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  1. AmorE - 100% free
  2. HandmadeTypewriter - 100% free
  3. TrickTag - Unknown license
  4. SonyannaScriptSSi - Unknown license
  5. BN FontBoy - Unknown license
  6. Lady Ice Revisited Upper - Unknown license
  7. Packard Antique - Personal use only
  8. Ruinik - Unknown license
  9. Kahless Shadow - Unknown license
  10. Spylord Bold Italic - Unknown license
  11. Kahless Pro - Personal use only
  12. BN Police - Unknown license
  13. BN Kuktus - Unknown license
  14. Tralfamadore - Unknown license
  15. BN Emulator - Unknown license
  16. BN Suck My Balls - Unknown license
  17. Hoola boola - Unknown license
  18. Siegfried - Unknown license
  19. Yellow Swamp - Unknown license
  20. Spylord Expanded Italic - Unknown license
  21. Smoke-ScreenObl - Unknown license
  22. Smoke-Rasterized - Unknown license
  23. Cayetano - Unknown license
  24. Spylord Laser Italic - Unknown license
  25. Work Or Spoon - Unknown license
  26. Feetish - Unknown license
  27. Gizmo SSi - Unknown license
  28. Erotokritos - Unknown license
  29. CuxhavenFraktur - Unknown license
  30. Sushitaro - Unknown license
  31. Galaxative tower - Unknown license
  32. Antroposofia - 100% free
  33. LD Harry by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    This fun font has a lightning bolt on many of the uppercase letters. It's magical!
  34. Mizar Grotesk by Fatchair, $9.95
    Mizar Grotesk is a sans-serif with a few quirks and a slight retro feel.
  35. Runaway by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    A heavy graffiti-inspired font! Don't drop it, 'cos it's weight might crush the floor!
  36. Fantini by Canada Type, $29.95
    Fantini is the revival and elaborate update of a typeface called Fantan, made in-house and released in 1970 by a minor Chicago film type supplier called Custom Headings International. In the most excellent tradition of seriously-planned American film faces back then, CHI released a full complement of swashes and alternates to the curly art nouveau letters. Fantan didn't fare much among the type scene's big players back then, but it did spread like electricity among the smaller ones, the mom-and-pop type shops. But by the late 1980s, when film type was giving up the ghost, most smaller players in the industry were gone, in some cases along with little original libraries that existed nowhere else and became instant rarities on their way to be forgotten and almost impossible to resurrect for future technologies. Fantini is the fun and curly art nouveau font bridging the softness and psychedelia of the 1960s with the flirtatious flare of the 1970s like no other face does. Elements of psychedelia and funk flare out and intermix crazily to create cool, swirly letters packed with a lot of joy and energy. This is the kind of American art nouveau font that made its comeback in the late 20th century and is now a standard visual in the branding drive of almost every consumer product, from coffee labels to book and music covers to your favorite sugar or thirst-crunching fix. Alongside Fantini's enormous main font come small caps and three extra fonts loaded with swashy alternates and variations on plenty of letters. All available in all popular font formats. Fantini Pro, the OpenType version, packs the whole she-bang in a single font of high versatility for those who have applications that support advanced type technologies. In order to make Fantini a reality, Canada Type received original 2" film specimen from Robert Donona, a Clevelander whose enthusiasm about American film type has never faltered, even decades after the technology itself became obsolete. Keep an eye out for that name. Robert, who was computer-reluctant for the longest time, has now come a long way toward mastering digital type design.
  37. Erratic Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The title on the 1925 sheet music for “By the Light of the Stars” was hand lettered in an eccentric Art Nouveau type style with varying character shapes and line widths. This is now available as Erratic Nouveau JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  38. Snorkel JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A package for a swim mask and snorkel was the basis for this decidedly unusual typeface with a wild 1970s-era design. There's no telling how to apply this font to a project, but think black light posters, psychedelic music and some cheap wine!
  39. Slabserif Grotesk JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Slabserif Grotesk JNL was modeled from an example of a wood type design called Antique Light Face, and is available in both regular and oblique versions. The numerals (although an odd fit to the overall design) make this vintage font quite unusual and charming.
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