4,785 search results (0.032 seconds)
  1. Romanche - Personal use only
  2. RikyTiky - Personal use only
  3. Fettash - Personal use only
  4. BeesWax - Personal use only
  5. Balloons - Personal use only
  6. HVD Edding 780 - Unknown license
  7. Starcraft - Unknown license
  8. Skeksis - Unknown license
  9. Turok - Unknown license
  10. Thalia - Unknown license
  11. Dalelands - Unknown license
  12. Emulator - Unknown license
  13. Chinyen - Unknown license
  14. Transmetals - Unknown license
  15. Nightwarrior - Unknown license
  16. Gutcruncher - Unknown license
  17. Sands of Fire - Unknown license
  18. Adventure - Unknown license
  19. Warlords - Unknown license
  20. Utusi Star - Unknown license
  21. Pokemon - Unknown license
  22. Jedi - Unknown license
  23. Tsa - Unknown license
  24. Ysgarth - Unknown license
  25. Tarpon Springs JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    An early-1960s Canadian magazine ad for a brand of birth control pills featured the least likely spokesperson – Annette Funicello (“starring in “Beach Blanket Bingo” and “How to Stuff A Wild Bikini”). The text was hand lettered in an Art Deco-inspired sans serif type design. Tarpon Spring JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  26. Brunswick Black by Letterbox, $80.00
    Named after its place of birth, Brunswick (Melbourne, Australia), this black display face builds upon the rich heritage of Cooper Black whilst minimizing the more cartoon-like aspects of the original and basing it on a very sturdy broad serif. With its solidity responding well to tight kerning, Brunswick Black features not only small caps but also petite caps.
  27. OL America The Beautiful by Dennis Ortiz-Lopez, $40.00
    Oh Beautiful, for Spacious Skies, for Amber Waves of Grain This font was designed to honor the Land of My Birth, The United States of America, a Nation that has given me the Freedom to be what I want to be, to Create what I feel fit to create and to Live in Peace. God Bless America!
  28. Model by Lián Types, $49.00
    When designing a typeface, one has to be conscious of superfluous details. Although I am always tempted to add little personal touches, experience taught me that the phrase -less is more- is totally true. In Model, the letters (like models do) participated of a contest: An event in which models engage in competition against each other, often for a prize or similar incentive. The prize was staying in the font! yay! Tall, delicate, refined, the right amount of elegancy: These were some of the aspects to be chosen. Typographically speaking, these things were achieved thanks to a tall x-height (which leaded the font to be somehow condensed), a subtle contrast between thicks and thins, and just the right amount of decorative swirls. The result is a nice script that can be used in magazines, invitations, posters, book-covers and works very well when used over photographs. Get Model and let it be the star of the catwalk. STYLES Model Pro and Model Small Pro are the most complete styles of the font. Both have all the ligatures and decorative glyphs seen in posters above (OT programmed). Model Std One, Std Two and Std Three are reduced versions of Pro. This means they have less glyphs inside. TIP If you are planning to print the font in small sizes, it’s highly recommended to purchase Model Small Pro. Its thins are thicker so they will be better printed.
  29. Beast Machines - Unknown license
  30. Celestial - Unknown license
  31. Gotham Nights - Unknown license
  32. Colony Wars - Unknown license
  33. Mystic Etchings - Unknown license
  34. Cybertron Metals - Unknown license
  35. Sharon Apple - Unknown license
  36. Ysgarth English - Unknown license
  37. Simple Runes - Unknown license
  38. Ronduit Capitals Light - Personal use only
  39. Rubber Stamp by ITC, $39.00
    Created in 1983 by British artist Alan Birch, this dramatic design conveys all the immediacy, impact, and effect of a stencil or rubber-stamp on paper. With a corroded, rough-around-the-edges feeling, Rubber Stamp gives an impression similar to the old, beat-up looking typewriter fonts that were popular among designers during the 1990s. Rubber Stamp is an all caps font, and is primarily suited for many headline and display applications that use larger point sizes. Try out Rubber Stamp in magazines, newsletters, and any other work that would be enhanced by a stencil, branding, or rubber stamp effect.
  40. Marriage-Script - Unknown license
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