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  1. LD Charlie Clown by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    LD Charlie Clown is an enjoyable scrapbooking font that can put a smile on anyone's face.
  2. Kells by Classic Font Company, $14.95
    A face designed specifically to complement celtic decorated capitals and based on text from the book.
  3. Ya Vez by Volcano Type, $19.00
    Ilustrations of different "moves" in Mexican wrestling; a sport popular in the late 60s and 70s.
  4. Normande by Bitstream, $29.99
    A French form of Fat Face, derived from the British; matrices survive at Berthold in Berlin.
  5. P22 Regina by IHOF, $24.95
    Regina is a calligraphic-influenced hybrid light-face Tuscan-serif roman with a companion swash italic.
  6. Movie House JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Double Feature JNL reworks the classic Huxley Vertical into an elegant trilinear Art Deco display face.
  7. Curbdog by MADType, $21.00
    Curbdog is a bold, playful display face with light horizontals and curved terminals in the italics.
  8. Disjecta by Michael Browers, $15.00
    Disjecta, derived from disjecta membra meaning fragmented or disjointed, was developed as a grunge script face.
  9. Deco Inline by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A hot revival of the 60s and 70s a great headline face with that retro look.
  10. Cisalpin by Linotype, $29.99
    The ideal typeface for cartography The Swiss designer/typographer Felix Arnold designed Cisalpin during the late 1990s, after he had challenged himself to create a contemporary typeface that could be used for cartographic uses. Arnold came to the subject of cartographic typefaces after analyzing many maps and atlases, and discovering that there was no standard typeface for these types of documents. Like any good cartographic type, Cisalpin is very legible at small sizes. While he was drawing this typeface on his computer, Arnold used a reduction glass to refine his design, making it work in these situations. Cisalpin is a linear sans serif face, with slight resemblance to renaissance serif types. The various weights are all clearly differentiated from one another. And because space is often a premium on maps, Cisalpin runs narrow. Words close in around themselves to help them become more identifiable. The letterforms in Cisalpin are durable, and can maintain their readability when placed over complex backgrounds. They have open interior forms, flattened curves, tall x-heights, and a capital height that almost reaches the tops of the ascenders. Cisalpin also has pronounced Italics, with a very clear angle of inclination. Each letterform in the family has been optimized so that they cannot be easily mistaken for another. This again helps minimize the misunderstandings that often occur because of illegibility. Although Cisalpin was developed for use in cartography, it may be used for countless other purposes; any font that can work well in small sizes on a map could be used almost anywhere else!
  11. LTC Spire by Lanston Type Co., $24.95
    LTC Spire with alternate caps was designed by Lanston’s type director Sol Hess in 1937. Spire Roman was designed without lowercase. But it includes alternate rounded caps which transform this extra condensed “fat face” into more of an art deco titling face. Spire Roman has been used within department store logos, luxury hotel signage, perfumes, etc, etc.
  12. Paragon by Greater Albion Typefounders, $12.50
    Paragon is a display Roman family of nine faces, combining elements of formality and fun. It embodies a high degree of contrast between near hairline horizontal strokes and bold vertical strokes. The family is offered in three widths and in regular, small capitals and title faces. Use Paragon to lend impact to your next design project.
  13. Minion by Adobe, $35.00
    In designing Minion font, Robert Slimbach was inspired by the timeless beauty of the fonts of the late Renaissance. Minion was created primarily as a traditional text font but adapts well to today's digital technology, presenting the richness of the late baroque forms within modern text formats. This clear, balanced font is suitable for almost any use.
  14. Angie Lou by FontFuel, $12.00
    Angie Lou is a contemporary clean informal face. More formal than most handwritten faces, it surprises the eye with its clean rhythm. It gives that "marker on paper" or "dry erase board" feel. But the thin nature of Angie Lou sets it apart from most marker style fonts. Angie Lou offers two variants: regular and italic.
  15. Broken Vows by The Type Fetish, $10.00
    Broken Vows was one of two typefaces I created to go along with some fragmented poetry written as I went through a divorce, the second being WHORE. The letterforms contain fragments of familiar script faces that are attempting to hold themselves together. Some of the connecting elements of the letterforms remain and hold the face together.
  16. Corvone by Greater Albion Typefounders, $16.95
    Corvone is a heavy bullnosed display family, inspired by the post war era's ideas of modernity. Two faces are offered, plain—a solid black face, and regular—which employs a three-dimensional pipeline effect to add real emphasis. Use Corvone to give work a retro feel, and/or where you want to really drive your point home.
  17. Limehouse Script by ITC, $40.99
    Limehouse Script is the work of British designer Alan Meeks, a display face with a wide variety of applications. It is a script face with capitals meant to be used with the lowercase letters and strokes to join many characters. Limehouse Script is a striking, informal upright script which reveals a combination of brush letter and handwriting influence.
  18. Planscribe NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    This family of faces take their inspiration from the standard faces used by the Leroy® Automatic Lettering Machine, a mainstay for architects and draftsmen in Ye Olden Days of t-squares and triangles. Crisp, clean and retro-techno. Both versions of this font include the complete Latin 1252, Central European 1250 and Turkish 1254 character sets.
  19. LTC Law Italic by Lanston Type Co., $24.95
    Law Italic was designed as an imitation of a formal style of penmanship used in legal documents. It has a more pronounced angle than standard italics. It is intended to be used by itself but can be combined with other faces to suit a designer's inclination. Historically, this face was once used by Bruce Rogers strictly for headings.
  20. Fluid Drive NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    A playful Art Deco face from master penman Samuel Welo is combined with design elements used in 1930s signage to create this architectural face. End caps are created with {brackets} and spaces with the design elements are _underscores. Both versions of this font support the Latin 1252, Central European 1250, Turkish 1254 and Baltic 1257 codepages.
  21. Service Men JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Service Men JNL is a collection of twenty-six service industry-related messages carried by a courier. Each image is offered facing left and facing right. A blank message panel is available on both the period and comma keys for adding special text. The classic 1940s-era artwork adds a nostalgic touch to these simple reminders.
  22. Linotype Really by Linotype, $29.99
    Linotype Really, designed by Gary Munch, is a typeface family of six weights with italics and small capitals that offers a broad palette of expressions to draw from, sensibly light to brightly stentorian. The moderate-to-strong contrast of the vertical to horizontal strokes recalls the Transitional and Modern styles of Baskerville and Bodoni, and the subtly obliqued axis of the stoke weight recalls the old-style faces of Caslon. A strong belt of sturdy serifs completes the Realist sensibility of a clear, readable, no-nonsense text face whose clean details offer the designer a high-impact display face.
  23. Genre by Storm Type Foundry, $26.00
    The official terseness and grey of Neo-Classical type faces will stand out when we narrow them. The consistently vertical shading of the letters suppresses one's desire for eccentricity, just like tea with bromine. It would, however, be wrong to consider Bodoni as the originator of this - vertically shaded - trend in type face production. In his Manual we can also find type faces with a slanted axis of shade, picturesque italics and a number of normal, more human type faces. It remains a mystery why his name is connected only with one of his many works. Genre's basic design is fairly light in colour, which is why it looks good in illustrated magazines and short texts and directly calls for graphically striking, contrasting headings. It shows off beautifully next to photographs, on diplomas and on printed materials connected with a person's death.
  24. Lefferts JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Lefferts JNL is a wide, light type face type with a square shape. Perfect for formal text.
  25. Xenotype by Device, $29.00
    Xenotype is an examination of heavy horizontal weighting and develops ideas underlying 60s and 70s headline faces.
  26. Hermainita by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    Hermainita is a calligraphic typeface that is very legible. Yngreena is a serifed version of this face.
  27. Typetonic by Wilton Foundry, $21.00
    Typetonic is great display face for anything related to design, art or technology. Available in Crossplatform Opentype.
  28. Shifty by MADType, $21.00
    Rational curves and spiky rhythms punctuate this all-caps sans face, for a plastic feeling, futuristic effect.
  29. Jayhawker by Context, $10.00
    A super-stylized retro display face for headlines, posters, drop caps and other basic-but-oversized uses.
  30. Manchester by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A Bold Powerful Condensed serif face; great for book jackets, magazines, ads and just about any application.
  31. Rhomus by Typotheticals, $4.00
    A Blocky face with a slight hint of angularity. The Omnilots are a free addition to the set.
  32. Caravan Script by Jonahfonts, $20.00
    An unconnecting informal yet formal script. Caravan is a rambling font which gives the appearance of going places.
  33. Shangrala by BA Graphics, $45.00
    For headlines, text, or anything inbetween; a beautiful readable face with just a touch of the Far East.
  34. Decorative Arrows JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Decorative Arrows JNL is a collection of twenty-six decorative arrows provided in right and left facing directions.
  35. Star7 by GFR Creative, $54.00
    STAR7 Racing Font I hope this font is interesting to use in your design projects. thank you GFRcreative
  36. MX Pro by WAP Type, $15.00
    MX very suitable for automotive magazine covers, racing game covers, logos & branding, product design, labels and so on.
  37. Handsome by CastleType, $39.00
    A collection of over 30 antique style hands; the typeface includes the hands facing both right and left.
  38. Galactic by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A heavy bold serif face, packs great punch; excellent headline font. Can be used for many different applications.
  39. Bruce Belgina NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Patented in 1867, this face adds peaks and shadows to the Egyptian form so popular at the time.
  40. Linotype Aspect by Linotype, $29.99
    The letters in the Linotype Aspect Family fonts seem to be experiments in the handcrafting of letters with just a few basic geometric forms. For instance, the bowls of the letters C, D, and G in Linotype Aspect Intro are all made up of narrow half circles. Features like this make Linotype Aspect Intro perfectly suited for headlines and short passages of text. Its quirkiness is sure to lend a smile to the faces of your readers. For shorter headlines with larger point sizes, try setting your text in Linotype Aspect Regular, the second member of the Linotype Aspect family. Linotype Aspect Regular uses the same basic letterforms as Linotype Aspect Intro, but reverses them out in white, and places them over bulbous black shapes. The Linotype Aspect family was developed by German designs Hans-Jürgen Ellenberger in 1999.
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