10,000 search results (0.078 seconds)
  1. Type Knight - Unknown license
  2. Orange Fizz - Personal use only
  3. Drew - Unknown license
  4. Android Nation - Personal use only
  5. Licenz Plate - Unknown license
  6. Damn Noisy Kids - Personal use only
  7. DarkArts BB - Personal use only
  8. Zoomgroove - Unknown license
  9. Yataghan - 100% free
  10. TrickTag - Unknown license
  11. Ruinik - Unknown license
  12. Kahless Shadow - Unknown license
  13. Spylord Bold Italic - Unknown license
  14. Kahless Pro - Personal use only
  15. Abecedarian - Unknown license
  16. Updike - Unknown license
  17. Desastra-Bold - Unknown license
  18. Data Transfer - Unknown license
  19. Basca - Unknown license
  20. Lefferts Corners - Unknown license
  21. Ventouse - Unknown license
  22. Spylord Expanded Italic - Unknown license
  23. Smoke-ScreenObl - Unknown license
  24. Goudiad - Unknown license
  25. Smoke-Rasterized - Unknown license
  26. Spylord Laser Italic - Unknown license
  27. DigitalStrip - Personal use only
  28. Arcanum - Personal use only
  29. Treasure Island - Unknown license
  30. Ravaged By Years BRK - Unknown license
  31. D3 Snowboardism - Unknown license
  32. regata - Unknown license
  33. Embossing Tape 2 BRK - Unknown license
  34. MTV2C - Unknown license
  35. Gentleman Caller - Unknown license
  36. Machia by Dharma Type, $19.99
    Handwriting script with more than enough ink. Rising Stars of My Fonts on September 2006.
  37. Conrad by Linotype, $29.00
    The award-winning Conrad was created by Japanese type designer Akira Kobayashi. Its design was based on the fifteenth-century type by Conrad Sweynheym and Arnold Pannartz, two German printers active in Rome at that time. They produced a unique, slightly unbalanced yet attractive type. Kobayashi says of his typeface, “I have designed a couple of typefaces inspired from the past, but this time the original print acted merely as a reference. The distinctive lowercase ‘a’ and some other letters were inspired by Sweynheym and Pannartz’s second roman type, but I revived the type in a more informal way. Here I used the historical type as a springboard. The resulting type looks different, taking on a rather temporary and lively look. I assume that the Conrad is the first revival of the Sweynheym and Pannartz type, though it does not closely resemble the original.” Conrad won first prize for the text typeface category in Linotype’s Third International Typeface Design Contest (2000) as well as the Certificate of Excellence in Type Design from the Type Directors Club (2001).
  38. Trump Soft Pro by Canada Type, $39.95
    Trump Soft Pro is the softer, round-cornered version of Trump Gothic Pro, the popular condensed gothic seen on films, magazines, book covers and frashion brands all over the globe. Trump Soft offers a friendlier grade of the same economic functionality, clear modular aesthetic and extended character sets as Trump Gothic. The sharper Trump Grothic series is a reconception of ideas from Georg Trump’s seminal 1955 Signum typeface and its later reworking (Kamene) by Czech designer Stanislav Marso. Originally cobbled together for a variety of film projects in the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Trump Gothic family was made available for the general public in 2005. Shortly thereafter, it became extremely popular. It continues to be used extensively today. In 2013, the typeface was redrawn, refitted, optimized and greatly expanded into a multiscript family of six fonts, each containing over 1020 glyphs and a wealth of OpenType features, including small caps, caps-to-small-caps, stylistic alternates, unicase/monocase alternates, fractions, ordinals, class-based kerning, and support for Latin, Cyrillic and Greek locales.
  39. Dynatype by Alphabet Soup, $60.00
    Suddenly...it’s the World of Tomorrow! With the push of a button Dynatype automates your typesetting experience. Dynatype is actually Two fonts in One–without switching fonts you can instantly change from Dynatype’s “regular” style to its alternate connecting version with the simple push of a button. For more details download “The Dynatype Manual” from the Gallery Section. What is Dynatype? Dynatype is the upright, slightly more formal cousin of Dynascript. It shares many of the characteristics of it’s slightly older relation, but is drawn entirely from scratch and has it’s own unique character. Dynatype may be reminiscent of various mid-century neon signage, and of sign writing, Speedball alphabets and even baseball scripts. Its design also takes some cues from a historical typographic curiosity that began in Germany in the ‘20s and which lasted into the ‘60s—when Photo-Lettering gave it the name "Zip-Top". Basically it was believed to be the wave of the future—that by weighting an alphabet heavier in its top half, one could increase legibility and reading speed. The jury’s still out on whether or not there’s any validity to this notion, but I think you’ll agree that in the context of this design, the heavier weighting at the top of the letters helps to create some uniquely pleasing forms, and a font unlike any other. Typesetters across the planet will also be able to set copy in their language of choice. Dynatype’s 677 glyphs can be used to set copy in: Albanian, Basque, Catalan, Cornish, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Estonian, Faroese, Finnish, French, Galician, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Kalaallisut, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Maltese, Manx, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, Oromo, Polish, Portuguese, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Turkish, and Welsh—and of course English. Sorry! Off-world languages not yet supported. PLEASE NOTE: When setting Dynatype one should ALWAYS select the “Standard Ligatures” and “Contextual Alternates” buttons in your OpenType palette. See the “Read Me First!” file in the Gallery section.
  40. Mostly Ghostly - 100% free
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing