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  1. Chellovek - Unknown license
  2. Plastelina MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Very versatile sans serif font, designed with a soft touch of elegance. Great for invitations and headlines
  3. Blockade by Monotype, $29.99
    Hans Bacher created a comic styled caps only font with the movement of his bold lettering stylus.
  4. Bindle by Elemeno, $25.00
    Rounded, tapered and bold, Bindle was designed as an alternative to overused or outdated informal sans serifs.
  5. Zarina by BohFonts, $-
    Sans serif typeface with calligraphic features and outstanding contrast between curve and line designed for small text.
  6. Grandeur by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A contemporary design can be used in all applications from text to Headlines. Very clean and readable.
  7. Gusto Black by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A real heavy weight, a chunky sans serif that packs some real Punch. No fancy frills here.
  8. Angulatte by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Angulatte is a sans serif font made up of characters that are drawn with only straight lines.
  9. Domestic Bliss by Funk King, $10.00
    Domestic Bliss is a perky dot fonts that can bring some fun and bounce to your project.
  10. Badinerie by JBFoundry, $16.00
    Badinerie is a cursive font family with decorative variations. You can choose simplicity, swash, love or flowers.
  11. KG Makes You Stronger by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Crayon-style script handwriting. Can also work as a colored pencil or chalk handwriting. Perfect for teachers!
  12. Shazam by BA Graphics, $45.00
    This font packs some punch Remember the TV Batman Blurbs POW, BANG, WOW, and of course SHAZAM!
  13. Kingdom by Funk King, $15.00
    Kingdom is a castle font. You can use the characters for display and build your own castle.
  14. Trilium JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Trilium JNL is a tri-line sans serif font that was modeled from some 1970s retail packaging.
  15. Shifty by MADType, $21.00
    Rational curves and spiky rhythms punctuate this all-caps sans face, for a plastic feeling, futuristic effect.
  16. Moyenage by Storm Type Foundry, $55.00
    Blackletter typefaces follow certain fixed rules, both in respect to their forms and to the orthography. Possibly, they were a reaction to the half-developed Carolingian minuscule which was soon to end in the Latin script. Narrow, ordered script was to replace the round, hesitant and shattered shapes of letters in order to simplify writing, to unify the meaning of individual letters, and to save some parchment, too. Opposed to the practice common in monasterial scriptoriums where Uncial, Irish and Carolingian inspiration flew freely and as a result, the styles of writing differed in each monastery, the blackletter type was to define one, common standard. It was to express spiritual verticality, in perfect tune with the architecture of the Gothic era. Typography became an integral part of the overall style of the period. The pointed arch and the blackletter type were the vanguard of the spectacular transformation from the Middle Ages towards the modern era, they were a celebration of a time when works of art were not signed by their makers yet. Some unfortunate souls keep linking blackletter solely with Germany and the Third Reich, while the truth is that its direct predecessor, the Gothic minuscule, evolved mostly in France. Even Hitler himself indicated blackletter type obsolete in the age of steel, iron and concrete – thus making a significant contribution to the spreading of the Latin script in Germany. Once we leave our prejudice aside, we find that the shapes of blackletter type have exceptional potential, unheard of in sans-serif letterforms. The lower case letters fit into an imaginary rectangle which is easily extended both upwards and sideways. In its scope and in the name itself, the Moyenage type family project is to celebrate the diversity of the Middle Ages. I begun realizing the urge to design my own blackletter when visiting the beer gardens of Munich and while walking through the villages of rural Austria. The letters from the notice boards of inns are scented with spring air, with the flowers of cudweed, with white sausage and weissbier. The crooked calligraphic hooks and beaks seem to imitate the hearty yodeling of local drinkers and the rustle of the giant skirts of girls who distribute the giant wreaths of beer jugs. Moyenage is, however, a modern replica of blackletter, so it contains some otherwise unacceptable Latin script elements in upper case. I chose these keeping the modern reader in mind, striving for better legibility. The font is drawn as if written with a flat pen or brush, and with the ambition to, perhaps, serve as a calligraphic model. In medium width, the face is surprisingly well legible; it is perfect for menus as well as posters and CD covers for some of the heavier kinds of music. It has five types of numerals and also a set of Cyrillic script, symbolising the lovelorn union of Germans and Russians in the 20th century. Thus, it is well suited for the setting of bilingual texts of the German classic literature, which, according to the ancient rules, must not be set in Latin script.
  17. Gelion by Halbfett, $30.00
    Gelion is a large family of geometric sans serif fonts. It ships both as two Variable Fonts or as 16 traditional fonts. Those static fonts span eight different weights, ranging from Extralight to Black. Each has an upright and an italic font on offer. The italics are carefully crafted, with an 8° slope. Gelion is inspired by 20th-century geometric sans serifs and classic neo-grotesque designs from the late 19th century and the middle of the 20th century. Its forms remain true to the gracefully geometric look of its classic predecessors, which will surely tick off any client’s long list of branding requirements. Letters in all of Gelion’s weights are drawn with virtually monolinear strokes. Its lowercase letters have a tall x-height. Yet, that still leaves enough room for the fonts’ diacritical marks. Gelion’s default “a” and “g” each have single-storey forms by default. The dots on the ‘i’, ‘j’, and diacritics are round, as are the punctuation marks. Gelion is an excellent choice for both corporate design and editorial design projects, thanks to its range of weights and its legibility in text. The fonts include a lot of ligatures, some monochromatic emoji, a set of arrows, lovely Roman Numerals, and more. Thanks to Gelion’s stylistic alternates, if a project comes up where you do not need a geometric vibe, you can activate Stylistic Set 1. That will replace many of the fonts’ letters with more humanistic-sans alternates, giving your text the feeling of a whole other type design with just one click. Last but not least, the descending “f” available in Gelion’s italics is a nice typographic trait.
  18. Poipoi by Dharma Type, $14.99
    Extraordinary impact and visual conspicuousness. Poipoi is a super 3D sans family for posters, logos and all display. The basic idea is not a brand new. The Stacking type system has been used since before wood type age. As you imagined, colored wood type(woodcut), many other engravings and contemporary printer machine print many colors separately with different printing plates for each color. Poipoi uses the same system for 3d effect. Please use Photoshop or Illustrator, or your favorite graphic design apps that can handle layers. Layers are the printing plates of wood type. You should be able to change text color for each layer. Poipoi "Standard" style is the base of this font family. You can add effects by stacking Highlight and shadow layers. Stacked layers in different color make the text in 3D. Instruction 1. Type your text as you like. 2. Set font-name "Poipoi" and font-style "Standard" 3. Set color of "Standard" layer. 4. Duplicate the "Standard" layer twice (One for Highlight, one for Shadow). 4'. The layer order should be Highlight, Standard, and Shadow from top to bottom. 5. Set font-style and color of "Highlight" and "Shadow" layers. 6. Adjust tracking if you need. (Please use same tracking value for all 3 layers.) For further detail, https://www.dropbox.com/s/xymis7dh5hwxn9q/Poipoi.pdf Poipoi Standard, Highlighted, and shadowed style can be used solely. Rounded terminals add soft, cute, and casual impressions to your design. Spec: Over 400 glyphs! Basic Latin ✓ Western Europe ✓ Central Europe ✓ South Eastern Europe ✓ Mac Roman ✓ Windows 1252 ✓ Adobe Latin 1 ✓ Adobe Latin 2 ✓ Adobe Latin 3 ✓ Almost all Latins are covered.
  19. Fangs ALot by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    FangsALot is a bizarre typeface family that was designed to alternate two character sets. These sets are alternated automatically in applications that support the OpenType feature Contextual Alternatives (calt). The template used to design characters is a distorted triangle that resembles a curved tooth or a fang. This shape can be flipped horizontally, vertically, and both horizontally and vertically to give four orientations. Two of these orientations are used in the regular style and two in what is called the italic style. I thought the fang motif did not come through clearly in the regular and italic styles. Rather the impression they give is more like graffiti lettering. To emphasize the fang motif I added two more members to the family by filling fang outlines with unadorned sans-serif characters. Then to allow more color in lettering, I added two more styles with letters on black. I then had six styles based on triangles skewed left and right. Why not fill the family out with three more styles based on an isosceles triangle? The end result is a family of nine. All members of the family are monospaced and are hard to read. The three graffiti-like styles have some alternative letters that can be accessed with the OpenType feature Stylistic Sets. Also, for each style it is possible to use only one set of characters by adding a space after each letter and then adjusting the character spacing. The graffiti-like styles can be useful in situations where the hard-to-read property is not important but where a menacing and vicious touch is needed, such as topics of sharks, teeth, biting, and vampires.
  20. ShadowedGermanica, a unique typeface crafted by Paul Lloyd Fonts, is a captivating addition to the realm of typography that draws heavy inspiration from Gothic and Germanic design principles. This fo...
  21. InkyBear - Unknown license
  22. Recon - Unknown license
  23. Daville Slanted - Unknown license
  24. Daville Condensed - Unknown license
  25. FontSale - Personal use only
  26. Borek by Alphabet Design, $20.00
    Borek is a geometric monoline sans-serif display font. It works well in both display and text applications.
  27. Ronan by Mad Irishman Productions, $22.00
    A bold font evoking Dark Age adventure, Ronan can be used for titles requiring Latin or Cyrillic alphabets.
  28. KG When Oceans Rise by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    A neat handwritten font in an upright, feminine style. The bar key | contains a cute slice of cake.
  29. Aureola by OneSevenPointFive, $20.00
    Condensed Sans-Serif font family 7 widths with corresponding italics 2 free fonts (Aureola regular & italic) OpenType features
  30. Science Fiction by Indian Summer Studio, $20.00
    Geometric sans-serif with clean, ordered, hi-tech, futuristic feeling. For texts, titles, interfaces, logos, technical inscriptions, everything.
  31. Deep Fried by Fatchair, $4.95
    Designed to be layered, DeepFried is a multi-weight geometric sans-serif with a 70's pop feel.
  32. Momcake Pro by Rivian, $15.00
    Modern geometric sans serif typeface. Suitable for many projects such as logo, printing, social media, website, apps, etc.
  33. Wednesdom by Letterhend, $9.00
    Wednesdom is a playful font that you can use for many things, including cute quotes, branding and more.
  34. MBF Predatory by Moonbandit, $10.00
    Moonbandit presents Predatory, a bold modern sans serif titling font. A multi purpose display font with high impact
  35. KG Broken Vessels Sketch by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    A hand-sketched sans serif sketch font. For a solid version, pair this with KG Second Chances Solid.
  36. Galactic by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A heavy bold serif face, packs great punch; excellent headline font. Can be used for many different applications.
  37. Cheq by Adobe, $35.00
    A set of chessmen and related symbols. Another version from Linotype can be found at Linotype Game Pi. "
  38. Nubrix Grotesk by Ensor Creative, $19.99
    Nubrix Grotesk is a condensed geometric sans full of curves, character & charm. Perfect for big statements and impact!
  39. Dreamline by Wiescher Design, $19.50
    Dreamline is a set of elegant monoline scripts in three variations that can be mixed with each other.
  40. Malibu Heights by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A beautiful new sans serif great for magazines, ad work, text or headlines works for all your needs.
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