10,000 search results (0.039 seconds)
  1. Clementine Sketch - Unknown license
  2. (el&font BLOCK) - Unknown license
  3. Gordon Heights - Personal use only
  4. brown bear funk - Unknown license
  5. walk the plank - Unknown license
  6. Inhuman BB - Personal use only
  7. Clementine Sketch - 100% free
  8. EvilGenius BB - Personal use only
  9. Luteous Industrious - Unknown license
  10. Vidas Secas - Unknown license
  11. Jailbox1 - Personal use only
  12. Shadows Into Light - Personal use only
  13. Amature Circus - Unknown license
  14. Keetano Gaijin - 100% free
  15. Spongebob Dingpants - Unknown license
  16. VTKS GENERAL USE - 100% free
  17. the quiet scream - Unknown license
  18. Luteous Viscous - Unknown license
  19. Put Another One In - Unknown license
  20. Tinga - 100% free
  21. His Name Is Honey - Unknown license
  22. YY Uncial Most Irish - Unknown license
  23. Luteous Exodus - Unknown license
  24. fragments of eter - Unknown license
  25. Futurex Distro - Unknown license
  26. Everytime I Miss You - Unknown license
  27. Just One More Picture - Unknown license
  28. SW Crawl Body - Unknown license
  29. Walecriture - 100% free
  30. Feuerfeste Outline - Unknown license
  31. Honest John's Shadow - Unknown license
  32. ZITZ - Unknown license
  33. Oxford Street by K-Type, $20.00
    Oxford Street is a signage font that began as a redrawing of the capital letters used for street nameplates in the borough of Westminster in Central London. The nameplates were designed in 1967 by the Design Research Unit using custom lettering based on Adrian Frutiger’s Univers typeface, a curious combination of Univers 69 Bold Ultra Condensed, a weight that doesn’t seem to exist but which would flatten the long curves of glyphs such as O, C and D, and Universe 67 Bold Condensed with its more rounded lobes on glyphs like B, P and R. Letters were then remodelled to improve their use on street signs. Thin strokes like the inner diagonals of M and N were thickened to create a more monolinear alphabet; the high interior apexes were lowered and the wide joins thinned. The crossbar of the A was lowered, the K was made double junction, and the tail of the Q was given a baseline curve. K-Type Oxford Street continues the process of impertinent improvement and includes myriad minor adjustments and several more conspicuous amendments. The stroke junctions of M and N are further narrowed and their interior apexes modified. The middle apex of the W is narrowed and the glyph is a little more condensed. The C and S are drawn more open, terminals slightly shortened. The K-Type font adds a new lowercase which is also made more monolinear so better suited to signage, loosely based on Univers but also taking inspiration from the Transport typeface both in a taller x-height and character formation. The lowercase L has a curled foot, the k is double junctioned to match the uppercase, and terminals of a, c, e, g and s are drawn shorter for openness and clarity. A full repertoire of Latin Extended-A characters features low-rise diacritics that keep congestion to a minimum in multiple lines of text. The font tips the hat to signage history by including stylistic alternates for M, W and w that have the pointed middles of the earlier MOT street sign typeface. Incidentally, Alistair Hall (‘London Street Signs’, Batsford, 2020) notes that when the manufacturer of signs was changed in 2007, Helvetica Bold Condensed was substituted in place of the custom design, “an unfortunate case of an off-the-peg suit replacing a tailored one” and a blunder that has happily since been rectified, though offending nameplates can still be spotted by discerning font fans.
  34. Hobo by Linotype, $29.99
    Hobo font was designed in 1910 by Morris Fuller Benton for American Type Founders. This unusual Art Nouveau-inspired design contains no straight lines and no descenders. It imparts a friendliness to display work such as invitations, menus, signage, and packaging.
  35. TC Broadway by Monotype, $29.99
    Modeled after a 1928-1928 design by M.F. Benton -- Broadway --, TC Broadway is ideal for show posters and signs for restaurants and boutiques. The TC Broadway font has strong contrasting strokes, and as such is only suitable for short lines.
  36. LTC Broadway by Lanston Type Co., $24.95
    Originally designed by Morris Fuller Benton for ATF in 1927, Sol Hess added a lower case in 1929. Hess also drew Broadway Engraved in 1928 for Lanston Monotype. Broadway has become somewhat of a classic icon as an "Art Deco" typeface.
  37. Argentina Cursive NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Here's an elegant addition to Argentina NF, carefully crafted after the pattern provided by master type designer Morris Fuller Benton in 1919. Both versions of this font support the Latin 1252, Central European 1250, Turkish 1254 and Baltic 1257 codepages.
  38. Ah, Lelim 200, a typographic enigma birthed from the creative chambers of Stefan Motzigemba's mind! If fonts were people, Lelim 200 would be that effortlessly cool friend who knows all the best coffe...
  39. Babe-alicious - Personal use only
  40. Wolf's Bane - Unknown license
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