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  1. Bali Script by Eclectotype, $40.00
    Inspired by the Indonesian island’s laid back feel and easy going culture, Bali Script is a tribute to the hand-lettered signage on beach bars, surf shacks and cafes. The swell of the stroke endings and the bolder-than-your-average gooey look convey a cool, contemporary take on baseball scripts. Overlay Bali Script Highlight for a cartoonish, glossy finish. Perfect for logos. This font is jam-packed with OpenType features that make smooth flowing text a doddle. Contextual alternates and ligatures are best left on by default. The alternates especially work a subtle magic that helps letters connect with an even rhythm, and automatically substitutes letters with the best fit alternatives based on their context, such as at the end of words, or adjacent to certain other letters. There are four stylistic sets (or all grouped together in the stylistic alternates feature for those without easy access to them) which do the following: SS01 - changes the r to a script form SS02 - makes certain caps more ‘scripty’ SS03 - capital I (and accented versions of it) get serifs SS04 - underline function. typing two or more underscores extends on underline beneath the previous word. Also included for your pleasure - oldstyle figures, automatic fractions, superior and inferior numbers, ordinals, some discretionary ligatures, swash alternates and extended language support.
  2. Leftfield by Fenotype, $35.00
    Leftfield - stylish vintage font collection. Leftfield collection includes following: •Leftfield Brush -a bold baseball style script with Clean and Rough version •Leftfield Swoosh -a set of swooshes designed to go with Leftfield Brush. Clean and Rough version. •Leftfield Sans -a sturdy all caps sans serif with Regular and Bold weight and Clean and Rough version of both •Leftfield Serif -a sturdy all caps serif with Regular and Bold weight and Clean and Rough version of both Leftfield Brush is a bold and strong sports team style vintage connected script. It’s great for any kind of display use from impressive logos to packaging and headlines. Brush is equipped with automatic Contextual Alternates that keep the connections smooth. In addition there is Swash, Titling and Stylistic alternates for standard characters. Try combining Leftfield Swoosh to make stunning compositions. Leftfield Sans and Serif work great as themselves, they make striking word blocks and they are designed to go with the Brush. Try Leftfield Serif in large sizes to make the best out of the subtle serif’s. Leftfield Rough versions simulate a printed version of the font for authentic vintage look. They’re otherwise the same font but with a rugged outline and print texture inside the characters. Leftfield has a wide language support including West European, Central European, Baltic, Turkish and Romanian character sets.
  3. The "Joe DiMaggio" font, conceptualized by an artist named Chloe, embodies the swift, elegant essence of its namesake, the legendary American baseball player Joe DiMaggio. Reflecting DiMaggio's smoot...
  4. Songs of Moravia by Mans Greback, $69.00
    Songs of Moravia is a beautiful script typeface. Its decorative capitals, adorned with delicate swashes and swirls, evoke the rich heritage and melodious charm of European design. Songs of Moravia captures the genuine spirit of folk tunes, offering a hint of tradition woven with modern craft, perfectly suited for projects that seek to marry the old with the new. Gentle yet vibrant, this type is a delightful choice for invitations and formal design. Use underscore _ to make a swash after any word, or multiple underscores for different lengths. Example: Baseball_
  5. Le Brond by Fateh.Lab, $20.00
    Le Brond is a sporty, strong and elegant typeface, in a college style. Inspired by design styles that are currently popular, and this is the answer to every need for ideas that you will pour in this modern era, with a thick and sturdy style in each letter as if this font has a soul in it. It excels in posters, social media, headlines, headlines, large format print - and anywhere else you want to get noticed. What are you waiting for get Le Brond soon. Let's play basketball!
  6. Gogosquat by Bogusky 2, $34.50
    Usually, the condensed version of a face comes after the regular design. Not with gogo squat. After gogo big, I thought how strong a regular version would be. A nice clean gutsy face. A "today" Franklin Gothic Extra Bold. I find it ideal for contemporary headlines as well as for logo solutions. As with gogo big, in my terms and conditions, I permit the modification of up to ten of the letter forms for logos and monograms, but logos and monograms only, not the typeface in normal usage.
  7. Rockin Pistons by Arterfak Project, $17.00
    Introducing Rockin Pistons, a font that exudes strength, energy, modernity, and speed. Its unique design with sharp edges gives it a powerful and fantastic impression. Rockin Pistons can be used for futuristic, sci-fi, sports, and automotive designs., this font is perfect for any project that needs a strong and dynamic look such as display, headline, football poster, basketball, race poster, sticker, t-shirt design, merchandise, or jersey. Rockin Pistons comes with special characters, multilingual support, and swashes, making it a versatile option for a variety of uses. What you’ll get : Uppercase Lowercase Numbers & punctuation Symbols. Accented characters Stylistic alternates Swashes
  8. Joost by Type-Ø-Tones, $60.00
    This is a relaunch version of Joost, a milestone of the Type-Ø-Tones catalogue. This revival of Joost Schmidt’s typeface now has a capital set, a new weight and some OpenType features. Not to mention alternate glyphs for M, N, Ñ, and W characters. The inspiration came from the 'bauhaus dessau im gewerbemuseum' basel exhibition poster, designed in 1929 by Franz Ehrlich after a sketch by Joost Schmidt.
  9. Undergrad by Thomas Käding, $10.00
    This font began its life as a project to design a T-shirt for a student group on a large midwestern university. It has now grown up into a unicode font, including Greek and Cyrillic. It has that look and feel of the T-shirts that are ubiquitous on the campuses of colleges and universities over the world. It would make an ideal tool for designing them, as well as posters and banners. Characters in these fonts include Latin, for English and other European languages; small a and c for names like MacDonald; many fractions, including 0/3 needed in baseball; Latin with diacritical marks for Eastern and Western European, Turkish, and Baltic languages; thorn, eth, cedilla, AE, OE, and sharp S for French, German, Icelandic; Latin extensions for clicks of some African languages; Greek (with tonos); Cyrillic for Russian and many other Slavic and Asian languages that use it; most Runes (the full Futhark plus a few more); six-point Brialle; currency symbols for dollar, cent, pound, yen, euro; and a few other extras like the peace sign. Available styles are regular block letters, outlines, and bold.
  10. Nicolaus Kesler by Proportional Lime, $12.99
    Nicolus Kessler was a printer of Incunabula in Basel, Switzerland. He produced numerous ecclesiastical works, Bibles, and an edition of the Golden Legend. This particular font is derived from one of his many typefaces. It has the virtue of both being at once fancy and elegant yet retaining a surprisingly easy to read property to it. This font has over 900 glyphs for modern usage and also includes a few of the more common historical abbreviations that were then present in printing.
  11. Quayside by Eclectotype, $40.00
    Quayside is a deliciously thick and bulbous baseball script, with a wealth of OpenType features. Features include: Contextual alternates - I would suggest having these on by default; they make letters connect more smoothly (uppercase letters like M and H, which are normally non-connecting for all-caps purposes, connect to lowercase letters. The swash variant of J, and all o and b characters connect to any e character at a lower junction for a smoother join). Contextual alternates also make sure special end-forms of lowercase letters are used at the ends of words. Ligatures - A nice collection of useful ligatures which make the text flow smoother. Swash - Gives you more exuberant capitals. Not recommended for all-caps usage! The swash function also gives a variation of the ampersand and turns # into a nice numero symbol. Oldstyle Figures - lining figures are default but with the flick of a switch in OpenType savvy applications, you get expressive oldstyle figures. Quayside is a versatile typeface. Depending on the mood you're after, it can easily be retro or modern, fun or (fairly) serious. I'm often pleasantly surprised by the wide variety of uses my fonts get put to, and I can't wait to see what you do with this one!
  12. Dark Angel by Alphabet Soup, $60.00
    Selected as one of “Our Favorite Typefaces of 2013” by Typographica.org, Dark Angel is the first completely new take in decades on the traditional “blackletter” font style. It began its journey towards the light years ago when this style was born as a sketch for a new logo for the California Angels baseball team (renamed shortly thereafter the Anaheim Angels). The Angels logo never happened, but that sketch has risen from the dead and become the basis for this brand new font design—and was also the source for the name. It’s kind of blackletter in feel, but as a display font it’s so much more. It is far more legible than most “Old English” or “Gothic Script” styles, and incorporates many features never before seen in them, such as swashes, tails and a plethora of ligatures. Dark Angel can be purchased in its regular solid form, or as Dark Angel Underlight—a handtooled font. If these two fonts are purchased together, the Family package will contain a third font—Dark Angel Highlight. With this font layered over the basic font, you can achieve two–color typesetting when the highlight and the base font are assigned two different colors. Dark Angel has enough language support to make the builders of Babel envious—its 1,163 glyphs can be used to set copy in 59 different languages. From A to Z: Afrikaans, Albanian, Basque, Bemba, Bosnian, Catalan, Cornish, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Faroese, Filipino, Finnish, French, Galician, Ganda, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Kalaallisut, Kamba, Kikuyu, Kinyarwanda, Lithuanian, Luo, Malagasy, Malay, Maltese, Manx, Morisyen, North Ndebele, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, Nyankole, Oromo, Polish, Portuguese, Romansh, Sango, Shona, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Swiss German, Turkish, Welsh, and last (but not least) Zulu. PLEASE NOTE: Dark Angel is a cross-platform font which depends to some extent on certain advanced OpenType features, therefore it can be used to its full potential only with programs that support those features. ADDITIONALLY: When setting Dark Angel one should ALWAYS select the “Standard Ligatures" and “Contextual Alternates” buttons in your OpenType palette. Please see the “Read–Me–First!” file in the Gallery section.
  13. Eco by FSD, $50.00
    Eco is a personal development of the lettering used in a 1970s logo of a little known company named Ageco. The only letters faithful to the logo's ones are E, C and O.
  14. ITC Cali by ITC, $29.99
    There are a few professions in which being left-handed confers an advantage-think of the great southpaw pitchers in major league baseball, like Sandy Koufax. Now, think of all the great left-handed calligraphers. Not so easy, right? Here's a hint: Luis Siquot. Far from being an advantage, Siquot's lefty orientation proved a hurdle to overcome. When I was young, I had serious problems writing," he recalls. "If there was a lot of text, I almost always soiled the paper with wet ink as my hand followed the pen." Then, a friend told Siquot about a special store in London that catered to left-handed people. It was there that he found an Osmiroid pen specially designed for left-handed calligraphers. ITC Cali is based on Siquot's use of this pen. "Electronic scans of my calligraphy were the foundation of the design," he says. "I was careful to leave in some imperfections to avoid an excessively mechanical look, and added the little notches in the strokes to imitate the texture of writing on a rough cotton paper." ITC Cali works equally well in text and display sizes, but it is a calligraphic script, Siquot warns, "and shouldn't be set in all capitals." That said, ITC Cali is a remarkably versatile design, well-suited to a variety of communication projects."
  15. Dropsomaniacal by Proportional Lime, $9.99
    Drop Caps happen. They started off life as decorated initials way back when in the days of illuminated manuscripts. Then printing came and they became the work of the rubricators and then somewhere soon after printing began, at least by the 1490’s, they were printed directly into the text. This then is a collection of over a hundred glyphs from that closing decade of the Incunabula period. All of them are based on examples found in the works printed by Michael Wenssler in Basel. This font also contains a few useful pointing hands and a set of spacing characters.
  16. Hanstoc Script by Mans Greback, $69.00
    Hanstoc Script is a formal calligraphy typeface. A sporty cursive, this retro lettering works as a cool team logotype or a vintage headline. Drawn and created by Mans Greback in 2022, it has a fresh style and a bold personality. Use underscore _ to make a swash. Example: Baseball_ Use multiple underscores to make different lengths. Example: Beauty____ The Hanstoc Script family consists of four professional styles: Regular, Bold, Italic, Italic Bold; complimenting each other for greater design opportunities. The font is built with advanced OpenType functionality and has a guaranteed top-notch quality, containing stylistic and contextual alternates, ligatures and more features; all to give you full control and customizability. It has extensive lingual support, covering all Latin-based languages, from Northern Europe to South Africa, from America to South-East Asia. It contains all characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  17. Longhorn by Belldorado, $20.00
    I saw a cool UT-Ligature on an old (maybe 70's or 80's) Texas Longhorns fan-shirt - it was in 3D and I wanted something like that with my own initials A and B to print it on a baseball hat. I started drawing it and when I was finished, I thought it might be nice to do the same for my officemates. I needed another G, T and K. After finishing that I thought it might be cool to do this for other people as well. Since the source of all the 3D glyphs is found in the regular ones which get moved by a 45 degree angle and then connected with lines , I first draw all the uppercase regular glyphs. The thing that followed was kind of an addiction: after finishing the uppercase letters, I wanted to add lowercase letters, after finishing the 3D letters, I thought it would be nice to have a fill version to layer with the 3D letters. Having a rough, woodcut version of the regular style would be cool, too. And the font is also pretty much suited to make a stencil version. When all this was done, I was interested on how the font would look like without the serifs and curves instead of the 45 degree angles, so I did the Longhorn Sans. Good to use for all sports-related designs, especially retro-style soccer/football shirts. Uppercase characters can be combined to form ligatures or logotypes.
  18. Coleface by Roy Cole, $34.00
    Coleface was created by the British typographer Roy Cole, completed shortly before his death in 2012. It comprises six fonts: Coleface 30, 60, 90 and the italics 33, 66, 99. As with his earlier typeface families - Lina, Zeta and Colophon - Coleface is a highly-readable sans serif typeface that offers significant flexibility in terms of its potential uses. Roy Cole studied typographic design under the tutelage of Emil Ruder at the Gewerbeschule in Basel, at a time when typographic history was being made through the creation of a style that epitomized modernity. Consequently the principles of order, simplicity and legibility, fused with experimentation, became a hallmark of his practice, as exemplified in his last font Coleface.
  19. The MLB Tuscan font is a visually captivating typeface that telegraphs a sense of vintage charm and sporting elegance, making it a favorite for projects that desire to embody a classic yet dynamic vi...
  20. Fairplex by Emigre, $49.00
    Zuzana Licko's goal for Fairplex was to create a text face which would achieve legibility by avoiding contrast, especially in the Book weight. As a result of its low contrast, the Fairplex Book weight is somewhat reminiscent of a sans serif, yet the slight serifs preserve the recognition of serif letterforms. When creating the accompanying weights, the challenge was to balance the contrast and stem weight with the serifs. To provide a comprehensive family, Licko wanted the boldest weight to be quite heavy. This meant that the "Black" weight would need more contrast than the Book weight in order to avoid clogging up. But harmonizing the serifs proved difficult. The initial serif treatments she tried didn't stand up to the robust character of the Black weight. Several months passed without much progress, and then one evening she attended a talk by Alastair Johnston on his book "Alphabets to Order," a survey of nineteenth century type specimens. Johnston pointed out that slab serifs (also known as "Egyptians") are really more of a variation on sans serifs than on serif designs. In other words, slab serif type is more akin to sans-serif type with serifs added on than it is to a version of serif type. This sparked the idea that the solution to her serif problem for Fairplex Black might be a slab serif treatment. After all, the Book weight already shared features of sans-serif types. Shortly after this came the idea to angle the serifs. This was suggested by her husband, and was probably conjured up from his years of subconscious assimilation of the S. F. Giants logo while watching baseball, and reinforced by a similar serif treatment in John Downer's recent Council typeface design. The angled serifs added visual interest to the otherwise austere slab serifs. The intermediate weights were then derived by interpolating the Book and Black, with the exception of several characters, such as the "n," which required specially designed features to avoid collisions of serifs, and to yield a pleasing weight balance. A range of weights was interpolated before deciding on the Medium and Bold weights.
  21. Berlinsa by FadeLine Studio, $15.00
    Berlinsa is a modern script font. It has smooth strokes to give character of a simple, sweet and realistic handwritten style. Berlinsa is perfect for logos, branding projects, homeware designs, product packaging, mugs, quotes, posters, shopping bags, logo's, t-shirts, book covers, name card, invitation cards, greeting cards, and all your other lovely projects.
  22. Bogie Bogie by Dumadi, $20.00
    Bogie Bogie – Logo Typeface A special font for the company logo and the logo of the project you are working on will certainly make it easier to create a logo. so for those of you who are still starting a business, this font will be very suitable for your identity and you will not bother anymore to create a logo. Bogie Bogie is perfect for logo designs, electronic logos, drone logos, smartphone logos, computer brand logos, camera logos, and other logo logos. What’s Included : + Standard glyphs + Multilingual Accent + Works on PC & Mac, Simple installations Accessible in Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe InDesign, even work on Microsoft Word. PUA Encoded Characters – Fully accessible without additional design software. Fonts include multilingual support + Image used: All photographs/pictures/vectors used in the preview are not included, they are intended for illustration purposes only. Thanks
  23. "Pip Boy Weapons Dingbats" is an iconic font that garners immediate recognition from fans of the "Fallout" series, a renowned collection of post-apocalyptic role-playing video games where the Pip-Boy...
  24. White Dove Script by FadeLine Studio, $18.00
    White Dove Script is a modern script font with a sweet and smooth handwritten style. This font has been enriched with additional alternates characters up to 700 glyphs. White Dove Script is perfect for logos, branding projects, homeware designs, product packaging, mugs, quotes, posters, shopping bags, logo's, t-shirts, book covers, name card, invitation cards, greeting cards, and all your other lovely projects.
  25. BRICK 3d by WAP Type, $15.00
    More information about this Font Introducing “Brick 3D esport Font” This font can be used for any variety purpose, such as: Logo, Esport Logo, Band Logo, Championship Logo, Military Logo and Clothing FEATURES : uppercase lowercase symbol & number All images on the demo is just for preview purpose only, not included on the file! FILES INCLUDE : TTF OTF Hope you love it Thank you!
  26. Ethery by LABFcreations, $14.00
    Ethery. Decorative modern serif font with a unique style. Elegant & Refined modern font. Geometric and stylish, this font is ideal for creating logon and branding. With original ligatures. It works perfect for creating stylish logos, striking editorials, invitations, graphic quotes, and more. Uppercase Characters Lowercase Characters Discretionary Ligatures Multilingual support for various languages Follow me by Instagram: @labfcreations Made in France with LOVE. © LABFcreations
  27. 1543 German Deluxe by GLC, $38.00
    This family was inspired by the sets of fonts used in 1543 by Michael Isengrin, printer in Basel (Germany) to print the splendid New Kreüterbuch...(New herbal...), with numerous nice pictures, the masterpiece of Leonhart Fuchs, father of the modern botany. It is a Schwabacher pattern, with three different sets of fonts, small (± 4mm for the upper case) in the main text, larger for titles (± 8mm for the upper case) and large Initials or lettrines (five lines of main text). This font contains standard ligatures and German historical ligatures (German double s, long s, tz, ch,...) and diacritics (special umlaut "e superscript" and "∞" unstead of dieresis with letters a, o and u,) naturally, we have added numerous letters lacking in the original to permit a contemporary use of the font. It can be used in complement with 1538 Schwabacher or/and 1534 Fraktur.
  28. Stable by WAP Type, $15.00
    stable logo font stable is a new font for design of sharp and powerful logos. The font is suitable for creating wordmarks, Logo, titles, taglines. Use alternates to emphasize separate letters in your text.
  29. Fireside by Sarid Ezra, $15.00
    Fireside is a logo font with sharp edge that will make your logo and design looks more futuristic and edgy. With the unique characteristic lowercase, this font will make your logo even more stunning. You can use this font for any purpose, especially to make logo e-sport. You can mix and match the uppercase and lowercase to make your logo more advanced. This font also comes with number, symbol, and multilingual support!
  30. Beitris by Kodhibanks, $15.00
    Beitris is a beautiful and elegant script font. Perfect for designing branding, blog logo, website logo, print ads, book covers, film covers, apparel, cards, logos, posters, etc. Beitris typeface gives you more alternatives in designing.
  31. House Bay by Maulana Creative, $14.00
    HouseBay Logo Script Font Give your designs an authentic handcrafted feel. HouseBay Logo Script Font is perfectly suited to logo, stationery, branding, typography quotes, magazine or book cover, website header, clothing, branding, packaging design, restaurant and more.
  32. Nebula Glorius by Struggle Studio, $18.00
    Give your typography designs a retro touch with the Glorius Nebula! Nebula Glorius is one of my fonts based on handwriting projects in 2021. This font is great for product logos, logos, clothing brand logos, vintage designs, and more.
  33. 1543 Humane Jenson by GLC, $38.00
    In 1543 the well-known “De humani corporis fabrica” treatise on anatomy by André Vesale, was printed by Johann Oporinus in Basel (Switzerland). Various typefaces were used for this work, mostly in Latin but including Greek characters. Its Jenson-type font was the one which inspired this font. It is a very elegant one, including the “long s”, a few abbreviation forms and ligatures. As it was a Latin text, there were no accented characters and a few capitals were absent. I had to reconstruct them. A render sheet, in the font file, makes all characters easy to identify on the keyboard. This font may be used as a “modern” one for web-site titles, posters and flier designs, publishing ancient texts... and anything else you want! One of the most elegant types ever cut, it stands up very well to enlargement, remaining as readable as in its original small size.
  34. Textus Receptus by Lascaris, $60.00
    Textus Receptus is a historical revival based on the Roman and Greek types used by Johann Bebel (and later also Michael Isengrin) in Basel in the 1520s. The Roman is a low-contrast medium-to-heavy Venetian reminiscent of Jenson or Golden Type. The unusual polytonic Greek, not previously digitized, is lighter in weight and supplied with all the ligatures and variants of the original. Yet when used without historial forms the Greek has a surprisingly contemporary feel: it’s quirky and playful as a display face, but still easily legible in running text. Bebel’s Greek extended and refined the one used for the first printed Greek New Testament, Desiderius Erasmus’ Novum Instrumentum Omne, published in Basel in 1516 by Johann Froben. The name of the font was chosen in honor of this edition, which was so influential that it was later called the Textus Receptus (the “received text”), serving as the basis for Luther’s German Bible in 1522 and much subsequent scholarship for over 300 years. Following 16th century practice, Textus Receptus contains 130 ligatures and stylistic alternates for Greek, accessible either with OpenType features or with five stylistic sets. The Greek capitals, often printed bare in early editions, have been equipped with accents and breathings for proper polytonic or monotonic typesetting. The Roman includes both standard and historical ligatures along with the abbreviations and diacritics typically employed in early printed Latin. For expanded language coverage it has the entire unicode Latin Extended‑A range and part of Latin Extended-B. The capital A is surmounted by a horizontal stroke, as in some 16th century Italian designs, and the hyphen and question mark have both modern and historical form variants. Mark-to-base positioning correctly renders fifty combining diacritics, and with mark-to-mark positioning the most common diacritics may be stacked, permitting, for example, accents and breathings on top of length-marked vowels. Numerals include old-style, proportional lining and tabular lining. For further details, please download the 31-page Textus Receptus User Guide.
  35. Adoria by Sarid Ezra, $17.00
    Adoria is a minimalist logo font with unique edge that will make your logo and design looks more simple and modern. With the unique characteristic lowercase, this font can make your logo even more stunning. You can use this font for any purpose, especially to make logotype. You can mix and match the uppercase and lowercase to make your logo more advanced. Adoria also comes with alternates that's why it's called deluxe logo font. This font also comes with number, symbol, and multilingual support!
  36. HeroesX by Mightyfire, $10.00
    If you are looking for a font that have strong looks, meet HeroesX. We create HeroesX with a firm, strong and tough looks. This font is perfectly suit for book title, gymnastic logo, sport logo, game logo and any other creative arts.
  37. Belgian Chocolate by Double Z Studio, $16.00
    Belgian Chocolate Font. Carefully crafted. It is a sweet chic, beautiful, modern, and elegant script. Smoothly flowing, perfect for designing blog logo, website logo, print ads, book covers, film covers, apparel, cards, logos, posters, etc. Opentype features give you more alternatives in designing.
  38. Planet Gamers by Sarid Ezra, $17.00
    Introducing, Planet Gamers, a serif logo font with unique ligatures! Planet Gamers is a serif based font with unique and carefully crafted ligatures that will make your logo stand out clean and modern. You can use this font for any purpose, especially to make logotype. This font is suitable for e-sport logo, game, or hi-tech company logo. This font also support multilingual.
  39. Dynatype by Alphabet Soup, $60.00
    Suddenly...it’s the World of Tomorrow! With the push of a button Dynatype automates your typesetting experience. Dynatype is actually Two fonts in One–without switching fonts you can instantly change from Dynatype’s “regular” style to its alternate connecting version with the simple push of a button. For more details download “The Dynatype Manual” from the Gallery Section. What is Dynatype? Dynatype is the upright, slightly more formal cousin of Dynascript. It shares many of the characteristics of it’s slightly older relation, but is drawn entirely from scratch and has it’s own unique character. Dynatype may be reminiscent of various mid-century neon signage, and of sign writing, Speedball alphabets and even baseball scripts. Its design also takes some cues from a historical typographic curiosity that began in Germany in the ‘20s and which lasted into the ‘60s—when Photo-Lettering gave it the name "Zip-Top". Basically it was believed to be the wave of the future—that by weighting an alphabet heavier in its top half, one could increase legibility and reading speed. The jury’s still out on whether or not there’s any validity to this notion, but I think you’ll agree that in the context of this design, the heavier weighting at the top of the letters helps to create some uniquely pleasing forms, and a font unlike any other. Typesetters across the planet will also be able to set copy in their language of choice. Dynatype’s 677 glyphs can be used to set copy in: Albanian, Basque, Catalan, Cornish, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Estonian, Faroese, Finnish, French, Galician, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Kalaallisut, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Maltese, Manx, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, Oromo, Polish, Portuguese, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Turkish, and Welsh—and of course English. Sorry! Off-world languages not yet supported. PLEASE NOTE: When setting Dynatype one should ALWAYS select the “Standard Ligatures” and “Contextual Alternates” buttons in your OpenType palette. See the “Read Me First!” file in the Gallery section.
  40. Dynascript by Alphabet Soup, $60.00
    Typography enters the Space Age! Dynascript brings the ease of “Pushbutton Automatic” to your typesetting experience. Dynascript is actually Two fonts in One–without switching fonts you can instantly change from Dynascript’s connecting font to the non-connecting italic with the simple push of a button. For more details download “The Dynascript Manual” from the Gallery Section. What is Dynascript? Dynascript is the slanted script cousin of Dynatype. It shares many of the characteristics of it’s sibling, but is drawn entirely from scratch and has it’s own unique character. To some it may be reminiscent of various mid-century neon signage, and of sign writing, Speedball alphabets and even baseball scripts. The design of Dynascript also takes some cues from a historical typographic curiosity that began in Germany in the ‘20s and which lasted into the ‘60s—when Photo-Lettering gave it the name "Zip-Top". Basically it was believed to be the wave of the future—that by weighting an alphabet heavier in its top half, one could increase legibility and reading speed. The jury’s still out on whether or not there’s any validity to this claim, but I think you’ll agree that in the context of this design, the heavier weighting at the top of the letters helps to create some uniquely pleasing forms, and a script unlike any other. Typesetters across the planet will also be able to set copy in their language of choice. Dynascript’s 694 glyphs can be used to set copy in: Albanian, Basque, Catalan, Cornish, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Estonian, Faroese, Finnish, French, Galician, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Kalaallisut, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Maltese, Manx, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, Oromo, Polish, Portuguese, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Turkish, and Welsh—and of course English. Sorry! Off-world languages not yet supported. PLEASE NOTE: When setting Dynascript one should ALWAYS select the “Standard Ligatures" and “Contextual Alternates” buttons in your OpenType palette. See the “Read Me First!” file in the Gallery section.
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