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  1. Western Deco JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The cover of the 1938 sheet music for "Treasure Island March" had its title hand lettered in a rough-hewn Western style with overtones of Art Deco influence. All of the characters were "cleaned up" for the digital font, but still retain the basic designs with their irregular, eccentric look. The result is Western Deco JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  2. Herbit by Lafontype, $25.00
    Herbit is a handwritten sans serif font designed with the principle "Irregularity in regularity" so that herbit produces different shapes on each side of the character but looks in harmony and still maintain readability. The family contains 7 weights from Light to black with multilingual support and is ideally suited for branding, logo, advertising and packaging needs, editorial and publishing, as well as web and screen design.
  3. Johnny by Canada Type, $24.95
    Johnny is the latest addition to the long line of popular psychedelic/hippy/funky art nouveau fonts representing the retro side of the Canada Type library. It is the digitization of a popular 1969 Phil Martin typeface that was known by two different names: Harem and Margit. The film type version had plenty of irregularities and quirks that made it seem like it was done in a hurry. In this digital version the errors have been corrected and the character set expanded to include international characters with built-in alternates, to be on par with what today's layout artists expect from a high quality font. This font saw a lot of use on record sleeves and music posters throughout the pre-disco part of the 1970s, which makes it a veteran of both the psychedelic and funk periods. This makes it the sharper, sturdier art nouveau contemporary personality of Canada Type's Tomato font. This font contains a very expanded character set that includes full support for Central, Eastern and Western European languages, as well as Baltic, Turkish, Esperanto, Greek, Cyrillic and Vietnamese.
  4. Aircruiser - Personal use only
  5. 3-DSalter - Unknown license
  6. Querround - 100% free
  7. Old Town - Personal use only
  8. Quer - 100% free
  9. Peace - Unknown license
  10. Tarantis - Unknown license
  11. FanciHand - Unknown license
  12. Hazard - Unknown license
  13. Beatsville - Unknown license
  14. Benjamin - Unknown license
  15. SonyannaScriptSSi - Unknown license
  16. Packard Antique - Personal use only
  17. Oxnard - Unknown license
  18. Buster - 100% free
  19. Bonzai - Unknown license
  20. Blades - Unknown license
  21. Rapture - Unknown license
  22. Edition - Unknown license
  23. Halley by Eurotypo, $24.00
    Halley is a modern, funny and casual script with an irregular base line that gives it a unique and modern look. All the glyphs have been carefully painted giving the texts a wonderful flow. A fat and thin blow in this font impresses the harmony. Halley family pack comes in three styles: regular, italic and Shadow. Each font contains 746 “regular or irregular" glyphs, including up to seven alternatives in upper case and six in lower case, standard and discretionary ligatures for a genuine handwriting effect. It also includes a Central European language support with its corresponding alternative characters to have more options in those languages. We have added some useful ornaments that will serve for the most demanding design project! Halley looks good in children's books, fashion, magazines, restaurant menus, book covers, wedding invitations, greeting cards, logos, business cards and is perfect for use in designs based on ink or watercolor, and more
  24. California Personal Use - Personal use only
  25. Love Glitch Personal Use - Personal use only
  26. Blue Screen Personal Use - Personal use only
  27. Traveller by Holland Fonts, $30.00
    A geometric design, published in Rick Poynor’s Typography Now 1 (Booth-Clibborn Editions, London UK,1991). Discussing these kinds of angular styles, the critic Rick Poynor noted that "fate has overtaken the angular post-constructivist type design of Neville Brody, Zuzana Licko and Max Kisman". Poynor described a process by which typefaces, once “fresh, unexpected, precisely attuned to the moment”, get used increasingly often in less and less appropriate contexts and end up looking "irredeemably passé". (Poynor, Rick, ‘American Gothic’ in Eye Magazine, 6/1992)
  28. Varsity - Unknown license
  29. Jessica - Unknown license
  30. Christa - Unknown license
  31. Almagro - Unknown license
  32. Lizard - Unknown license
  33. Janet - Unknown license
  34. Aljo - Unknown license
  35. Asa - Unknown license
  36. HamLake - Unknown license
  37. Sheryl - Unknown license
  38. Dreidels - Unknown license
  39. Bert - Unknown license
  40. Sakura - Unknown license
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