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  1. Roxic by Thinkdust, $10.00
    Roxic doesn’t push boundaries, or break them; Roxic doesn’t recognise your pedestrian concept of boundaries. It doesn’t so much laugh in the face of convention as much as it refuses to acknowledge its very existence. Roxic is a font for the modern day, but without the layers of pretension so often associated with modernism. Elegantly conveying your message with its uniquely delicate sturdiness, Roxic is a font that people haven’t met before, but they can’t help but trust it.
  2. Brenham JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Before typography had 'rules', lettering artists set down designs that have endured as classics. A perfect example is Brenham JNL, which was modeled after an antique wood type. The extra elongation of some characters, the irregular shapes of others and the overall hand-made charm of the entire design makes this digital font the perfect choice for replicating broadsides, posters and anything needing a nostalgic look as if from the past.
  3. Overbyte by Comicraft, $19.00
    This digitally remastered high density lettering has been bitmapped out for you by Comicraft's Eric Eng Wong. Those of you harddriving through cyberspace on the information superhighway had better zap your prams and reboot your hard disk before you're dragged into your system folder while OVERBYTE makes a major withdrawal from your atm. Do not be fooled by the name, there's nothing goofy about this typeface.
  4. Nouveau Signage JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Occasionally a type design is started - then set aside for whatever reason - before eventually being completed. More often than not, the original source material is forgotten, so proper attribution cannot be made. Such is the case for a hand lettered Art Nouveau alphabet likely found within the pages of an early Speedball lettering book from around the 1920s. This playful and casual design is now digitally reproduced as Nouveau Signage JNL, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  5. Alda by Emigre, $59.00
    The original idea for Alda came from exploring an alternative approach to generating different typeface weights by adapting the characteristics of physical objects. I was interested to find out how far this could be pushed before the letters became a parody of what they referenced. Initially I took this treatment very literally, with the boldest weight expressing the tension of bent steel, and the lightest being as spineless as a rubber band. This allowed me to infuse each weight with unique characteristics, where the bold is robust and angular, and the light is delicate and soft.
  6. Kempoka by Hanoded, $15.00
    Kempoka is a Japanese word describing someone who practices Kempo. Kempo, or Chuan Fa in Chinese, is a martial art with roots in China and Japan. I thought of this brush font just before my weekly kempo-training and I figured the name suited the font style. Kempoka comes with alternates and ligatures, and has a black belt in diacritics!
  7. FreesiaUPC by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Freesia™ UPC Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Freesia UPC Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Freesia UPC.
  8. Cordia New by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Cordia™ New Bold is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Cordia New Bold Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Cordia New.
  9. IrisUPC by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Iris™ UPC Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Iris UPC Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Iris UPC.
  10. Angsana New by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Angsana™ New Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Angsana New Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Angsana New.
  11. Browallia New by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Browallia™ New Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Browallia New Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Browallia New.
  12. Jasmine UPC by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Jasmine™ UPC Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Jasmine UPC Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Jasmine UPC.
  13. Victorian Silhouette by Monotype, $29.99
    Victorian Silhouette is a decorative all-capitals face made up of small silhouettes of people engaged in different activities. Before photographs were readily available, portraits were commissioned in the form of silhouettes, and these were extremely popular during the Victorian era. The Victorian Silhouette font is ideal for initial caps.
  14. Maleys by Luxfont, $48.00
    Welcome to the world of Maleys color fonts - where trendiness and playfulness meet in dynamic harmony. These fonts give your designs a breath of fresh air, adding originality and inspiration. Features: - Real Golden effect - Extras - Kerning - Multilingual IMPORTANT: - Check the glyphs in the font before buying! - SVG fonts contain raster letters.
  15. DilleniaUPC by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Dillenia™ UPC Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Dillenia UPC Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Dillenia UPC.
  16. Lily UPC by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Lily™ UPC Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Lily UPC Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Lily UPC.
  17. Choc by Linotype, $29.99
    Choc is the work of French designer Roger Excoffon, based on the traditions of Japanese brush calligraphy, thick yet graceful. Choc light was designed by Phil Grimshaw, who had to redraw many times in different weights before finding one that worked as a text face and remained true to the original.
  18. EucrosiaUPC by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Eucrosia™ UPC Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Eucrosia UPC Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Eucrosia UPC.
  19. Kodchiang UPC by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Kodchiang™ UPC Regular is a Thai font designed by Unity Progress and offered under license from Microsoft. The Kodchiang UPC Regular Font includes the Thai code page 874 and Latin 1 character sets. You should be familiar with the use of Thai fonts and multilingual fonts before purchasing Kodchiang UPC.
  20. MFC Heathcliff Monogram by Monogram Fonts Co., $19.00
    The source of inspiration for MFC Heathcliff Monogram is a crudely hand drawn vintage monogram transfer depicting a wider format diamond monogram. We revised numerous letters for better clarity and a more vintage industrial vibe. MFC Heathcliff Monogram is capable of traditional two and three letter format monograms, as well as gapped and hugging framing options for each. Numerals 1-9 and 0 on the keyboard for the 2 letter framing options typed before the letters, and use the shift key on the numerals for the 3 letter framing options type before the letters. It's just that easy. Looking for an MC in one of the letter slots? Just type mc on either side of MC in the middle to get it. Otherwise, just type a lowercase, a Capital, and then a lowercase to build your monogram. As one of the most popular shape based formats for monogramming since the beginning, it must be true that diamonds are forever.
  21. Mayblossom by Hanoded, $15.00
    Mayblossom was named after an old French fairytale (The Princess Mayblossom),which is quite similar to the tale of Sleeping Beauty. Mayblossom font is a fairytale font. It was made with a magic wand (with a Unicorn hair core) onto centuries old parchment. The font was then blessed by 12 lovely fairies. Of course, I had the evil thirteenth one kidnapped before she could cast her spell. In other words, if your work requires a certain lightness, a pinch of fairy dust and a sprinkling of magic, then Mayblossom is your best pick.
  22. Flyover by Ronnie Boy, $19.00
    When a formation of jets flies over the top of a stadium before a big game, there is an unparalleled sense of excitement in the crowd. Flyover, a display typeface, captures that moment with an italic base, left-facing serifs, hollowed notches and a change in angle representing the instant the jets pass overhead.
  23. BrushType Longhand by Brush Art Design Office, $52.00
    My name is Teruyoshi Matsui. I live in Japan. I am a Brush Artist. I artistically write the letters of the alphabet with a Japanese brush. I have created the font “ BrushType Longhand”. It was originally named "BrushType Alternative". But I changed my mind before it was completed. At first I aimed at an alternative font. But while I was trying to make it alternative, I realized that it was not. Of course there are many alternative letters that you have never seen before among them, so you have to be careful using the font. If you are a progressive and defiant designer trying to discriminate against others' designs, you should own my font "BrushType Longhand". Be ambitious! This is the word I will give you. I am ambitious ,too. No one in the world creates brush fonts like me. I am the only one as a Brush Artist though no one knows. I will be a world artist some day. So you should buy the font that is one of my favorite works. Thank you.
  24. Choc by ITC, $29.99
    Choc font is the work of French designer Roger Excoffon, based on the traditions of Japanese brush calligraphy, thick yet graceful. Choc light font was designed by Phil Grimshaw, who had to redraw many times in different weights before finding one that worked as a text face and remained true to the original.
  25. Hodgepodge by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Hodgepodge is a confused mixture of letters that somehow work together. While I know this has been done before I create fonts that I need. And I occasionally have found a need for this. And it was not there, so now it is. There is a mixture of light and dark, bold and regular, caps and lower case but not where you would expect them to be. Since this is a headline font you can set the headline and then easily go back and change a letter here or there to get the best-looking combination. Hodgepodge was in the 2011 Typodarium Page-A-Day Calendar on 7-17-2011.
  26. Somehand by PintassilgoPrints, $24.00
    Handsome in its own way, More versatile than one could say. Four alternates to each letter, Because in this family Spontaneity do matter. (And just in case someone wonders, Yes, there are alternates for numbers!) Seven cuts the family holds. Six of them Are for saying with words. And the very last, (Before someone asks) Holds some very cool dingbats. ​Books, app​s​, ​mags, To just name a few, ​Now go with Somehand And try something new​ :)​
  27. Avalaqus by Amera Type, $10.00
    Avalaqus is a font inspired by certificate, labels, posters, F&B packaging and has ligatures with alternate style that can make your display better than before. You will get a decorative font, sans, serif with bold and outline styles. And you will also get a set of badges with the open type feature format that match this typeface
  28. Entitled JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Way back before digital imaging, video tape and computer editing, the home movie enthusiast had to shoot on film his own titles using any one of a variety of movie titling kits on the market. One common approach was to arrange white ceramic letters on a colored background and film them. A set of such letters provided the inspiration for Entitled JNL from Jeff Levine. The classic, sleek Art Deco lines of this font makes it an all-purpose design for any headline needs.
  29. Handmade Dropshadow JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Handmade Dropshadow JNL was modeled from lettering found on a vintage silk screened metal sign used for point-of-sale marketing. Before the advent of computers and modern techniques, silk screens were hand cut using material called frisket and knife tools, and the lettering reflected the human inconsistencies of cutting these lettering into the template surface for transfer.
  30. P22 Coda by IHOF, $39.95
    Coda Pro is a simple but decorative and controlled sans serif design. Coda literally means ‘tail’ (Italian, from latin cauda) and refers to the way the letters h, m and n stretch below the writing line towards the end of a sentence or before a final stop. Coda Pro is an elegant and contemporary font suited for display purposes.
  31. Viking Initials by Wiescher Design, $19.50
    Viking Initials are pure brute-force blackletter initials of the time just before the Nazis started to rule, somehow these initials are typical for that period. I made one alphabeth-set with rough edges on the uppercase keys and a second set with sharp edges on the lowercase keys. For you to choose. Your historical designer Gert Wiescher
  32. Yesterday by Thomas Käding, $5.00
    This is a geometric uncial font with a retro/art-deco feel. It comes in four weights, each in upright and oblique styles. It has Unicode coverage for Latin, Greek (modern diacritics only), and Cyrillic, plus the Euro and peace signs. This font began as part of a project to design a local currency. Sadly, the municipality canceled the endeavor before the design competition had started. I'm including one of the prototypes in the gallery section as an example of this font’s many uses.
  33. Scaffoldini by Funk King, $10.00
    The Scaffoldini Family provides four different isometric perspectives and is suitable in use in science, engineering and sci-fi themed projects or however you see fit. The lines are formed by bubbles (or circle bricks in Fontstruct) and appear smoother the smaller the size of the type. These are not straight line segments and the gylphs will appear bubbly (scalloped edges) at larger size. Please be aware of this feature of the font before you purchase.
  34. Westpart by Garisman Studio, $20.00
    Westpart was born from the previous three brush fonts: 1. Northen, 2. Easttalia and 3. Southen. This font is part of the 4 directions that cannot be separated. It has a styling brush that is very different from before, because the Westpart has its own advantages. Westpart has a bonus splatter, ligature, and swash that has a very detailed brush effect. In addition, Westpart is very supportive of the use of 27 languages.
  35. Azarosa by Trifásica Studio, $9.00
    Azarosa (a.sa.ˈɾo.sa) is a display font inspired by the work of the urban artist Arkano in Bogotá (Colombia). The orthogonal shapes of a continuos line adapt themselves pretty well to the architecture of the city, and the not common ductus of the letters gives a very attractive visual texture, which is always seen before read. Visually, Azarosa is related to the graffiti movement pichação in Brasil and with some nordic runes; this is why this visually "encrypted" font is not easy to read, ideal for underground purposes.
  36. Petit Four by Hanoded, $15.00
    A "Petit Four" is a small, bite-sized, French pastry. The font before you is a bite-sized Hanoded original. It is hand made, fun to use and comes with a lot of calories. Like its namesake, use Petit Four sparingly and it will be the cherry on top of your design.
  37. Yeah Baby by Comicraft, $29.00
    Mmm-hmmm! Dig that crazy beat! Following the success of Lilou's GIRLS!GIRLS!GIRLS! font, we couldn't wait to give you More!More!More! Yeah, Baby! It's a font and it's clip art and it's bound to make heads turn and temperatures rise. Get up on the dance floor, girl, and dance the way you've never danced before!
  38. Praitor by Scriptorium, $18.00
    Praitor is based on a devotional inscription to the goddess Diana found a short distance from Rome in 1887. It is an early style from before 100 BC and has some characteristics of Etruscan lettering. It's a rough, strong font which works very well for distinctive titles.
  39. Arioso by Linotype, $40.99
    Arioso was a part of the 1990 program Type before Gutenberg, which included the work of twelve contemporary font designers and represented styles from across the ages. The calligraphic style of Arioso stems from an early form of Old Face developed in the 14th and 15th centureis in Italy. It is a mixture of Roman capitals and Carolingian lower case.
  40. Mashq by Arabetics, $29.00
    The Mashq script is the oldest documented Arabic Jazm calligraphy style. It was invented by the early Muslims in the Arabian cities of Mecca and Medina, exclusively for writing the Quran and other Islamic religious texts. The Mashq style employed complex ligature and multi-level baseline rules, and therefore it went through a continuous simplification process. Around the time period Mashq was developed, the early Arab Muslims experimented with another short-lived Mashq-like style with heavily slanted vertical stems, which closely resembled the common Ḥijazi style. This style is commonly referred to as the Ma’il (slanted) style. Eventually, the early complex Mashq style was replaced as the main Islamic Arabic script, by a more simplified Mashq-derived calligraphy style that was developed in the city of Kufa, modern day Iraq, which was commonly referred to as Kufi. The Kufic style became the official Arabic script style for centuries before it was replaced by the more developed Naskh, the modern Arabic script style used today. The Mashq font family by Arabetics includes three styles of Mashq. The first is Mashq regular, which closely follows the script style of Musḥaf ‘Uthman (currently displayed in the Topkapi Museum in Turkey) with only the initial and final Haa’ baselines shifting. The second is Mashq Maail, which emphasizes the features of the Ma’il style shared with Mashq. The third is Mashq Kufi, which closely follows the script style in an adequate sample from the Quran manuscripts of the Bergstraesser Archive. All three fonts include two styles, with and without Tashkeel (dots). The Mashq and Mashq Kufi fonts include two more styles, with and without Harakat (soft vowels), and Hamza. Only three soft vowels are implemented along with their Tanween (double) forms. The Sukoon vowel is the default shape before inserting a soft vowel. Hamza was treated as a vowel in the Mashq and early Kufi manuscripts. Kashida is a zero width character. In the Mashq fonts, inserting one Kashida before the final ‘Ayn glyph group will trigger alternative shapes. In the Mashq Kufi fonts, inserting one Kashida (or two) before the final Yaa’, ‘Ayn, and Ḥaa’ glyph groups will trigger alternative shapes. The Mashq font family by Arabetics was designed to be as compatible as possible with the Arabic keyboard and Unicode alphabet used in computers today. Calligraphic variations were implemented only when they marked significant and permanent script features.
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