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  1. Second Guess JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The cover of the 1934 sheet music for "Your Guess Is Just as Good as Mine" offers up another hand lettered Art Deco sans with a classic period look. The square-ish lettering with rounded corners of Second Guess JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  2. Popstick by Creativemedialab, $14.00
    A simple and cool retro, pop art, stylish font for your design. Popstick has a modern, clean and fresh look with nice perfect rounded shapes. This font is best suited for commercial and editorial uses like advertising, apps, sports brand, packaging, logos, headers, corporate identity and much more.
  3. Harpo by Elemeno, $25.00
    Harpo is a naturally condensed font, better at large sizes. Harpo Wide is a more versatile version of the same font. Part of The Algonquin Collection, Harpo was named for occasional Round Table member, Harpo Marx. Light, narrow and discreet this font brought to mind the silent Marx brother.
  4. Virgiluna by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $25.00
    Virgiluna is a sweet, soft hand-lettered script font. The playful rounded characters make it the perfect font for creating amazing designs. Fall in love with its authentic feel and use it to create gorgeous wedding invitations, beautiful stationary art, eye-catching social media posts, and cute greeting cards.
  5. Questionable Things by Comicraft, $29.00
    Have you been marking your words quixotically lately? Can't choose between an interrogative and a questionnaire? It can be quite the problem during question time, so we've quickly rounded up a quality quorum of questionable characters so you'll never be short of a Q during a Q&A!
  6. Blob by Superfried, $32.50
    Blob, designed by Superfried, is available in two formats Round and Square. It is an experimental, sans-serif display typeface based on simple geometric shapes. Although unorthodox, care has been taken to ensure that it is completely legible. Blob has been featured on the Behance curated typographic gallery TypographyServed.com.
  7. Simple Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A brass hand-punched shipping stencil from the 1950s inspired Simple Stencil JNL. The rounded ends of the characters are reminiscent of technical lettering templates, especially since there are a combination of solid letters and those with stencil "breaks" as many of those pen and ink templates possessed.
  8. MBF Mechania by Moonbandit, $17.00
    Mechania is a geometric sans serif display font. Bold and wide design gives this typeface a strong presence. Balance in the round and sharp edge to keep the clarity. Best use for a modern minimalist theme, other usage includes logo, poster, display, headline, t-shirt design and many more.
  9. Hulpy by Adam B. Ford, $16.00
    Hulpy is a relaxed font that won’t judge you. It was created with a combination of stocky rounded verticals and tapering curves. It could probably be used in comic strips or fun and happy headlines, but it also has enough regularity to be used in unpretentious body copy.
  10. Judera by deFharo, $11.00
    Judera is an unicase and monospaced experimental typography of subtractive geometric construction with no diagonals with two styles plus italics which have a 13° inclination. • Flat: font of straight lines with all angles at 90° • Ring: Rounded in its external vertices with angles proportional to the constructive grid.
  11. Break Snooze by Crumphand, $30.00
    Introducing, Break Snooze fonts. Break Snooze have a unique shape, rounded and fun. Comes with 3 style Regular, Outline and Extrude, then can mix and match with Stylistic Set. What's Included Inside The Fonts ? Uppercase Lowercase Symbols Numerals Stylistic Set 1 Stylistic Set 2 European Multilingual Thank you, Regards!
  12. Sastica Nora by Aqeela Studio, $20.00
    Sastica Nora is a smooth and elegant handwritten font. Its distinctive, rounded font makes this font a masterpiece. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style and use it to create spectacular designs! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all glyphs and swashes with ease!
  13. Barb by chicken, $17.00
    Heavy as hell, awkward, asymmetric, sort-of-gothic… Four alternates for every letter, carefully kerned together and nicely shuffled for you by OpenType apps… Blunt has the sharp corners ever so slightly rounded off for a softer look at large sizes. Wired chops everything up for an origami angle…
  14. Faizer by Differentialtype, $10.00
    Faizer is a slab serif typeface font with a display theme. Great for presentations, billboard fonts, logo fonts, and more. Faizer has 3 styles, regular, rounded, and outline. The faizer also features alternates with bouncing styles, as well as alternate lowercase and alternate numbers with in-circle styles.
  15. Mula by Typesketchbook, $55.00
    Mula is an extra large super family of 80 styles. Mula has such a big abundance of contrast, styles, weights, width. The complete Mula family consists of regular, slim and rounded versions for use in a multifunctional settings, especially for cooperative work, websites, magazines, editorials, publishing, packaging and more.
  16. RMU Wallau by RMU, $25.00
    In 1885 Heinrich Wallau, printer and typographer in Mainz, picked up the idea of creating a rounded gothic font written with a broad nib. This idea was then realized by Rudolf Koch between 1925 and 1930. RMU Wallau is a bringing back this beautiful font for present typography.
  17. Pauline by insigne, $24.99
    Pauline is a sans serif with a strong influence from retro scripts. Pauline is a geometric face formed with slow and deliberate rounded brush strokes. The tall ascenders give it a useful touch of naïveté. It’s a face suitable for some interesting titling and short bits of copy.
  18. Neues Bauen by Hanoded, $10.00
    Neues Bauen is a Bauhaus inspired font with some interesting glyphs. It is slightly rounded in places, but sharp in others and it will most certainly make your designs stand out. Neues Bauen in other words, like the style that emerged in pre-war Germany, is a statement.
  19. Ajuga by Daily Studio, $14.00
    Ajuga - a typeface designed by Daily Studio. This is a geometric type font. with smooth and rounded egde. You can enjoy and play with the uppercase or lowercase to make it more entertaining. Perfect for header, poster, title, and cards. Ajuga contains full uppercase, lowercase, punctuation, and multilingual letters.
  20. MBF Reute by Moonbandit, $42.00
    Introducing MBF Reute, a cutting-edge font that redefines modern typography. With its squared, minimalist design, this typeface strikes a perfect balance between rounded warmth and sharp precision. Clean lines and a contemporary aesthetic make MBF Reute the go-to choice for a sleek and versatile visual language.
  21. Miso by Mårten Nettelbladt, $-
    Miso was designed for architects' drawings. It’s a clean and narrow typeface suitable for small text but also for headlines and logos. The spacing of Miso follows the logic of mono-stroke fonts as found in CAD software. The starting point for this typeface was the lettering style of the International Organization for Standarization found in ISO 3098-0:1997.
  22. ZP Monsterz More by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    This adorable, blocky font features monster elements and fur on each letter. Great for Halloween or just fun projects for kids.
  23. Zarathustra by Etewut, $30.00
    'Zarathustra' family is black lettered gothic font with multi-language support. It was inspired by middle age cathedrals and its sculptures.
  24. Borderless by Lazy Holiday Studio, $15.00
    This font is characterised by a sleek shape.There are two versions, regular and black. Included: -Uppercase and Lowercase -Number and Punctuation
  25. Reverse Gothic JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Reverse Gothic JNL is a design based on vintage reverse letterpress type for creating interesting headlines with white-on-black text.
  26. Ekistra by Dharma Type, $14.99
    Crazy sans for happy, fun time. There are two other fonts designed by in the same concept. -Deluta Black -Xesy -Ekistra
  27. JH Rawan by JH Fonts, $40.00
    JH Rawan is a modern geometric typeface; it is derived from JH Dima black ; typical for corporate identity, headlines, branding & signage...
  28. 112 Hours by Device, $9.00
    Rian Hughes’ 15th collection of fonts, “112 Hours”, is entirely dedicated to numbers. Culled from a myriad of sources – clock faces, tickets, watches house numbers – it is an eclectic and wide-ranging set. Each font contains only numerals and related punctuation – no letters. A new book has been designed by Hughes to show the collection, and includes sample settings, complete character sets, source material and an introduction. This is available print-to-order on Blurb in paperback and hardback: http://www.blurb.com/b/5539073-112-hours-hardback http://www.blurb.com/b/5539045-112-hours-paperback From the introduction: The idea for this, the fifteenth Device Fonts collection, began when I came across an online auction site dedicated to antique clocks. I was mesmerized by the inventive and bizarre numerals on their faces. Shorn of the need to extend the internal logic of a typeface through the entire alphabet, the designers of these treasures were free to explore interesting forms and shapes that would otherwise be denied them. Given this horological starting point, I decided to produce 12 fonts, each featuring just the numbers from 1 to 12 and, where appropriate, a small set of supporting characters — in most cases, the international currency symbols, a colon, full stop, hyphen, slash and the number sign. 10, 11 and 12 I opted to place in the capital A, B and C slots. Each font is shown in its entirety here. I soon passed 12, so the next logical finish line was 24. Like a typographic Jack Bauer, I soon passed that too -— the more I researched, the more I came across interesting and unique examples that insisted on digitization, or that inspired me to explore some new design direction. The sources broadened to include tickets, numbering machines, ecclesiastical brass plates and more. Though not derived from clock faces, I opted to keep the 1-12 conceit for consistency, which allowed me to design what are effectively numerical ligatures. I finally concluded one hundred fonts over my original estimate at 112. Even though it’s not strictly divisible by 12, the number has a certain symmetry, I reasoned, and was as good a place as any to round off the project. An overview reveals a broad range that nonetheless fall into several loose categories. There are fairly faithful revivals, only diverging from their source material to even out inconsistencies and regularize weighting or shape to make them more functional in a modern context; designs taken directly from the source material, preserving all the inky grit and character of the original; designs that are loosely based on a couple of numbers from the source material but diverge dramatically for reasons of improved aesthetics or mere whim; and entirely new designs with no historical precedent. As projects like this evolve (and, to be frank, get out of hand), they can take you in directions and to places you didn’t envisage when you first set out. Along the way, I corresponded with experts in railway livery, and now know about the history of cab side and smokebox plates; I travelled to the Musée de l’imprimerie in Nantes, France, to examine their numbering machines; I photographed house numbers in Paris, Florence, Venice, Amsterdam and here in the UK; I delved into my collection of tickets, passes and printed ephemera; I visited the Science Museum in London, the Royal Signals Museum in Dorset, and the Museum of London to source early adding machines, war-time telegraphs and post-war ration books. I photographed watches at Worthing Museum, weighing scales large enough to stand on in a Brick Lane pub, and digital station clocks at Baker Street tube station. I went to the London Under-ground archive at Acton Depot, where you can see all manner of vintage enamel signs and woodblock type; I photographed grocer’s stalls in East End street markets; I dug out old clocks I recalled from childhood at my parents’ place, examined old manual typewriters and cash tills, and crouched down with a torch to look at my electricity meter. I found out that Jane Fonda kicked a policeman, and unusually for someone with a lifelong aversion to sport, picked up some horse-racing jargon. I share some of that research here. In many cases I have not been slavish about staying close to the source material if I didn’t think it warranted it, so a close comparison will reveal differences. These changes could be made for aesthetic reasons, functional reasons (the originals didn’t need to be set in any combination, for example), or just reasons of personal taste. Where reference for the additional characters were not available — which was always the case with fonts derived from clock faces — I have endeavored to design them in a sympathetic style. I may even extend some of these to the full alphabet in the future. If I do, these number-only fonts could be considered as experimental design exercises: forays into form to probe interesting new graphic possibilities.
  29. Flowers by BluHead Studio, $22.00
    The Flowers Family is a collection of 3 typefaces in two weights, meticulously drawn by British designer Roy Preston. The Flowers fonts share a common clean and narrow design, with oval-shaped rounds and distinctive individual letter shapes that give each font a unique character all their own. Flowers Petal is the base typeface, essentially a sanserif with rounded terminal ends. Flowers Bud adds a unique inverted triangle shaped serif, and Flowers Thorn replaces that with an elegant pointed serif. All 3 typefaces are very legible and usable for text runs, and there are bold weights of each font for headlines and display applications. Flowers' extended character set supports many Western European languages and each font has some OpenType features, including Ligatures, that make them more useful.
  30. Kiro by Dharma Type, $24.99
    Kiro is a minimal, simple condensed sans-serif family designed by Ryoichi Tsunekawa and the whole family consists of 12 style: six weights from Thin to ExtraBold and their matching Italics. The range of styles provides flexibility for title, headline and body text. And the large x-heights gives them legibility and readability. The basic skeleton was designed semi-modularly and the letterform was minimalized by removing their unnecessary stems. Their corners were finished with subtle rounded effect. The minimalized semi-modular design gives this family contemporary urbane taste and rounded corners make this family warm and friendly. Kiro supports almost all European languages: Western, Central, South Eastern Europeans and afrikaans. And superior figures, inferior figures, denominators, numerators and fraction can be accessed by using OpenType features.
  31. Laquile by Edignwn Type, $16.00
    The font collection is called "Laquile", it is a display font for logotype. These collections contain script and serif font. Every font comes with 4 style typefaces (regular, rounded, rough and stamp). Laquile give more extras 1 pack farm illustrations. This script font includes some alternates. The Laquile matches apply in some designs such as the logo, poster, label, badge, packaging, t-shirt, branding, quotes and more custom design. Laquile features : 4 style typefaces (regular, rounded, rough and stamp) Uppercase, lowercase, numeral, symbol, punctuation and alternate in script font All-caps, numeral, symbol and punctuation in serif font Multilingual PUA Encoded Laquile includes : 10 fonts (script, serif and dingbat) 24 illustrations in dingbat Thank you for your support and choosing us.
  32. Poppin by Kustomtype, $20.00
    Poppin is a playful font-type that you can comfortably use in all kinds of styles, from modern to old school. A combination of a few names on an old movie poster is what triggered the creation of this font type. Because it had such a strong rock and roll character, I decided to dedicate a font-type to it. The Poppin font is completely hand-drawn and then digitized. It results in being an extremely user-friendly, complete and modern font that you can use in all your graphic applications. Poppin is a font from the subculture that has been updated to a hip and classy font, ideal for eye-catching designs. Poppin comes in 4 styles, regular, bold , round & bold round. Poppin makes everyone smile!
  33. Baldufa Cyrillic by Letterjuice, $66.00
    Baldufa is a charming typeface with strong personality, which looks very comfortable in text. There is a search to obtain complicated curves and detailed features, which gives the typeface a touch of beauty and elegance. However, this is also a self-conscious design that claims through the rounded serifs and irregular vertical stems appreciation for quirkiness and human imperfection. The letterforms are inspired by the slight distortions and idiosyncrasies that came with old printing methods. It has distinct, features such as rounded serifs, irregular vertical streams, ink traps and extremely thin junctions. In the Italic, serifs have been removed to enhance movement and expressivity. These experiments in form have not come at the cost of legibility: The typeface remains suitable for both small and display text.
  34. Baldufa Greek by Letterjuice, $47.00
    Baldufa is a charming typeface with strong personality, which looks very comfortable in text. There is a search to obtain complicated curves and detailed features, which gives the typeface a touch of beauty and elegance. However, this is also a self-conscious design that claims through the rounded serifs and irregular vertical stems appreciation for quirkiness and human imperfection. The letterforms are inspired by the slight distortions and idiosyncrasies that came with old printing methods. It has distinct, features such as rounded serifs, irregular vertical streams, ink traps and extremely thin junctions. In the Italic, serifs have been removed to enhance movement and expressivity. These experiments in form have not come at the cost of legibility: The typeface remains suitable for both small and display text.
  35. Occam by Veil of Perception, $20.00
    Occam is an informal calligraphic script face. The letter forms were drawn and constructed rather than penned or brushed but reflect a definite flat pen influence. The ascenders and descenders incorporate an abstract implied loop form. Some curves that would normally be round are pointed and some transitions that would normally be sharp and pointed have been made round. A few exit strokes curve back instead of moving up and out for a little different look. This font could be put to good use as a contrasting style combined with sans and serif faces in applications such as newsletters, brochures, invitations and annual reports. It could be used for heads, subheads, pull quotes, drop caps and as a title font for covers.
  36. Simpliciter Sans by Cercurius, $19.95
    Simpliciter Sans is a typeface based on the lettering used in the 20th century on technical drawings, either written by free hand or using templates. The lettering was made with a round pen, therefore all lines got rounded ends. All lines had the same thickness in uppercase, lowercase and small caps. The upright style was used on construction drawings and the italic style on machine drawings. The backslant style was used on maps for names of water bodies — seas, lakes, rivers etc. — and for water depth. Simpliciter Sans is primarily intended for texts on drawings, diagrams, charts and maps, but it can also be used for signs and labels. It also works surprisingly well as a body type in smaller sizes.
  37. Sansduski by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    Sansduski is a sans-serif decorative/display family. Its very high x-height and tight spacing make it more suitable for use at large point sizes than small point sizes. (There are better options if one wants a readable text font.) It comes in nine weights and one outline style, with an oblique style accompanying each of these ten styles to give a total of 20 styles in the family. The letter O is a rectangle with rounded corners and this shape motif is carried over to other characters that are usually rounded. For a monospaced rather than proportional version of this design idea, see SansduskiMono. Sansduski is appropriate for titles, posters, advertising, and other uses that benefit from simple letter forms that are geometric and clean.
  38. Derpache by Edignwn Type, $18.00
    The Derpache Font is inspired by authentic typefaces in old labels. This font collections contain script and serif font. Every font comes with 4 style typefaces (regular, rounded, rough and stamp). Derpache gives more extras nautical and pirate in one pack illustrations. This script font includes some alternates. The Derpache matches apply in some designs such as the logo, poster, label, badge, packaging, t-shirt, branding, quotes and more custom design. Derpache features : 4 style typefaces (regular, rounded, rough and stamp) Uppercase, lowercase, numeral, symbol, punctuation and alternate in script font All-caps, numeral, symbol and punctuation in serif font Multilingual PUA Encoded Derpache includes : 9 fonts (script, serif and dingbat) 26 hand-drawn illustrations in dingbat Check out Duhline which is a great pair for Derpache.
  39. Cell by Type Minds, $7.50
    Cell is a sturdy, geometric typeface with many potential applications. Though it is best suited to display sizes, its construction is simple enough for use in smaller settings. Its octagonal, almost mechanical design is softened by rounded corners. The face is characterized by a single thick stroke in each letter, lending it a unique appearance. It also features an oblique counterpart with several italic-style glyphs. Both members of the family also include small capitals mapped to the Private Use Area. Cell was designed to be at once simple and unique. Its grid-based structure is enhanced by slight adjustments for optical consistency. Glyphs which are normally round instead have 45-degree angles at the corners, sticking to the grid system without losing legibility.
  40. Taca by Rúben R Dias, $42.00
    Taca is a typeface built around a shape that Portuguese designer Rúben R Dias calls a “squircle” — neither square nor circle. We usually associate the rounded, convex box with the television screens of the 1960s and Aldo Novarese’s classic typeface, Eurostile. But whereas Eurostile is cold and machined, Taca is warm and rugged, as if it was molded from clay or carved from stone. Taca’s organic nature is also derived from another unique feature: rounded crotches at the right angles where perpendicular strokes meet. This subtle finish, along with blunt stroke endings, softens the otherwise rigid skeleton. With such a strong conceptual vision, Taca could be relegated to the bin of experimental designs, severely limited in their application. But that fate is usually born of a less experienced maker. As a teacher, designer, and letterpress printer, Dias is a type user, keenly aware of the functional requirements of good type. Taca is therefore not a slave to its concept, but a working font family, effective in various sizes and environments. Its lettershapes break away from the base shape whenever it makes sense for legibility, while still maintaining the flavor of the design as a whole. That said, a set of squircle-shaped alternates give the user the flexibility to get more stylized if the situation calls for it. Fitting to its functional aims, Taca has many of the features one expects of a proper text font: upper and lowercase figures, case-sensitive punctuation, and Extended Latin language support. The simplicity, openness, and squareness of Taca’s forms also make it an ideal design for the pixel grid of screen displays.
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