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  1. Drebiek - Unknown license
  2. VTCSuperMarketSaleTallTilt - Unknown license
  3. Kings of Pacifica - Personal use only
  4. SF Piezolectric Inline - Unknown license
  5. Ebola - Unknown license
  6. Avain - Personal use only
  7. Wonton - Unknown license
  8. Riquoth - Unknown license
  9. Meccanica by Monotype, $25.00
    Meccanica is pretty unique and difficult to describe, suffice to say that it’s a geometric sans typeface with some hexagonal DNA. Meccanica’s defining features include soft, chamfered edges, angular bowls and shoulders, angled/hexagonal terminals, and semi-hexagonal ink traps (in a nutshell). View the microsite for full info: http://meccanica.info Meccanica was inspired by the mechanics of engineering – the humble nut and bolt in particular – it is a versatile typeface that will give your own typography a distinctive voice. Initially designed as a display typeface (for headlines, logotype, branding and short runs of text), Meccanica also reads well as body copy – particularly at smaller point sizes. Key features: • 9 weights in Roman and Oblique • Small Caps and Alternates • Full European character set (Latin) • 640+ glyphs per font.
  10. Technik by CarnokyType, $25.00
    Technik is a constructed typeface, which is almost strictly designed from basic geometrical elements consisting of mainly circles, also squares and diagonal shapes. Another characteristic is the connection of diagonals, verticals and diagonals, and also of some circle shapes touching each other at one point. It gives this type an original look, and prevents the problematic dark places in some letters. The technical feeling of the type (mainly in uppercase letters) is balanced by the design of lowercase which looks more friendly and fresh. Technik is not designed as a text typeface, it is recommended mainly for display typesetting. You can use it for example in fashion industry or in branding typography, or everywhere where you need the technical feeling of the constructed typefaces to look less cold and more friendly.
  11. Gill Sans MT by Monotype, $45.99
    Gill Sans is a humanistic sans serif family that, while is considered by many to be quintessentially British in tone and concept, has been used in virtually every country and in nearly every application imaginable. Gill Sans has reached this level of near-ubiquity for one simple—and very good—reason: it is an exceptionally distinctive design with a potential range of use that is almost limitless. This toolkit family includes a wide range of styles including the standards such as Light—which is open and elegant—and a Regular that, with its flat-bottomed d, flat-topped p and q and triangular-topped t, has a more compact and muscular appearance. Its Bold styles tend to echo the softer, more open style of the light while the extra bold and ultra bold have their own vivid personalities, but each of them would make for an eye-catching headline. Take into account the family’s many weights, including condensed and extra condensed designs, and extended language support and you have yourself a tool you’ll be thrilled to return to, time and again. Gill Sans was designed by Eric Gill: a versatile, brilliant, and prolifically successful designer of the early part of the last century. One of the main reasons for the enduring success of his namesake design is that it is based on Roman character shapes and proportions, making it unlike virtually any other sans serif out there. Gill also worked his own warmth and humanity into his design, resulting in a typeface in which each weight retains a distinct personality of its own. Pair with serif fonts like Gill's own Joanna; or more modern offerings like Frutiger® Serif, Malabar™, Syntax® Serif, FF Scala®, or DIN Next™ Slab.
  12. Cougher by Context, $10.00
    A big fat quirky face for big bold weird uses. Inspired by E. McKnight Kauffer and vintage travel posters, both styles have support for multiple languages.
  13. KG Always A Good Time by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Happily-lettered handwriting full of optimism. This handwriting was drawn with a chunky round marker and is bold enough for drawing attention yet still completely legible.
  14. Safety Goggles by Ali Hamidi, $10.00
    Safety Goggles is a bold, strong, masculine display font. This font is perfect for SVG design, sticker, home decoration, quotes, headings, blogs, logos, invitations and more!
  15. Friskily by Ali Hamidi, $12.00
    Friskily is a soft bold script font with a retro and simple vibe. It will look great on headlines, magazines, logos, branding and so much more!
  16. Antique Shadow by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    A modified remake of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century. This is an extra bold, shadowed, sans serif suitable for display.
  17. Scrap Caps by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    Cap off your project with this all capital letter font. Bold and stylish with hand lettered appeal. Great for any paragraph or headline that demands attention.
  18. French Antique by Wooden Type Fonts, $20.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century, extremely condensed, bold, flat thick serifs, a very useful design for display.
  19. Display Engraved JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Display Engraved JNL was inspired by the bold, engraved Sphinx Blanc from the Deberney & Peignot circa 1925, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  20. Pipo by bb-bureau, $65.00
    Pipo is a minimalist rounded tubular and stencil font in 5 weights (Thin, Light, Regular, Medium & Bold) — many symbols and cleverly ligatured! language: all latin glyphs
  21. AZ Claire by Artist of Design, $20.00
    AZ Claire was inspired by hand scripts, but with the necessity for a bolder look. This font was designed for use as a fun bold headline.
  22. Ugaritica by Mouhannad Alkousa, $14.00
    Ugaritica is an uppercase typeface. Blocky, sharp, and aggressive. Nice for headlines to catch the attention. Ugaritica is available in two styles - regular and bold. Enjoy!
  23. Greywall by Khurasan, $8.00
    Introducing Greywall, a bold stretch sans serif font. Greywall it perfect for posters, logos, magazines, covers, banners, t-shirts and headers, or even large-scale artwork.
  24. BB book A by bb-bureau, $65.00
    bb-book A — breaking rules typeface Expressive book serif (triangular and curved) kicking up weight, width and contrast — in 4 styles: light, regular, medium and bold.
  25. Fagies by Hitype, $15.00
    Fagies is a modern and bold sans serif typeface featuring characters that stand out from every background. Suitable for logos, posters, packaging, branding, invitations, notes, etc.
  26. Flute by Typotheticals, $5.00
    Flute was a font that was released in 2006 now, in 2022, it has been updated to increase the number of faces, including a bold version.d.
  27. Darbee Legend by OGJ Type Design, $35.00
    A characteristic feature of the Darbee Legend is its boxy forms and the angled (unpainted) terminals. Regular to bold plus italic and a variable font (upright).
  28. Gengboy by Hitype, $15.00
    Gengboy is a fun bold Sans Serif typeface featuring characters that stand out from every background. Suitable for logos, stickers, posters, packaging, branding, invitations, notes, etc.
  29. Jebakan by Nandatype Studio, $13.00
    Jebakan is a beautiful and charming display font with a bold vibe. Jebakan suitable for standout designs and make any design idea into a true standout.
  30. Sketchwriter by Baseline Fonts, $24.00
    Sketchwriter™ is a terribly fun hand-drawn typeface designed with many uses in mind. At small point sizes, it's a little grungy. The larger the display, the more interesting the stroked glyphs become.
  31. Splinters JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Splinters JNL is a fun, hand-drawn font emulating letters formed from pieces of wood. Use at larger point sizes for best results. Please note: There is no kerning and a limited character set.
  32. Saint Saturn by Factory738, $15.00
    Are you looking for a new font to add to your collection? Look no further than St Saturn, a retro serif font that is both stylish and versatile. Whether you’re designing a logo, creating a website, or working on a print project, this font has the potential to elevate your work to the next level. Keep reading to learn more about the features that make St Saturn unique and how to use it effectively. 7 Weights Basic Latin A-Z and a-z Numerals & Punctuation Stylistic Ligatures and Alternate Glyphs Multilingual Support for ä ö ü Ä Ö Ü … Free updates and feature additions Thanks for looking, and I hope you enjoy it.
  33. Covenante by Harvester Type, $20.00
    Covenante is an antique font that contains futuristic elements that give it an unusual look. Sharp serifs and unusual shapes of ovals, create a solid character and make the font fresh. More language support, ligatures, and alternative characters will increase the font's usability. 450 glyphs, 282 languages of the Latin group, 7 alternative characters, 21 ligatures, a capital set and more than one day spent for kerning-create a great potential for this font. Text, covers, posters, prints, titles, interfaces, web, book covers, packaging, logos, and much more where you can apply this font. If you find an error in the font, kerning, or just want to add something or suggest something, then write to me: bunineugene@gmail.com
  34. Mobilesta by Gatype, $14.00
    Mobilesta Script is a very unique handwriting, the shape is modern but pleasing to the eye and the style is very natural. This font is designed to potentially take any of your creative ideas to the highest level! These designs are used for branding, web and editorial design, print, craft, quotes, Great for logos, wedding invitations, romantic cards, labels, packaging, name spelling and more. Mobilesta Script includes OpenType style alternatives, ligatures, and International support for most Western Languages. To enable the OpenType Stylistic alternative, you need a program that supports Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe Indesign & CorelDraw X6-X7, Microsoft Word 2010 or later. How to access all alternative characters using Adobe Illustrator: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzwjMkbB-wQ
  35. Miaupaws by Aisyah, $12.00
    Meows Display Font is a fun and playful font that is perfect for a variety of design projects. This font features a unique paw print in place of a traditional dot over the letter "i" giving it a playful and whimsical feel. The Meows Display Font is a bold and attention-grabbing font that is sure to make a statement in any design. The paw print feature gives the font a touch of personality and quirkiness, making it ideal for use in children's books, animal-themed designs, and other creative projects. The Meows Display Font is designed to be used as a display font, meaning it is best used in larger sizes such as headlines, titles, and logos. The font includes a full set of upper and lowercase letters, as well as numbers and punctuation, making it a versatile and practical choice for designers. Overall, Meows Display Font is a fun and unique font that brings a touch of playfulness and quirkiness to any design project. Whether you're creating a children's book, designing a pet-themed product, or working on a logo, this font is sure to make your project stand out.
  36. Looking to add a little Arts & Crafts flavor to your next project? Perhaps you just need a distinctive, new sans serif design? And one with a large international character set. In either case, ITC New Rennie Mackintosh™ may be the typeface for you. Its narrow proportions saves space, and the design shines at large sizes. While it can be an excellent typeface for Art Nouveau flavored labels, name tags and chapter call-outs, this is a suite of fonts that you can also turn to for a bevy of print and on screen uses. Games and apps, as well as print headlines and menus all benefit from ITC New Rennie Mackintosh’s vintage vibe. Based on Phill Grimshaw’s original 1996 design, Monotype Studio designers reimagined the iconic family, added lowercase characters, a new weight structure of light, regular and a more robust bold design; each with an italic counterpart. In addition, a large international character set that include support for many Western and Eastern European languages – including Cyrillic and Greek – give the family a deep typographic bench. An added benefit: the new designs can also be combined with Grimshaw’s original ornament and initial character fonts.
  37. 1509 Leyden by GLC, $49.00
    This script font was inspired by the type used in Leyden by Jan Seversz to print Breviores elegantioresque epistolae [...], author Francesco Filfelo, circa 1509. The original font contains all lower case characters, except w, eth, thorn, lslash, oslash and so... and almost upper case. In addition, one set of small lombardic initials were also nearly complete. It take place instead of the Bold style (in only one package)offering a real and rare complete historical printing set... The original small "a" hight was 2,8 mm !, the upper case hight no more than nearly 5 mm, the initials hight almost 15 mm, covering nearly two lines. This font includes "long s", naturally, as typically medieval and also a few ligatures, but not any variants. We have entirely recreated some characters, upper, lower and initials, to fill gaps. It is used as variously as web-site titles, posters and fliers design, publishing texts looking like ancient ones, or greeting cards, all various sorts of presentations, menus, certificates, as a very decorative, elegant and unusual font, besides its historical scrupulous reality... This font supports enlargement as well as small size.
  38. Brushed by d[esign], $4.62
    Let this free-flowing brush script add a little hand painted goodness to your works. Cheaper than a bucket of paint, use Brushed to add brush painted letters to your works or manipulate the many glyphs in this font using image editing software to create art as shown above.
  39. Teutonia by HiH, $10.00
    How can Teutonia be called “Art Nouveau” with all those straight lines? It seems like a contradiction. In fact, however, Art Nouveau embraces a rather wide variety of stylistic approaches. Five well-known examples in the field of architecture serve to illustrate the range of diversity in Art Nouveau: Saarinen’s Helsinki Railroad Station, Hoffman’s Palais Stocklet in Brussels, Lechner’s Museum of Applied Arts on Budapest, Mackintosh’s Glasgow School of Art and Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia in Barcelona. Only the last fits comfortably within the common perception of Art Nouveau. Whereas Gaudi would avoid the straight line as much as possible, Macintosh seemed to employ it as much as possible. The uniting factor is that they all represent “new art” -- an attempt to look things differently than the previous generation. Even when they draw on the past -- e.g. Lechner in the use of traditional Hungarian folk art -- the totality of the expression in new. Teutonia clearly shows its blackletter roots in the ‘D’ and the ‘M.’ Roos & Junge of Offenbach am Main in Germany produced Teutonia in a "back-to-basics" effort that has seen many quite similar attempts in the field of topography. In 1883, Baltimore Type Foundry released its Geometric series. In 1910, Geza Farago in Budapest used a similar letter design on a Tungsram light bulb poster. In 1919 Theo van Doesburg, a founder with Mondrian and others of the De Stijl movement, designed an alphabet using rectangles only -- no diagonals. In 1923 Joost Schmidt at Bauhaus in Weimer took the same approach for a Constructivist exhibit poster. The 1996 Agfatype Collection catalog lists a Geometric in light, bold and italic that is very close to the old Baltimore version. Even though none of these designs took the world by storm, they all made a contribution to our understanding of letterforms and how we use them. Teutonia is compact and surprisingly readable at 12 points in print, but does not do as well on the screen. Extra leading is suggested. Four ligatures are supplied: ch, ck, sch and tz. The numerals are tabular.
  40. Josefov by Ingo, $28.00
    A narrow, modern Slab Serif. JOSEFOV is directly derived from the sans serif text font ”Hedwig“. Therefore, of course, it pairs best with “Hedwig”. The basic thought was to create a font with heavy rounded serifs in the style of ”Clarendon“ but which hardly reminds one of that particular font. The form principle of rounded serifs is applied whenever possible — for example at the points where the individual strokes of the characters join one another. JOSEFOV seems very technical, very constructed (and truly is). In order to soften up the rigid impression, the serifs are applied at some points contrary to the tradition handed down, as with the upper case A C G K M V W and the lower case a b d h i j k l s t. Historically there is no example of the laterally oriented serifs of capital and small s (S) and C G. On the other hand, the double-sided serifs on the stems of b d h k l appear at the beginning of modern times in the very first serif types from five hundred years ago. The double-sided serifs of A M V W were also customary in the first decades of printing. JOSEVOV is particularly suitable for topics such as nature, folklore, culture, music, nutrition.
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