Travelcons - Personal use only
  4. LEGO BRIX - Personal use only
  5. SheCreature - Unknown license
  6. super danger - Unknown license
  7. Jangly walk - 100% free
  8. Half SunBurst-w4-02 - Unknown license
  9. Ciclamino by TrueBlue, $16.00
    “Ciclamino” is the Italian name for a small, elegant forest flower with a sweet but strong fragrance. This font is inspired by the peculiars characteristics of this flower, to the elegant shapes of the petals and its intense fragrance but sweet and refined. The result is a font with a particularly incisive but elegant layout suitable for high-impact graphic projects with a modern and decisive flavor but with a note of balanced elegance. There are no limits to the situations in which you can use it to give a touch of originality to your graphic creations but there are some project categories in which it could be a choice of great visual impact and help you express all your creativity. The particular can give excellent results in all those situations that have a flavor of modernity, and innovative technology and express innovation and dynamism and decision. At the same time, its decisive and sinuous lines also adapt to situations with a gothic and fantasy relish and even to tribal graphics. But this is just a minimal list of situations in which it can express its potential, it is a very versatile font and you can find a lot of other situations in which its use can make a difference and help you obtain an original result with a great visual impact.
  10. Bloody - Unknown license
  11. Beautiful Beasts - Unknown license
  12. HandPrinting - Unknown license
  13. The Real Font - Unknown license
  14. Golden Girdle - Unknown license
  15. Teleprinter - Unknown license
  16. HOZENOZZLE - Unknown license
  17. Senior Service - Unknown license
  18. Console - Unknown license
  19. FUTURE_NEWS - Unknown license
  20. Strait - Unknown license
  21. Killerbee - Unknown license
  22. Uneek - Unknown license
  23. Wellsley - Unknown license
  24. Ala Carte - Unknown license
  25. Italian Didot by BA Graphics, $45.00
    Exquisite design, delicate but yet strong enough to make a statement just right for that special occasion.
  26. Crackers by BA Graphics, $45.00
    Extreme look but yet simple enough for headlines, books and loose ads. A happy go lucky look.
  27. Fashion Didot by BA Graphics, $45.00
    Exquisite design, delicate but yet strong enough to make a statement. Just right for that special occasion.
  28. Happy Heinrich by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Happy Heinrich has the looks of a typewriter font, but he's far to funky just for that!
  29. Rookie JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Rookie JNL is derived from the lettering style found in Directory Board JNL, but with serifs added.
  30. Forberas by Forberas Club, $16.00
    Forberas Club is usable for anything. But will be better if you use it for memorable moment.
  31. Domestic Bliss by Funk King, $10.00
    Domestic Bliss is a perky dot fonts that can bring some fun and bounce to your project.
  32. Golden Love by Autographis, $39.50
    Golden Love is a modern, compact script with short ascenders and descenders but nevertheless very good readability.
  33. Jayhawker by Context, $10.00
    A super-stylized retro display face for headlines, posters, drop caps and other basic-but-oversized uses.
  34. DB Girly Soccer by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    Whoever said that girls can't play sports was wrong! DoodleBat Girly Soccer highlights the fun in soccer.
  35. Easy Game by PizzaDude.dk, $18.00
    Easy Game is my laid back, easy to read, fun to watch comic and all-purpose font!
  36. ITC Tactile by ITC, $29.99
    ITC Tactile is a puzzle of subtle typographic contradictions. Capitals have traditional epigraphic proportions, but the lowercase has a uniform optical width. Light weights are stately and elegant, but bold designs are almost jolly. This paradoxical alphabet even combines two distinctively different serif designs. Designer Joe Stitzlein says, “I wanted to create a modern and dynamic serif face that draws its forms from antiquity. I also wanted to have as much fun as possible with the drawing and architecture of each letter. Hopefully I've created a very legible typeface that grabs the reader's eye in a nice, 'tactile' way.” The apparent inconsistencies of the design are the result of careful consideration. Of the seemingly odd serif design, Stitzlein explains, “The transitional serif is an entry point for the eye into the letterform, and the long slab is an exit, leading to the next letter.” The result is a typeface that's easy to read at text sizes but offers surprising details when enlarged to display sizes, setting ITC Tactile apart from more traditional designs. While this is his first commercial typeface design, Stitzlein has ample experience creating custom typefaces for corporate branding, including companies such as Silicon Graphics and Sempra Energy. His graphic design business has served a wide range of clients, including Apple Computer and the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics. The ITC Tactile family is available in three weights, with complementary italic designs and a suite of small caps for each of the roman designs. Stitzlein drew the small caps to match the height of the lowercase x-height, which enables “bi-form” or “unicase” setting in display copy.
  37. 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.
  38. IceCream Soda - Unknown license
  39. Marquee Moon - Unknown license
  40. Lunaurora - Unknown license
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