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  1. Kidyzen by Niznaztype, $10.00
    Kidyzen is a sans handwritten typeface. Inspired from the character of kids writing in their book. Kidyzen have unique style because it like same with typing of children. Kidyzen is perfect for comic, illustration, cartoon, kids design and very suitable for speech bubble text. It have very fun, cute, easy communication, easy reading and unique styles. You can use it for kids t-shirt, cover book, tagline, poster, branding, advertising, wall painting letter and graphic designs that use kids character . Kidyzen have 6 styles, there are regular, italic, bold, bold italic, thin and thin italic. Be enjoy it with my fonts.
  2. Rainy Stars by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Rainy Stars is an irresistibly adorable, naive sans-serif font that captures the magic of a child's imagination. With its round, cute, and cartoon-like letterforms, this font adds a touch of whimsy and playfulness to your designs, perfect for projects aimed at children, nature, or rustic themes. The soft, bold strokes and charming personality of Rainy Stars make it a delightful choice for comic books, illustrations, and any creative work that aims to evoke the innocent joy of a toddler's world. The Rainy Stars font family includes six delightful styles to suit various design needs: The weights Light, Regular and Bold for balancing and impact, as well as each thickness as Italic for a touch of movement. Use asterisk * to make a star. Use multiple asterisks to make different space symbols. Example: Magic**Planet (Download required) Built with advanced OpenType functionality, Rainy Stars ensures top-notch quality and provides you with full control and customizability. It includes stylistic and contextual alternates, ligatures, and other features to make your designs as unique and enchanting as the font itself. Rainy Stars offers extensive lingual support, covering all Latin-based languages, from Northern Europe to South Africa, from America to South-East Asia. It contains all the characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  3. Farmhand by Adam Ladd, $25.00
    Farmhand is a textured, hand drawn family featuring serif, sans, inline, italic, and extras styles suited for display titling. An all-caps typeface with individually drawn small caps for lowercase. Experiment by mixing and matching the casing for titling effects. Great for packaging and branding. The sans adds a different look but still has the vintage appeal. Try the inline styles to add a little more distinction to your type or the matching catchwords and ornaments to add typographic interest.
  4. Skribblugh by Tom Chalky, $12.00
    This was a creative experiment. Writing for a long period of time prior to starting erased any inhibitions that prohibited forming natural, authentic letters and by adding more duration the hands became sore and weak. Allowing minimal control, and a more eccentric outcome. It was a real slog, but totally worth it. Skribblugh is a wobbly, aesthetically pleasing, and obviously handwritten typeface full of character and versatility. Within a modern design; It adds a human’s touch, a final note, a signature. And within a playful, colorful one it helps exaggerate the atmosphere, bringing playfulness and warmth to the center of the stage. With four choices for every uppercase and lowercase letter, there are plenty of opportunities to make designs look personal and relatable!
  5. Wenykidos by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $29.00
    Wenykidos is a cute and quirky display font. It will add an incredibly joyful touch to your designs. Add this beautiful display font to each of your creative ideas and notice how it makes them stand out!
  6. Quickly by Green Adventure Studio, $20.00
    Quickly is a cute and quirky display font. It will add an incredibly joyful touch to your designs. Add this beautiful display font to each of your creative ideas and notice how it makes them stand out!
  7. Sun Summer by Sakha Design, $12.00
    Sun Summer is a cute and casual display font. It will add an incredibly joyful touch to your designs. Add this beautiful font to each of your creative ideas and notice how it makes them stand out!
  8. Foodpacker by Awan Senja, $14.00
    Foodpacker is a cute and quirky display font. It will add an incredibly joyful touch to your designs. Add this beautiful display font to each of your creative ideas and notice how it makes them stand out!
  9. Erbaum by Inhouse Type, $33.78
    Erbaum is a display square sans serif type family. It is straight-forward in overall structure, simple and rational in details. Erbaum was designed to maximise clarity, with an emphasis on construction and pragmatic aesthetics. The concept behind this typeface was uncompromisingly function driven, which was to provide a clear and effective medium for communication and a modern alternative to similar fonts in the aforementioned category. Extended x-height and sharp details aid legibility. Other features include seven weights, Cyrillic, alternative characters and various OpenType features.
  10. Lumina by BXS Type, $10.00
    Lumina is a font that exudes sophistication and style. Combining modern and classic elements, it boasts a unique and distinctive look that sets it apart. This versatile font shines brightly in larger contexts, making it ideal for various design applications. Whether you're working on a logo, web font, or looking to add a touch of elegance to your project, Lumina is the perfect choice. With its radiant presence, Lumina effortlessly elevates any design, adding a dose of charm to your visual creations. **Uppercase
  11. Fady Lingers by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Fady Lingers is a mispronunciation of that famous Italian cookie - nevertheless, there is nothing awkward or wrong with the font! It is handmade using a thin marker, leaving an uneven edge. I did spend some time cleaning up each letter, but was carefully observant to keep the original handmade and organic look. I've added 4 slightly different versions of each lowercase letter. and they automatically changes as you type - a really great way to make your design stand out as organic and lively!
  12. Areplos by Storm Type Foundry, $53.00
    To design a text typeface "at the top with, at the bottom without" serifs was an idea which crossed my mind at the end of the sixties. I started from the fact that what one reads in the Latin alphabet is mainly the upper half of the letters, where good distinguishableness of the individual signs, and therefore, also good legibility, is aided by serifs. The first tests of the design, by which I checked up whether the basic principle could be used also for the then current technology of setting - for double-sign matrices -, were carried out in 1970. During the first half of the seventies I created first the basic design, then also the slanted Roman and the medium types. These drawings were not very successful. My greatest concern during this initial phase was the upper case A. I had to design it in such a way that the basic principle should be adhered to and the new alphabet, at the same time, should not look too complicated. The necessary prerequisite for a design of a new alphabet for double-sign matrices, i.e. to draw each letter of all the three fonts to the same width, did not agree with this typeface. What came to the greatest harm were the two styles used for emphasis: the italics even more than the medium type. That is why I fundamentally remodelled the basic design in 1980. In the course of this work I tried to forget about the previous technological limitations and to respect only the requirements then placed on typefaces intended for photosetting. As a matter of fact, this was not very difficult; this typeface was from the very beginning conceived in such a way as to have a large x-height of lower-case letters and upper serifs that could be joined without any problems in condensed setting. I gave much more thought to the proportional relations of the individual letters, the continuity of their outer and inner silhouettes, than to the requirements of their production. The greatest number of problems arose in the colour balancing of the individual signs, as it was necessary to achieve that the upper half of each letter should have a visual counterbalance in its lower, simpler half. Specifically, this meant to find the correct shape and degree of thickening of the lower parts of the letters. These had to counterbalance the upper parts of the letters emphasized by serifs, yet they should not look too romantic or decorative, for otherwise the typeface might lose its sober character. Also the shape, length and thickness of the upper serifs had to be resolved differently than in the previous design. In the seventies and at the beginning of the eighties a typeface conceived in this way, let alone one intended for setting of common texts in magazines and books, was to all intents and purposes an experiment with an uncertain end. At this time, before typographic postmodernism, it was not the custom to abandon in such typefaces the clear-cut formal categories, let alone to attempt to combine the serif and sans serif principles in a single design. I had already designed the basic, starting, alphabets of lower case and upper case letters with the intention to derive further styles from them, differing in colour and proportions. These fonts were not to serve merely for emphasis in the context of the basic design, but were to function, especially the bold versions, also as independent display alphabets. At this stage of my work it was, for a change, the upper case L that presented the greatest problem. Its lower left part had to counterbalance the symmetrical two-sided serif in the upper half of the letter. The ITC Company submitted this design to text tests, which, in their view, were successful. The director of this company Aaron Burns then invited me to add further styles, in order to create an entire, extensive typeface family. At that time, without the possibility to use a computer and given my other considerable workload, this was a task I could not manage. I tried to come back to this, by then already very large project, several times, but every time some other, at the moment very urgent, work diverted me from it. At the beginning of the nineties several alphabets appeared which were based on the same principle. It seemed to me that to continue working on my semi-finished designs was pointless. They were, therefore, abandoned until the spring of 2005, when František Štorm digitalized the basic design. František gave the typeface the working title Areplos and this name stuck. Then he made me add small capitals and the entire bold type, inducing me at the same time to consider what to do with the italics in order that they might be at least a little italic in character, and not merely slanted Roman alphabets, as was my original intention. In the course of the subsequent summer holidays, when the weather was bad, we met in his little cottage in South Bohemia, between two ponds, and resuscitated this more than twenty-five-years-old typeface. It was like this: We were drinking good tea, František worked on the computer, added accents and some remaining signs, inclined and interpolated, while I was looking over his shoulder. There is hardly any typeface that originated in a more harmonious setting. Solpera, summer 2005 I first encountered this typeface at the exhibition of Contemporary Czech Type Design in 1982. It was there, in the Portheim Summer Palace in Prague, that I, at the age of sixteen, decided to become a typographer. Having no knowledge about the technologies, the rules of construction of an alphabet or about cultural connections, I perceived Jan Solpera's typeface as the acme of excellence. Now, many years after, replete with experience of revitalization of typefaces of both living and deceased Czech type designers, I am able to compare their differing approaches. Jan Solpera put up a fight against the digital technology and exerted creative pressure to counteract my rather loose approach. Jan prepared dozens of fresh pencil drawings on thin sketching paper in which he elaborated in detail all the style-creating elements of the alphabet. I can say with full responsibility that I have never worked on anything as meticulous as the design of the Areplos typeface. I did not invent this name; it is the name of Jan Solpera's miniature publishing house, in which he issued for example an enchanting series of memoirs of a certain shopkeeper of Jindrichuv Hradec. The idea that the publishing house and the typeface might have the same name crossed my mind instinctively as a symbol of the original designation of Areplos - to serve for text setting. What you can see here originated in Trebon and in a cottage outside the village of Domanín - I even wanted to rename my firm to The Trebon Type Foundry. When mists enfold the pond and gloom pervades one's soul, the so-called typographic weather sets in - the time to sit, peer at the monitor and click the mouse, as also our students who were present would attest. Areplos is reminiscent of the essential inspirational period of a whole generation of Czech type designers - of the seventies and eighties, which were, however, at the same time the incubation period of my generation. I believe that this typeface will be received favourably, for it represents the better aspect of the eighties. Today, at the time when the infection by ITC typefaces has not been quite cured yet, it does absolutely no harm to remind ourselves of the high quality and timeless typefaces designed then in this country.In technical terms, this family consists of two times four OpenType designs, with five types of figures, ligatures and small capitals as well as an extensive assortment of both eastern and western diacritics. I can see as a basic text typeface of smaller periodicals and informative job-prints, a typeface usable for posters and programmes of various events, but also for corporate identity. Štorm, summer 2005
  13. Finger Stamp by Mvmet, $16.00
    Finger Stamp is an unique display font with fingerprint texture on it. You can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts and clothing, for your kids book designs, kids party needs, greeting cards, stickers, posters, banners, or anything that needs a bold and fun touch. Try it to create fabulous designs and feel the fun and cheering vibes with it!
  14. Tree Trunk by Mvmet, $15.00
    Tree Trunk is a bold display font with wood texture on it. You can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts and clothing, for your kids book designs, kids party needs, greeting cards, stickers, posters, banners, or anything that needs a bold and fun touch. Try it to create fabulous designs and feel the fun and cheering vibes with it!
  15. Baby Angella by Violatype, $14.00
    Baby Angella is a cute and charming handwritten font. It will add an incredibly joyful touch to your designs. Add this beautiful handwritten font to each of your creative ideas and notice how it makes them stand out! Baby Angella font is perfect for logos, wedding invitations, clothes, souvenirs, magazines, quotes, crafts, and more, please try it yourself and perfect your design.
  16. Comic Bold Large by Mvmet, $12.00
    Comic Bold Large is a fun bold cartoon display font for your everything needs! You can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts and clothing, for your kids book designs, kids party needs, greeting cards, stickers, posters, banners, or anything that needs a bold and fun touch. Try it to create fabulous designs and feel the fun and cheering vibes with it!
  17. Lucky Fellas by Nicky Laatz, $10.00
    A rough-and-ready hand-brushed script, with edgy lines and awesome character! It includes opentype features - stylistic alternates for the lowercase letters, and a comprehensive set of natural looking Ligatures to add to the realistic nature of the typeface. Lucky Fellas font family includes a complimentary textured titling sans serif font, and some super sexy swashes and splatters font to add some finishing touches to your designs.
  18. Beardman Outline by Jafar07, $10.00
    Beardman is a condensed sans-serif font designed specifically for bold and powerful headlines and titles. With four variants available: regular, italic, regular outline, and italic outline, this font allows you to express yourself with a style that suits your design project. The name "Beardman" is inspired by the meaning of a man who is masculine but has a soft heart, and it is reflected in the font's design. With strong and sturdy letterforms, the font also has a gentle and smooth touch that gives an elegant and modern impression. With its strong and expressive appearance, "Beardman" is suitable for use in graphic design projects such as posters, brochures, magazines, websites, and much more. Add a touch of masculine yet gentle to your design with the "Beardman" font. What did you get? Regular, Italic, Regular Outline & Italic Outline Alternates & Ligatures Numbers & Punctuation Multilingual Support Works on PC & Mac Simple Installations
  19. Geometrica by PeGGO Fonts, $24.00
    Behance presentation https://www.behance.net/gallery/51305239/Geometrica Geometrica is a low contrast rounded geometric Sans with a mid 19th/early 20th century simplicity air yet modern and minimalist. The font was inspired by the idea of creating a typeface with uppercase/lowercase characters and small caps having the same proportion. The result is a font with a moderate width, generous x-height, and short ascenders and descenders, giving it a compact and clean look. Geometrica comes in 10 weights plus italics—each variant with 589 glyphs—and contains a number of OpenType features that allow you to create very ‘good looking’ designs. Geometrica provides a wide range of choices for any design project and it is especially recommended for UI/UX and app design, branding and corporate design, in 2017 it was selected as one of the 10 best Sans of the year by FontShop.
  20. Beardman by Jafar07, $10.00
    Beardman is a condensed sans-serif font designed specifically for bold and powerful headlines and titles. With four variants available: regular, italic, regular outline, and italic outline, this font allows you to express yourself with a style that suits your design project. The name "Beardman" is inspired by the meaning of a man who is masculine but has a soft heart, and it is reflected in the font's design. With strong and sturdy letterforms, the font also has a gentle and smooth touch that gives an elegant and modern impression. With its strong and expressive appearance, "Beardman" is suitable for use in graphic design projects such as posters, brochures, magazines, websites, and much more. Add a touch of masculine yet gentle to your design with the "Beardman" font. What did you get? Regular, Italic, Regular Outline & Italic Outline Alternates & Ligatures Numbers & Punctuation Multilingual Support Works on PC & Mac Simple Installations
  21. Halau Serif by Vintage Voyage Design Supply, $10.00
    Introducing mid-century modern font family – Halau Serif. Classic mid-century serif with characteristic cartoon look. Straight for your summer projects. More fun, more sun and more retro-modern! Play with it and get really cool retro-lettering style. Also, you can use some alternates (A, E, K, R, Y, a, g, l, k). Also, you get Mid-Century Modern style graphic objects set as letters and numerals alternates (36 Total).
  22. Gulden Display by Studio Gulden, $20.00
    Gulden Display - Introducing our new psychedelic display font, perfect for adding some trippy vibes to your designs. This bold and eye-catching font features swirling, abstract shapes and patterns that seem to move and shift right before your eyes. With its unique, otherworldly aesthetic, this font is perfect for album covers, concert posters, and any project that wants to make a bold, unconventional statement. Whether you're a graphic designer, artist, or just looking to add some visual interest to your personal projects, this font is sure to make an impact. Give it a try and let your creativity take flight! Features: - Uppercase & Lowercase - Narrow and Wide Versions - Number - Multilingual Support - Punctuation Stay pop and inspiring! Regards, Studio Gulden.
  23. Lucky Lady by JVB Fonts, $39.00
    Lucky Lady was inspired by the old, classic art and craft of brush script lettering usually applied in ads of the WWII era and 1940s. The name of the font family refers to one of the most emblematic combat units of the US air force in WWII that were decisive in the victory of the allied forces. Lucky Lady can be mainly used in titles and display texts. It supports East Europe languages. It's highly recommend to use the combined shadow styles under the main regular basic style layer. Lucky Lady includes standard and discretionary ligatures, alternative style for uppercase, fractions, numerators and denominators, end and/or terminal forms and other OpenType features.
  24. Hadriano by Monotype, $29.99
    When traveling in Paris, American designer Frederic W. Goudy did a rubbing of a second century marble inscription he found in the Louvre. After ruminating on these letterforms for several years, he drew a titling typeface in 1918, all around the letters P, R, and E. He called the new face Hadriano" as that name was in the original inscription. Robert Wiebking cut the matrices, and the Continental Typefounders Association released the font. Goudy designed a lowercase at the request of Monotype in 1930, though he didn't really like the idea of adding lowercase to an inscriptional letterform. The lowercase looks much like some of Goudy's other Roman faces. Compugraphic added more weights in the late 1970s, and made the shapes more cohesive. Hadriano has nicely cupped serifs and sturdy, generous body shapes. Distinctive individual letters include the cap A and Q, and the lowercase e, g, and z. Hadriano™ is an excellent choice for impressive headings and vigorous display lines."
  25. Andhibath by Sabrcreative, $17.00
    Introducing Andhibath Bold Script Font, a captivating script typeface that exudes elegance and versatility. With its bold strokes and graceful curves, this font is perfect for adding a touch of sophistication to your design projects. Whether you're creating invitations, branding materials, packaging, or any other creative work, Andhibath will elevate your designs with its unique charm. The Andhibath font features both uppercase and lowercase letters, allowing you to mix and match different letterforms for a customized look. It also includes numbers and punctuation, ensuring that your compositions are comprehensive and well-rounded. With multilingual support, you can effortlessly incorporate various languages into your designs, making it suitable for projects with a global reach. One of the standout features of Andhibath is its PUA encoding. This means that accessing the font's special ligatures and glyphs is a breeze, giving you even more creative possibilities. The ligatures add a natural and handcrafted feel to your text, enhancing its visual appeal. With its script style, Andhibath captures the essence of handwritten elegance. It is ideal for a wide range of design applications, from wedding stationery and logos to social media graphics and advertising materials. The versatility of this font allows you to adapt it to different themes and moods, whether you're aiming for a classic, modern, or whimsical look. Experience the beauty and versatility of Andhibath Bold Script Font. Let its graceful curves and bold presence make a lasting impression in your designs.
  26. Craft by Alfareaniy, $200.00
    Craft is a unique and cool kids font model. The horror and sharp shape makes your design very stunning
  27. Fresh Anemone by Seemly Fonts, $14.00
    Fresh Anemone is a cute and quirky display font. It will add an incredibly joyful touch to your designs. Add this beautiful display font to each of your creative ideas and notice how it makes them stand out!
  28. Creamy Delight by Awan Senja, $14.00
    Creamy Delight is a cute and quirky display font. It will add an incredibly joyful touch to your designs. Add this beautiful display font to each of your creative ideas and notice how it makes them stand out!
  29. Jalopy JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    History, as it's said, tends to repeat itself. The round-point pen lettering used in the 1920s logo and ads for Dodge Brothers cars (pre-General Motors) is an early predecessor to the techno type styles of the 1980s. Square in shape, with unique stylization to some letters, Jalopy JNL can cross the decades and be used for a 1920s period piece and still look fresh in an ad for computer parts. Rather than round out the inside lines of the characters to fully emulate the strokes of a lettering pen, the inside lines have straight intersections for the contemporary side of this font's design.
  30. Shibuya Dancefloor by Megami Studios, $10.00
    Inspired by Rob’s years of living in Japan, Shibuya Dancefloor is an expanded version of an earlier font that we did, adding hiragana and katakana to the mix. It's perfect for anime artwork, sci-fi lettering or even just making flyers for that party you're planning down in Roppongi!
  31. Phantom Urbanism Graffiti by Sipanji21, $22.00
    "Phantom Urbanism" is a monoline font with a monoline graffiti theme and an option with stylistic set with arrow effect to add depth and decoration to the font. It is perfect for a wide range of urban or street-themed design projects, such as streetwear design, logo design, car/motosport decals, skateboard decals, and other similar designs. With its edgy and bold appearance, "Phantom Urbanism" brings a sense of energy and attitude to your designs. The font's monoline style and arrow effect optional to adds visual interest and makes your designs stand out. Whether you're looking to create a strong and impactful design or add a touch of urban style to your projects, "Phantom Urbanism" is the font for you.
  32. Street Of Exodus by Sipanji21, $18.00
    "Street of Exodus" is a monoline font with a graffiti theme and a slight shadow effect to add depth and decoration to the font. It is perfect for a wide range of urban or street-themed design projects, such as streetwear design, logo design, car/motosport decals, skateboard decals, and other similar designs. With its edgy and bold appearance, "Street of Exodus" brings a sense of energy and attitude to your designs. The font's monoline style and slight shadow effect create a 3D effect that adds visual interest and makes your designs stand out. Whether you're looking to create a strong and impactful design or add a touch of urban style to your projects, "Street of Exodus" is the font for you.
  33. Fabius by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    A flat pen script font face with a fairly elegant look to it. The design of this script was intended to be used anywhere a well legible script is called for. A heavy stout script is the perfect display face which has a 30s and 40s flair that will add class. Suitable for applications such as captions, fashion headlines, packaging, invitations, cards, posters, ads, book jackets and covers.
  34. Orion Radio NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    A 1930s ad for—believe it or not—Orion radios provided the inspiration for this ultrabold and slightly sassy face. The radio brand didn't make it into the twenty-first century, but its signature typeface has, ready and willing to add a little pizazz to your next project. This font contains the complete Latin language character set (Unicode 1252) plus support for Central European (Unicode 1250) languages as well.
  35. PH Font by Fontfabric, $29.00
    PH from Fontfabric Type Foundry is a multifaceted font system consisting of different font weights and type of condensation. Every one of these font weights contains a number of extension types - Condensed, Narrow, Regular, Extended and Wide. Along with all of this, you will also discover added groups of extras which could serve as a foundation or add that extra "cherry on the cake" to each unique design.
  36. Graffick by Graffiti Fonts, $12.99
    Graffick is a mechanical style created by merging a little traditional type design & typography with a little basic graffiti lettering theory. Extra ascenders and descenders have been added to many of the capital letters to add a more varied & specialized appearance. This layered type system provides for the easy creation of outline/fill effects with regular, italic, wide and outline styles as well as baseline & caps-height alignment options.
  37. North Shore by Bruised Goods, $18.00
    NORTH SHORE – The ultimate Hawaiian surf spot typeface, both groovy and mid century inspired. Designed by Lauren Kilbane (on the other coast!) in sunny South Florida, USA. USE THIS FONT FOR: ads, album covers, apparel, cards, flyers, invitations, logos, menus, merchandise, packaging, signage, web, and more. 204 Glyphs Total: Uppercase ONLY, Numbers, Symbols, Punctuation, Emojis, & Language Support. Language Support: Danish, English, French, German, Irish, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, & Swiss German.
  38. Brick Stone by Alit Design, $22.00
    Introducing the "Brick and Stone Victorian Typeface" – a timeless and elegant font that beautifully captures the essence of the Victorian era. This exquisite typeface is a masterful blend of intricate craftsmanship, vintage charm, and artistic flair, making it the perfect choice for designers, typographers, and creatives seeking to evoke a sense of classic refinement and sophistication in their projects. The Brick and Stone Victorian Typeface boasts a rich repertoire of design elements that truly set it apart. With meticulously crafted ornaments, graceful swashes, captivating ligatures, and versatile alternates, this font provides an extensive toolkit to elevate any typographic endeavor. Whether you're working on invitations, branding, packaging, signage, or any other creative pursuit, this typeface lends an air of prestige and distinction to your work. Each character of this Victorian typeface has been thoughtfully created to reflect the ornate and elegant aesthetics of the 19th century. The font captures the essence of engraved stone and brickwork, giving your text an authentic vintage touch. The ornamental details add an extra layer of opulence, making every word feel like a work of art. Whether you're designing for weddings, formal events, historical projects, or simply seeking to add a touch of classic sophistication to your work, the Brick and Stone Victorian Typeface will exceed your expectations. Embrace the elegance of the past and unlock a world of creative potential with this remarkable font.
  39. Under Storm 3d Graffiti by Sipanji21, $15.00
    "Under Storm" is a graffiti font with three unique layers: regular, inner shadow, and outer shadow. This font is designed to add depth and dimension to your typography, creating a captivating and dynamic look. The regular layer provides a bold and impactful appearance, while the inner and outer shadow layers add a 3D effect, giving your designs an edgy and urban vibe. With its layered style, "Under Storm" is perfect for creating eye-catching street art, posters, and other urban-themed projects. Embrace the storm of creativity with this versatile and dynamic graffiti font.
  40. Grosfer by Typeskets, $17.00
    Grosfer is a cool, bold and thick lettered display font. This font reads as strong, confident, and dynamic and can add a fierce character to your designs.
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