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  1. Tawakkal Sans by Fontdation, $15.00
    New month means new font. Let us introduce our latest (another) sans serif; Tawakkal Sans. This font is a mix of modern and classic style, its cleanliness and irregular shapes represent the future, while its elegant curve mimicking old style typography. Tawakkal Sans is highly versatile, you can use it on many designing fields, ex: headline, editorial, quote-writing, tees/poster design, logo, etc. Packed with lots of glyphs (including OpenType chars), this font is a must have weapon on your designing arsenal. Enjoy!
  2. Bollolo by YuliusParyadi, $11.00
    Bollolo (Handwritten) is a fun and playful font. Bollolo name is made from bolo-bolo which is mean lets be friend. This font is readable, catchy, and easy to use. This font is suitable for quotes, logo designs, kids toys, story book, and many other design projects. Bollolo is includes: - full set uppercase and lowercase letter; - numerals; - multilingual support; - large number of punctuations; - ligatures. Please add this font as your favorite, hit like button, or follow me. I'll very happy for that and appreciated it.
  3. Double Fresh by Rochart, $15.00
    These letters were created directly by my wife's hand, then I processed it into a vector and turned it into an aesthetic font, i.e. Double Fresh handwritten font. Handwritten like a note, this font features all caps, with three variations of each letter, and lots of ligatures for a natural imperfect look. It's perfect for that hand-lettered social media quote, logos, or adding a handwritten touch to any project. Mix & match the stylistic alternate or ligature, so that you’ll have lots of different letters for that unique look & feel! What’s included: ALL CAPS LIGATURES STYLISTIC ALTERNATE MULTILINGUAL SUPPORT NUMBER & PUNCTUATION Have fun creating with this brush font and let me know if you’ve any wish, suggestion or feedback 🙂
  4. Flying Colours Don't Run - Unknown license
  5. HL2MP - Unknown license
  6. Luciferius - Unknown license
  7. Portcullion - Unknown license
  8. Doctor Who 2006 - Unknown license
  9. New Land Contour - Unknown license
  10. Labtop Down Under - Unknown license
  11. Futurex Deco - Unknown license
  12. Phosphorus - Unknown license
  13. Tranceform - 100% free
  14. Spider Web Block - Unknown license
  15. Wolfram - Unknown license
  16. Futurex Variation Alpha - Unknown license
  17. Futurex Embossed - Unknown license
  18. TNA Bound for Glory - Unknown license
  19. Hypertension - Personal use only
  20. Gringo Nights - Unknown license
  21. Healthy Alternative - Unknown license
  22. Middle Ages - Unknown license
  23. Face Front - Unknown license
  24. Futurex Engraved - Unknown license
  25. Army Beans - Unknown license
  26. Orotund - Unknown license
  27. Sanity Wide - Unknown license
  28. The Signer by Ably Creative, $9.00
    The signer is an organic handwritten font that is suitable for branding, signature, wedding invitation, promotion, product packaging, and other needs. This font is modern, simple, but still authentic. You will get full set of lowercase and uppercase letters, numerals and punctuation, multilingual symbols,ligatures and alternates lowercase.
  29. Well Done by Letterara, $16.00
    Well Done is a flower calligraphy font with an incredibly luxurious feel. It will add a romantic touch to any crafting project! Get inspired by its unique look! To stay up to date for my latest job, follow me and let’s be friends because there will be many promos.
  30. SP Jean by Remote Inc, $39.00
    I met her in a saloon called Little Texas. I was drinking mescal like it was vodka. She, tossing midgets like they were lawn darts. When the betting was closed, she launched an extra from The Wizard of Oz an impressive five meters, grabbed her margaritta and sat down.
  31. RMU Pittoreske by RMU, $35.00
    This great Victorian display font of the late 19th century was revived for today’s use. You also find two frame elements. To start setting a frame, type [shift] + [alt] + p for the corner, and continue with typing [alt] + p. Duplicate and mirror the lines to get a fantastic frame.
  32. Furriatt by DVType, $16.00
    Furriatt is a heavy weight bold all caps display typeface. It’s perfect for posters, logos, merch, covers and all stuff you want to print or display in larger format. Font also contain alternative characters set, you could match it with standard glyph to get the best rhythm of letters.
  33. Bethany Script by Sans And Sons, $19.00
    Bethany Script is Modern Script with Elegant and Unique Style. Includes full set of uppercase and lowercase letters, multilingual symbols, numerals, punctuation, swash and alternates letters The font has organic smooth wet ink texture with Modern Elegant Style this is perfect for branding, logos, invitation, masterheads and more.
  34. Binghamton NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    This typeface gets its inspiration from a face designed by Vincent Pacella for PLINC named Bingham, and is evocative of steam locomotives and the Old West. Both versions of this font include the Unicode Latin 1252 and 1250 Central European character sets, with localization for Moldovan and Romanian.
  35. Misyela by Stripes Studio, $20.00
    Introducing Misyela, made with modern handwriting! You can use it for your work because there are a lot of features in it to contain a complete set of letters lower and uppercase letters, assorted punctuation, numbers, and multilingual support. This font also contains several ligatures and alternate characters.
  36. Figgins Tuscan by HiH, $12.00
    Early in the 19th century, foundries began releasing a variety of decorated ornamental letters based on the Tuscan letterform. Fancy Tuscan letters quickly became so popular, they eventually came to represent the cluttered extremes of Victorian design. Foundries competed with each other to produce most extravagantly decorated letterforms. As often happens, success turned to excess. What is often overlooked is the long history of the Tuscan style. Early examples have been traced back to ancient Rome. Indeed, the characteristic bifurcation may have represented a fishtail to the early Christians, thus sharing in the roll of symbolic identification played by the simple drawing of a fish as a whole. Later. trifurcation was developed as an alternate termination, followed by loops, full fishtails, curls, hooks and other fancy variations. Nicolete Gray provides an extensive history in her Appendix One of NINETEENTH CENTURY ORNAMENTED TYPEFACES. According to Gray, the first metal typeface based on the Tuscan form was the Ornamented of 1817 by Vincent Figgins of London. Thorowgood followed suit in 1821, Fry in 1824 and Caslon in 1830. Each was to re-visit the form many times during the Victorian era. Here we present our interpretation of what Figgins might have produced in a basic, plain Tuscan form - free of the decorative additions. We are pretty safe here because Figgins was very creative. He explored many of the terminal variations listed above and combined them with different decorative devices to produce a constant stream of new faces to meet the demands of the marketplace. Figgins Tuscan ML represents a major extension of the original release, with the following changes: 1. Added glyphs for the 1250 Central Europe, the 1252 Turkish and the 1257 Baltic Code Pages. There are also a few glyphs for Anglo-Saxon, Gaelic and Old Gaelic. Total of 355 glyphs. 2. Added OpenType GSUB layout features: aalt, ornm and liga ˜ with total 34 lookups. 3. Added 351 kerning pairs. 4. Redesigned several glyphs: the comma, quotes, brackets, braces, acute accent, and grave accent. 5. Revised vertical metrics for improved cross-platform line spacing. Please note that some older applications may only be able to access the Western Europe character set (approximately 221 glyphs). The zip package includes two versions of the font at no extra charge. There is an OTF version which is in Open PS (Post Script Type 1) format and a TTF version which is in Open TT (True Type)format. Use whichever works best for your applications.
  37. Gibon by Juraj Chrastina, $29.00
    Gibon draws inspiration from the fascinating comic book universe, inhabited not only by many legendary superheroes, monsters and superbadass antiheroes, but also by its own legendary typefaces. Every cartoonist and hand letterer needs a pencil, a T-square and on and on. For digital lettering, books Gibon is an option. This handy toolkit helps you easily letter your comic strips, but even if you have nothing to do with cartooning, this bundle can simply add some comic book feel to your design or make some noise with layered sound effects. The basic font for speech balloon inking is Gibon Lettering, while Gibon Bold and Heavy let you emphasize certain text. Gibon Bold is further developed as a multilayer type where different styles are designed to be overlaid on top of each other, letting you work with built-in shadows, 3D effects and outlines to create striking SFX. Gibon Balloons offers different types of layered speech balloons and a few halftone patterns. The OpenType contextual alternate feature is set to automatically apply the random effect using two sets of glyphs. Traditionally, comic books are lettered in caps only, which explains why Gibon is an all caps font. To easily access alternate characters they are encoded as lowercase letters. For example, type the uppercase “I” to access the crossbar “I” and the lowercase “i” to access the crossbar-less “I”. Turn on stylistic set number one to use only crossbar-less “I”.
  38. Transport New by K-Type, $20.00
    Transport New is a redrawing of the typeface designed for British road signs. In addition to the familiar Heavy and Medium weights, Transport New extrapolates and adds a previously unreleased Light weight font originally planned for back-lit signage but never actually applied. Version 3.0 of Transport New features significant improvements including numerous outline and spacing refinements, and a full complement of Latin Extended-A characters. Also, to align Transport New with the 2015 release of Motorway, the other typeface used for UK road signage, Italic fonts for all three weights have been added. Originally designed by Jock Kinneir and Margaret Calvert beginning in 1957 and first published on the Preston bypass in 1958, the original Transport font has subtle eccentricities which add to its distinctiveness, and drawing the New version involved walking a tightrope between impertinently eliminating awkwardness and maintaining idiosyncrasy. The Grotesk roots of the glyphs were investigated and cheekily fine-tuned – uncomfortably close terminals of characters such as 5, 6, C, G, and e were shortened, the S and s were given a more upright aspect and their protruding lower terminals tucked in, overly wide glyphs like the number 4 were narrowed, and some claustrophobic counters were slightly opened up. The question mark was redesigned and parentheses given some stroke contrast. The x height was edged fractionally even taller. The Heavy font is actually more of a Bold, and the Light is pretty much a regular weight, but the original nomenclature has been retained for old times’ sake.
  39. Brava Slab by Rafael Jordan, $30.00
    Brava Slab is a family of 6 weights with matching italics. Designed for editorial purposes, it has a monolinear appearance with a humanist construction, open counters and a tall “x height” that give it a right personality for use in branding. Also Brava Slab have a lot of helpful features as a wide range cover of Latin languages and lots of OpenType features that make Brava Slab a useful tool for the graphic designer. A full range of numerals (included old style figures, lining, numerators, denominators, superiors, subs, circled and black circled), small caps, forty ligatures (between standard & discretionary ligatures), a lowercase superior and inferior set and a stylistic set are some of the features that makes Brava Slab a solid choice.
  40. Portheras by Identity Letters, $39.00
    What does “smart casual” look like as a font? Try Portheras: a fairly wide, contemporary humanist sans with a laid-back attitude. Inspired by the fine Cornish beach of Portheras Cove, this typeface pays homage to British design tradition while incorporating an informal idiom. At ease both in flip-flops and silk blouses, in Bermudas and knit ties, Portheras sports a low x-height and comes with italics between “oblique“ and “true italic”. Despite its approachable look, the font family is equipped for heavy duty—you’ll get 16 styles with 780 glyphs each and OT features such as small caps, numerous figure sets (with old-style figures at mid-cap height), a bunch of arrows, three stylistic sets, and more. Portheras is as classy as relaxed gets.
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