10,000 search results (0.025 seconds)
  1. Calligrapher - Unknown license
  2. Watford - Unknown license
  3. Gordon - Unknown license
  4. Steamer - Unknown license
  5. Pacotille - 100% free
  6. Bandit - Unknown license
  7. Paramount - Unknown license
  8. Heather - Unknown license
  9. Caliph - Unknown license
  10. Bazooka - Unknown license
  11. Scribble - Unknown license
  12. MacHumaine - Unknown license
  13. Jester - Unknown license
  14. Sherwood - Unknown license
  15. Ogilvie - Unknown license
  16. Carrick - Unknown license
  17. CharlieChan - Unknown license
  18. See - Unknown license
  19. Batmos - Unknown license
  20. Fillmore - Unknown license
  21. Blue - Unknown license
  22. Buccaneer - Unknown license
  23. Stylus - Unknown license
  24. Tejaratchi - Unknown license
  25. Standout - Unknown license
  26. Ariosto - Unknown license
  27. Trooklern - Unknown license
  28. PixelScreen - Unknown license
  29. Cue - Unknown license
  30. Serpent - Unknown license
  31. Bloomington - Unknown license
  32. Satanick - Unknown license
  33. StageCoach - Unknown license
  34. Architext - Unknown license
  35. Tubular - Unknown license
  36. Mercedes - Unknown license
  37. Arabian - Unknown license
  38. Kelmscott - Unknown license
  39. Aphrosine by ParaType, $30.00
    Aphrosine is a font based on pointed pen script. A huge lot of alternatives and smart OpenType features allow it to look almost indistinguishable from real live handwriting. Aphrosine is something between handwriting and calligraphy: it took too much effort for being “just handwriting” but lacks seriousness and regularity comparing to true calligraphic fonts. That’s why it was called after a peculiar character from a children’s book: a witch who was very fond of dressing, makeup and writing letters. Aphrosine has three faces. But unlike most other type families, the glyphs from one face do not match exactly the glyphs from another one. The faces are based on writing with different nibs but by the same hand. The type is designed by Alexandra Korolkova and Alexander Lubovenko and released by ParaType in 2015.
  40. Envoy by Tim Rolands, $20.00
    Envoy is a serif type inspired primarily by Garalde oldstyle types like those of Claude Garamond. As such, it is particularly well suited for book and magazine text. Characteristic details more typical of Venetian oldstyle faces serve to give Envoy just a bit more personality. The base family includes regular, italic, bold, bold italic and small capitals. Expert sets add ligatures and alternate letterforms. Display sets include letterforms customized for titling. Originally designed in 1995 and 1996, for the 1996 Morisawa International Typeface Design Competition, Envoy was later revived, completed and publicly released in 1998. During the initial design, the family was known as Truman in honor of Northeast Missouri State University becoming Truman State University, but the name was changed to Envoy prior to entry in the competition.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing