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  1. PR Compass Rose - Unknown license
  2. Hey Its Red - Unknown license
  3. Candela Book - 100% free
  4. Triad - Unknown license
  5. SW Crawl Title - Unknown license
  6. Beast vs Buttercrumb - Unknown license
  7. Cuivrerie by JBFoundry, $19.98
    Cuivrerie is a free interpretation of relatively common lapidary inscriptions in Burgundy. Letters fit together. Thus the engraver gains room and we lose legibility. No matter, we have forever to read !
  8. Vampire by Otto Maurer, $17.00
    Inspired by a famous vampire movie. This font is based on the character shapes of Free Serif, a sample font bundled with FontLab applications; it is quite similar to Times Roman.
  9. ATF Garamond by ATF Collection, $59.00
    The Garamond family tree has many branches. There are probably more different typefaces bearing the name Garamond than the name of any other type designer. Not only did the punchcutter Claude Garamond set a standard for elegance and excellence in type founding in 16th-century Paris, but a successor, Jean Jannon, some eighty years later, cut typefaces inspired by Garamond that later came to bear Garamond’s name. Revivals of both designs have been popular and various over the course of the last 100 years. When ATF Garamond was designed in 1917, it was one of the first revivals of a truly classic typeface. Based on Jannon’s types, which had been preserved in the French Imprimerie Nationale as the “caractères de l’Université,” ATF Garamond brought distinctive elegance and liveliness to text type for books and display type for advertising. It was both the inspiration and the model for many of the later “Garamond” revivals, notably Linotype’s very popular Garamond No. 3. ATF Garamond was released ca. 1918, first in Roman and Italic, drawn by Morris Fuller Benton, the head of the American Type Founders design department. In 1922, Thomas M. Cleland designed a set of swash italics and ornaments for the typeface. The Bold and Bold Italic were released in 1920 and 1923, respectively. The new digital ATF Garamond expands upon this legacy, while bringing back some of the robustness of metal type and letterpress printing that is sometimes lost in digital adaptations. The graceful, almost lacy form of some of the letters is complemented by a solid, sturdy outline that holds up in text even at small sizes. The 18 fonts comprise three optical sizes (Subhead, Text, Micro) and three weights, including a new Medium weight that did not exist in metal. ATF Garamond also includes unusual alternates and swash characters from the original metal typeface. The character of ATF Garamond is lively, reflecting the spirit of the French Renaissance as interpreted in the 1920s. Its Roman has more verve than later old-style faces like Caslon, and its Italic is outright sprightly, yet remarkably readable.
  10. Gort's Fair Hand Regular - Unknown license
  11. Gort's Fair Hand Upright - Unknown license
  12. Jenson Classico by Linotype, $29.99
    In 1458, Charles VII sent the Frenchman Nicolas Jenson to learn the craft of movable type in Mainz, the city where Gutenberg was working. Jenson was supposed to return to France with his newly learned skills, but instead he traveled to Italy, as did other itinerant printers of the time. From 1468 on, he was in Venice, where he flourished as a punchcutter, printer and publisher. He was probably the first non-German printer of movable type, and he produced about 150 editions. Though his punches have vanished, his books have not, and those produced from about 1470 until his death in 1480 have served as a source of inspiration for type designers over centuries. His Roman type is often called the first true Roman." Notable in almost all Jensonian Romans is the angled crossbar on the lowercase e, which is known as the "Venetian Oldstyle e." In the 1990s, Robert Slimbach designed his contemporary interpretation, Adobe Jenson™. It was first released by Adobe in 1996, and re-released in 2000 as a full-featured OpenType font with extended language support and many typographic refinements. A remarkable tour de force, Adobe Jenson provides flexibility for a complete range of text and display composition; it has huge character sets in specially designed optical sizes for captions, text, subheads, and display. The weight range includes light, regular, semibold, and bold. Jenson did not design an italic type to accompany his roman, so Slimbach used the italic types cut by Ludovico degli Arrighi in 1524-27 as his models for the italics in Adobe Jenson. Use this family for book and magazine composition, or for display work when the design calls for a sense of graciousness and dignity.
  13. AstroNaut by The Northern Block, $29.00
    AstroNaut is an 8 font family consisting of 4 weights with italics. It's angular construction takes influence from various science fiction films including: Blade Runner, Alien, Minority Report & 2001: A Space Odyssey.
  14. Brasley by Nicolas Deslé, $6.00
    Here's Brasley, a geometric sans. Brasley is available in six weights - bold, semibold, medium, regular, light and thin - each with matching italics. It also includes contextual alternates, ligatures, fractions, arrows and shapes.
  15. Ekaliptus by Yinon Ezra, $9.90
    Ekaliptus, Display Condensed and Humane Typeface, Containing 4 Weights + 4 Matched Italics, Can be used for Headlines and Logos. Two Styles that work well together to form a better tool for you.
  16. Oksana Text Swash by AndrijType, $25.00
    Oksana Text Swash has swashed initials and ampersand for Oksana Text italics in six weights from Thin to Heavy. For all-in-one fonts please look to OpenType version of Oksana Text.
  17. Meister Antiqua by RMU, $35.00
    Voilà, the Meister Antiqua font family, which was originally released by Typoart, Dresden, circa 1951, is again available as a remastered, modernized and digitized version, with swash caps integrated in the Italics.
  18. GHEA Zartonk by Edik Ghabuzyan, $40.00
    This Typeface family include 6 Uprights and 6 Italics. This font family can be used as Display as well as text font. The font family includes Armenian, Cyrillic and Latin alphabet systems.
  19. Rima by K-Type, $20.00
    Rima is a stencil display face with imposing slab serifs, designed to suggest strength, confidence, expertise and efficiency. Regular and Bold weights are included along with two handy italics (optically corrected obliques).
  20. Elegancia Romantica - Personal use only
  21. DisneyPark - Unknown license
  22. Mobile Sans - Personal use only
  23. Bellaberry - Personal use only
  24. Last Ninja - Unknown license
  25. Dekers - Personal use only
  26. TMBG Severe Tire Damage - Unknown license
  27. Times Sans Serif - Unknown license
  28. Cicle Gordita - Unknown license
  29. TE Modern by Tharwat Emara, $7.00
    Its one  of the modern Arabic fonts, a spontaneous free line characterized by beauty and speed of reading. To be used in advertisements, writing titles, magazines, cartoons, films, serials, comics and plays.
  30. Alexandra MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Intuitive free hand strokes are so unique to Alexandra and will stand out in a crowd. The brush like brush strokes are so personalized yet so legible, even in small font sizes.
  31. Melancholia by Barnbrook Fonts, $75.00
    Melancholia is a subtle and beautiful sans-serif inspired by calligraphic letterforms. The name describes a feeling of deep sadness, an intense sensitivity to the world. The design of Melancholia is an attempt to introduce some of that wistfulness into the sans-serif form, a typographic classification that is often characterised by an austere functionality. Melancholia includes a set of true italics influenced by old-style serif italics, such as those found in Claude Garamond’s eponymous typeface, as well as a set of stylistic alternates and calligraphic-style swash characters.
  32. Octava by ParaType, $30.00
    PT Octava™ was designed at ParaType in 2001 by Vladimir Yefimov. The first (Cyrillic only) version named Scriptura Russica (1996) consisting of three styles (book, italic, bold) was commissioned by the Russian Bible Society. Lately the Latin letters and bold italic were added. Inspired by Lectura, 1969, by Dick Dooijes and Stone Print, 1991, by Sumner Stone. In spite of large x-height the typeface is both space saving and quite legible at small sizes. Expert fonts including small caps (book) and old style figures are available.
  33. Oliva by Viktor Nübel Type Design, $25.00
    Oliva & Oliva Italic are two strong and funky display fonts. Influences came from typefaces like Futura Black by Paul Renner and Motter Ombra by Othmar Motter, but also Stilla by François Boltana and Allegro by Hans Bohn lay on the desk. All these ingredients were mixed to a new and contemporary type experience and packed in proper OpenType files Oliva & Oliva Italic are OpenType Pro, featuring full Western, Central European, Baltic, Turkish and also Cyrillic language support. They contain ligatures, superior numerals, and a stylish set of decorative ornaments and arrows.
  34. Mado by Larin Type Co, $15.00
    MADO is a elegant serif font that includes two styles: regular and true Italic. This is a contrasting medium weight font and looks amazing in logos, branding, arranging wedding invitations, business cards, packaging, titles and much more, it is very readable and recognizable. This font includes alternates for Uppercase and Lowercase and ligatures for Lowercase, with them you can make your project more elegant and unique and italic style will add dynamics to your design, it also includes alternates and ligatures This font is easy to use has OpenType features.
  35. Roxale Story by Reyrey Blue Std, $16.00
    Introducing - Roxale Story. a new fresh & modern serif with smooth curves. It comes with elegant style, classy, and contrasts, with features and consist of regular, italic and calligraphy italic. Roxale Story is perfect for luxury logo and branding, classy editorial design, woman magazine, cosmetic brand, fashion promotional, art gallery branding, museum, historical of architectural, boutique branding, stationery design, blog design, modern advertising design, card invitation, art quote, home decor, book/cover title, special events and any more. Features : · All Uppercase and Lowercase · Number & Symbol · Supported Languages · Alternates and Ligatures · PUA Encoded
  36. Evil Schemes by Comicraft, $19.00
    Big Brother is watching you and vile Supervillains are afoot! The cunning characters involved in this font have devised a convoluted Machiavellian plot for world domination that encompasses mind parasites, twitter, deadly viruses in the public water system and possibly a nuclear dirty bomb in a downtown Metropolitan area to which they've strapped your girlfriend and a digital clock rapidly counting down to zero! Will Good Triumph and Defeat Evil?! Stay tuned... Features: Four fonts (Regular, Italic, Bold & Bold Italic) with upper and lowercase characters. Includes Western European international characters.
  37. Ehrhardt MT by Monotype, $29.99
    The Ehrhardt name indicates that this typeface is derived from the roman and italic typefaces of stout Dutch character that the Ehrhardt foundry in Leipzig showed in a late-seventeenth-century specimen book. The designer is unknown, although some historians believe it was the Hungarian Nicholas Kis. Monotype recut the typeface for modern publishers in 1937 to 1938. Ehrhardt has a clean regularity and smooth finish that promote readability, as well as a slight degree of condensation, especially in the italic, that conserves space. Ehrhardt is a fine text face, especially for books.
  38. Basile by Tipo, $85.00
    Basile is the conclusion of a process that began with the learning of italic handwriting in a roballos-Naab studio course. In this workshop I developed a variation of chancery handwriting which had a more pronounced wider than its historical model. While making the digitalization, the forms were modified to obtain a similar spirit to the one in the handwriting, but thinking about the text in small sizes. Also incorporating three sets of forms enlarged the family: italic, swash and extra swash. And the addition of initials and terminals sets.
  39. ITC Bailey Sans by ITC, $39.00
    ITC Bailey Sans is the first typeface family created by Kevin Bailey, a graphic designer in Dallas, Texas. He was once looking for an understated block serif for a design project and could find nothing suitable. Bailey began working on his own serif face but then found that the basics of his new design worked well as a sans serif and continued on that track. ITC Bailey Sans font is available in four weights: book, book italic, bold and bold italic and even has a companion serif display font, ITC Baily Quad Bold.
  40. Cavita by Underground, $29.00
    Cavita typeface is a mix between both grotesque and calligraphic models: regulars have a rough grotesque spirit; while the italics where inspired in calligraphic gestures. All of these details are reinforced with an inverted modulation (horizontals strokes are thicker than usual). The italics seem to move away from the traditional concept of type system, but work very well along side. This typeface has very particular shapes and rhythm, it's different and identifiable from the rest, making it a very good option to use on every piece of design.
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