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  1. Panton by Fontfabric, $47.00
    NEW! Update 3.0 What’s New: • New Narrow version of 18 weights • Bulgarian Localization Support • Tabular Figures • Case-Sensitive Punctuation • Extended Glyph Case • Icon Sets PDF Specimen available: http://myfonts.us/suAc3K Panton has been expanded with Panton Narrow! It has 9 uprights and 9 matching italics ranging from Thin to Heavy. The Panton font family includes 54 fonts - 19 uprights with 19 matching italics and 16 icon sets as a bonus! It is characterized by excellent legibility in both web & print design areas, well-finished geometric designs, optimized kerning, excellent web-font performance and legibility etc. Inspired by the classic grotesque typefaces - Panton has his own unique style, expressed in perfectly softened geometric forms. The font family is most suitable for headlines of all sizes, as well as for text blocks that come in both maximum and minimum variations. Panton font styles are applicable for any type of graphic design in web, print, motion graphics etc and perfect for t-shirts and other items like posters and logos.
  2. Publica Play by FaceType, $-
    Publica Play is Publica Sans’ and Publica Slab’s playful sister. It comes with loads of subtle open type features, tabular options, rare currencies signs and symbols and arrows – ‘Publica Play’ has everything you need for playful design tasks. Take a close look at our gallery (especially ‘OpenType Features 1–7’) to discover the versatility of Publica Play. Alternates and Stylistic Sets Give your typography a certain spin with the variety of alternate letters provided. Explore the Stylistic Sets provided. Currency You need to set prices in exotic countries? No problem: Publica Play gives you loads of rare currency symbols. Case Sensitive Forms Sometimes you write in all caps and there are some symbols (e.g. brackets) that need some extra treatment to make it look perfect – that’s what case sensitive forms are for. Figures Publica Play provides 6 sets of figures, like lining, tabular, oldstyle, numerators ... Discretionary Ligatures Ligatures can make your logo or headline look spicy. So there are plenty of them.
  3. Eezyl by Partu Haodis, $25.00
    A title font that looks better as larger the font size. First of all, it is designed for use in the upper-case format. Feature style: futurism, space, modernism, glyph variety (uniqueness (minimum automatic generation)). A kind of „s‟ in the lower-case format sets the tone and emphasizes the character, formed in the Prime Numbers Nebula — they determined its appearance, and influenced the style as a whole. Particular attention is paid to the kern: the kern table is formed manually, taking into account absolutely all the glyphs included in the font-family. Two types of stress (grave, acute) for all letter glyphs. The font contains basic Latin and several additional tables, as well as three types of quotation marks, a non-breaking space and a hyphen, a short, medium, and long dash. For a set of mathematical expressions there are centrifugal signs: equal, minus (not a hyphen or minus-hyphen), plus, multiplication (X-shaped and dot), plus-minus, division. The font was made for 3 years.
  4. Spathe Pro by DBSV, $10.00
    About family “SpathePro” Spathe(Sword) the guy… There are many versions of the expression spathe, some of them are: A guy who says things by name we say is a sword, is correct in explaining a situation or an event. Sometimes we say again that a woman is beautiful and has a body like a sword!! It is one of the four versions of the pack of cards for example "ace sword". We also say of someone that he won a case with his sword (his sword), with transparency and knowledge of the case. It is also one of the oldest weapons used by humans in wars, sometimes used by the defendants to resolve their differences or for reasons of honor. While even today it is an Olympic game as fencing. This is a font as sharp as a swordfish… This series is composed and includes ten fonts with 630 glyphs each, with true italics, true Sloping and supports of course: Latin, Greek & Cyrillic.
  5. DragonFyre by Scholtz Fonts, $21.00
    Beware: Here be Dragons! It Be Dangeroues to Venture Yonder! This warning, inscribed on a rock at the entrance of a cave in an inaccessible mountain in the far north of Scotland, provided the inspiration for the font DragonFyre. While I have not seen the actual rock myself, I have based the font on an accurate drawing of the original inscription. DragonFyre speaks of lands beyond our ken, of wistful faerie kingdoms, of dark happenings and white magic. Use it at your peril, for its very use will conjure up worlds long forgotten, places of faeries, elves and hobgoblins, of ogres and giants. Those who read texts written in this font may well have their lives strangely changed. I have included a complete character set of 242 characters; upper and lower case; as well as all accented and special characters. All characters have been carefully letterspaced and kerned. For maximum dramatic impact I suggest you use combinations of both upper- and lower-case characters.
  6. Proper by Scholtz Fonts, $17.00
    Proper was based on handwritten characters (of my own) that I scanned and then digitally touched up. I kept the digital editing to a minimum so as to preserve the freshness of the original. I did, however, want to convey a sense of propriety and regularity and so my original handwriting was done with quite a lot of control. I kept the size of the lower case characters quite large and this makes the font very readable, even at quite small point sizes. Proper may be used when you need clean, legible text, with a natural look, e.g.: -- magazines aimed at the natural health market -- "natural look" fashion pages -- "natural look" decor pages -- natural food products -- natural beauty products -- children's books -- packaging for children's toys, games etc. -- educational material -- comics Proper contains a full character set with all upper and lower case characters, numerals, symbols, accented characters and it has been carefully spaced and kerned.
  7. Scan by Breauhare, $19.95
    Scan is literally a barcode font, made of actual barcodes, shaped in De Stijl style. It is a monospace, all-caps font with two different barcodes per letter. These offer the user a choice of a heavier look with the upper case and a lighter look with the lower case. Numbers and letters each have their own distinct barcodes. Also included are an alternate K and R. This font offers numerous ways to create artistic presentations with its unusual design. In certain contexts it has a foreboding look of impending doom, or a cool, cutting edge futuristic look, which lends itself to artwork for album covers, video games, movies, television, novels, and more. It can even have a whimsical look with the use of different colors for its individual bars. Some renderings reveal a ridged or textured look, even a 3D or three dimensional look. Scan gives the user a very high degree of creative potential! Digitized by John Bomparte.
  8. Beach Vibes by Din Studio, $29.00
    Wanna make your branding spark? Do you sometimes have an appetite for a bit more wholesome typography? Looking for a gorgeous and stylish font? If you need to create a big, bold logo for your business, work on a poster for an event, or whatever your project may be-then we've got what you want. Beach Vibes - A Display Brush Font Beach Vibes is an awesome font. A display font that is accompanied by a fabulous handcrafted script brush font that works together in perfect harmony. This font made all in uppercase that easy on the eyes and nice to look while it’s also easy to read Designed primarily as a captivating font to add the right amount of modernity and style, Great choice for your logo, book cover, poster, t-shirt, branding, and advertisement needs. Our font always includes Multilingual Support to make your branding reach a global audience. Features: Ligatures Alternates PUA Encoded Numerals and Punctuation Thank you for downloading premium fonts from Din Studio
  9. Primeform Pro by Punchform, $29.00
    The most versatile geometric font ever is here. With 421 alternative characters and 19 stylistic sets, you get unlimited power to take your creativity to the next level. The first typeface of its kind, Primeform Pro is meticulously designed to adapt its personality to any project. Primeform Pro is the smartest choice for any creative project. With a single click, you can change its typographic personality and adapt it to your desired style. Choose between 3 predefined styles or create your own style by combining the hundreds of alternate characters available. OpenType Features Access All Alternates (aalt) Stylistic Alternates (salt) 19 Stylistic Sets (ss01 – ss19) Localized Forms (locl) Case-Sensitive Forms (case) Standard Ligatures (liga) & Discretionary Ligatures (dlig) Slashed Zero (zero) Proportional Figures (pnum) Tabular Figures (tnum) Subscript (subs) & Superscript (sups) Numerators (numr) & Denominators (dnom) Fractions (frac) Ordinals (ordn) Glyph Composition/Decomposition (ccmp) Language Support 317 Latin Languages 2 Greek Languages 15 Cyrillic Languages Tech Specs Glyph Count: 1185 Format: OpenType CFF
  10. Sansduski Mono by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    SansduskiMono is a sans-serif decorative/display family that is monospaced. Its very high x-height and tight spacing make it more suitable for use at large point sizes than small point sizes. (There are better options if one wants a readable text font.) The letter O is a rectangle with rounded corners and this shape motif is carried over to other characters that are usually rounded. The origin of this face is in a previous typeface, BigStripesMono. That family was designed to use the OpenType feature Contextual Alternatives (calt) to put stripes on letters. It had only upper-case letters in one weight. SansduskiMono adds lower-case letters and eight more weights plus italics and outline styles for the black weights. For a proportional rather than monospaced version of this design idea, see Sansduski. SansduskiMono is appropriate for titles, posters, advertising, and other uses that benefit from simple letter forms that are geometric and clean.
  11. John Sans by Storm Type Foundry, $49.00
    The idea of a brand-new grotesk is certainly rather foolish – there are already lots of these typefaces in the world and, quite simply, nothing is more beautiful than the original Gill. The sans-serif chapter of typography is now closed by hundreds of technically perfect imitations of Syntax and Frutiger, which are, however, for the most part based on the cool din-aesthetics. The only chance, when looking for inspiration, is to go very far... A grotesk does not afford such a variety as a serif typeface, it is dull and can soon tire the eye. This is why books are not set in sans serif faces. A grotesk is, however, always welcome for expressing different degrees of emphasis, for headings, marginal notes, captions, registers, in short for any service accompaniment of a book, including its titlings. We also often come across a text in which we want to distinguish the individual speaking or writing persons by the use of different typefaces. The condition is that such grotesk should blend in perfectly with the proportions, colour and above all with the expression of the basic, serif typeface. In the area of non-fiction typography, what we appreciate in sans-serif typefaces is that they are clamorous in inscriptions and economic in the setting. John Sans is to be a modest servant and at the same time an original loudspeaker; it wishes to inhabit libraries of educated persons and to shout from billboards. A year ago we completed the transcription of the typefaces of John Baskerville, whose heritage still stands out vividly in our memory. Baskerville cleverly incorporated certain constructional elements in the design of the individual letters of his typeface. These elements include above all the alternation of softand sharp stroke endings. The frequency of these endings in the text and their rhythm produce a balanced impression. The anchoring of the letters on the surface varies and they do not look monotonous when they are read. We attempted to use these tricks also in the creation of a sans-serif typeface. Except that, if we wished to create a genuine “Baroque grotesk”, all the decorativeness of the original would have to be repeated, which would result in a parody. On the contrary, to achieve a mere contrast with the soft Baskerville it is sufficient to choose any other hard grotesk and not to take a great deal of time over designing a new one. Between these two extremes, we chose a path starting with the construction of an almost monolinear skeleton, to which the elements of Baskerville were carefully attached. After many tests of the text, however, some of the flourishes had to be removed again. Anything that is superfluous or ornamental is against the substance of a grotesk typeface. The monolinear character can be impinged upon in those places where any consistency would become a burden. The fine shading and softening is for the benefit of both legibility and aesthetics. The more marked incisions of all crotches are a characteristic feature of this typeface, especially in the bold designs. The colour of the Text, Medium and Bold designs is commensurate with their serif counterparts. The White and X-Black designs already exceed the framework of book graphics and are suitable for use in advertisements and magazines. The original concept of the italics copying faithfully Baskerville’s morphology turned out to be a blind alley. This design would restrict the independent use of the grotesk typeface. We, therefore, began to model the new italics only after the completion of the upright designs. The features which these new italics and Baskerville have in common are the angle of the slope and the softened sloped strokes of the lower case letters. There are also certain reminiscences in the details (K, k). More complicated are the signs & and @, in the case of which regard is paid to distinguishing, in the design, the upright, sloped @ small caps forms. The one-storey lower-case g and the absence of a descender in the lower-case f contributes to the open and simple expression of the design. Also the inclusion of non-aligning figures in the basic designs and of aligning figures in small caps serves the purpose of harmonization of the sans-serif families with the serif families. Non-aligning figures link up better with lower-case letters in the text. If John Sans looks like many other modern typefaces, it is just as well. It certainly is not to the detriment of a Latin typeface as a means of communication, if different typographers in different places of the world arrive in different ways at a similar result.
  12. Juvenis by Storm Type Foundry, $32.00
    Designs of characters that are almost forty years old can be already restored like a historical alphabet – by transferring them exactly into the computer with all their details. But, of course, it would not be Josef Tyfa, if he did not redesign the entire alphabet, and to such an extent that all that has remained from the original was practically the name. Tyfa published a sans-serif alphabet under the title Juvenis already in the second half of the past century. The type face had a large x-height of lower-case letters, a rather economizing design and one-sided serifs which were very daring for their time. In 1979 Tyfa returned to the idea of Juvenis, modified the letter “g” into a one-storey form, narrowed the design of the characters even further and added a bold and an inclined variant. This type face also shows the influence of Jaroslav Benda, evident in the open forms of the crotches of the diagonal strokes. Towards the end of 2001 the author presented a pile of tracing paper with dozens of variants of letter forms, but mainly with a new, more contemporary approach: the design is more open, the details softer, the figures and non-alphabetical characters in the entire set are more integral. The original intention to create a type face for printing children’s books thus became even more emphasized. Nevertheless, Juvenis with its new proportions far exceeds its original purpose. In the summer of 2002 we inserted all of this “into the machine” and designed new italics. The final computer form was completed in November 2002. All the twelve designs are divided into six variants of differing boldness with the corresponding italics. The darkness of the individual sizes does not increase linearly, but follows a curve which rises more steeply towards the boldest extreme. The human eye, on the contrary, perceives the darkening as a more fluent process, and the neighbouring designs are better graded. The x-height of lower-case letters is extraordinarily large, so that the printed type face in the size of nine points is perceived rather as “ten points” and at the same time the line spacing is not too dense. A further ingenious optical trick of Josef Tyfa is the figures, which are designed as moderately non-aligning ones. Thus an imaginary third horizontal is created in the proportional scheme of the entire type face family, which supports legibility and suitably supplements the original intention to create a children’s type face with elements of playfulness. The same applies to the overall soft expression of the alphabet. The serifs are varied; their balancing, however, is well-considered: the ascender of the lower-case “d” has no serif and the letter appears poor, while, for example, the letter “y”, or “x”, looks complicated. The only serif to be found in upper-case letters is in “J”, where it is used exclusively for the purpose of balancing the rounded descender. These anomalies, however, fit perfectly into the structure of any smoothly running text and shift Juvenis towards an original, contemporary expression. Tyfa also offers three alternative lower-case letters *. In the case of the letter “g” the designer follows the one-storey form he had contemplated in the eighties, while in “k” he returns to the Benda inspiration and in “u” adds a lower serif as a reminder of the calligraphic principle. It is above all the italics that are faithful to the tradition of handwritten lettering. The fairly complicated “k” is probably the strongest characteristic feature of Juvenis; all the diagonals in “z”, “v”, “w”, “y” are slightly flamboyant, and this also applies to the upper-case letters A, V, W, Y. Juvenis blends excellently with drawn illustrations, for it itself is modelled in a very creative way. Due to its unmistakable optical effect, however, it will find application not only in children’s literature, but also in orientation systems, on posters, in magazines and long short-stories.
  13. Pykes Peak by Sentinel Type, $30.00
    Pyke's Peak is a spirit type descended from Paeleoflex: The Angel of the Odd. Wraith-like forms mix Roman inscriptional letters with an ar'deco theme for an ethereal graphic art effect. Suitable for magazines and editorial design, book jackets & interiors, posters & broadsides, art & craft objects and other things needing a touch of the extraordinary. Over 500 extra characters give Pyke's Peak unusual range and ability. Mirror capitals, phantom forms, dot phantoms, "superposed" (overlapping) ligatures, capitalized ligatures and fitted pairs for hours of trippy rub-down arcadian magic. Includes hanging numerals, lining numerals, full punctuation, standard math & monetary symbols. Accented characters for Latin 1 and Latin 2 cover the following languages: Albanian, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Icelandic, Italian, Norwegian, Spanish and Swedish. Available in OpenType format only. Pykes Peak comes in two versions: (1) Pyke's Peak the full-blown OpenType version with over 500 extra characters, (2) Pyke's Peak Zero, the zero cost version with full Latin 1 & 2 character set but no extra characters. Pyke's Peak Zero is free to download, is licensed for commercial and personal (non-profit) use, and may be embedded on webpages using the CSS @font-face property. This typeface is dedicated to Australian musician James "Jock" Paull, who is a free spirit.
  14. HG Soei Kakupoptai by RICOH, $199.00
    HG創英角ポップ体は、水本恵子氏がデザインした「創英ポップ体1」を字母とする書体です。店頭広告用文字のスタイルを模して作られた書体で、楽しく、軽快な書体です。極太角ゴシックのイメージをベースに作られていますが、それをやや崩し、柔らかさも取り入れ、フリーハンドで書いたイメージを残しています。見やすくするため、ふところは可能な限り大きくなっています。店頭のPOP、チラシ、看板などに最適の書体です。 HG Soei Kakupoptai is a typeface with a "fresh pop" designed by Mr. Mizumoto Keiko. It is a typeface made by mimicing the style of letters for party-style, fun and light typefaces. It is made on the basis of the image of thickSoei Kakugothic, but it breaks it open, and incorporates softness, leaving the font looking freehand. To make it easy to see, the boldness has become as thick as possible. It is a typeface best suited for store-front fun, leaflets, signboards and so on.
  15. Lancelot Pro by Canada Type, $39.95
    When type historians look back on Jim Rimmer, they will consider him the last type designer who just couldn't let go of metal type, even though he was just as proficient in digital type. Lancelot is one definite case in point: A face designed and produced in digital as late in the game as 1999, only to spring onto the new millenium a couple of years later as a metal type cast in three sizes. That was Jim, a time traveler constantly reminding the craft of its origins. This particular time machine was originally designed as a simple set of attractive caps that emphasize the beauty of the variable conventional dialogue between the drawing tool and the intended final form, and the one exchanged within the totality of the forms themselves. Jim designed two weights, with contrast and counterspace being the main difference between them. In 2013, the Lancelot family was remastered and greatly expanded. Lancelot Pro is now a wonder of over 840 glyphs per font, including smaller versions of the caps in the minuscule slots, and alternates and ligatures that can transform the historic spirit of the original design into anything from half-uncial to outright gothic. Language support goes beyond the extended Latin stuff, to cover Cyrillic and Greek as well. 20% of the Lancelot Pro family's revenues will be donated to the Canada Type Scholarship Fund, supporting higher typography education in Canada.
  16. Fushar Arabic by Mikołaj Grabowski, $19.00
    Fushar Arabic is a bold comic color font family which comes in 5 layer-styles easy to compose in a multicolor manner and 3 OpenType-SVG color styles to make the work faster and easier. Character set covers Latin A-Z all caps, Arabic, Persian and Urdu with 230 ligatures, European, Arabic and Persian / Urdu localized digits, punctuation, currencies and other symbols - the total of 729 glyphs. The idea came from a custom logotype I made several years ago for a local charity organisation that helps children. The logotype was based on bold letters with light that make the "balloon" effect visible in "Holes" style. Later I expanded the family with "Cuts" and all the derivative fonts that make the whole color family. The purpose was to create a funny, friendly and playful script that would embrace the beauty of the Arabic alphabet. Solid, Cuts and Holes are classic one-color styles which can be used separately to compose a simple text. With Shadows and Lights they can produce a multicolour design, as shown on the images above. To save the time, there are three already prepared combinations in the new OpenType-SVG color format. The features include required ligatures, discretionary ligatures, proper mark attachment, contextual alternates, case-sensitive forms, ordinals, localised Persian/Urdu numerals, superscript (1, 2, 3) & fractions. Now you can buy Extended Latin character set (uppercase and lowercase) at Fushar font family page on MyFonts. European languages, Vietnamese and Pinyin included.
  17. Pinel Pro by URW Type Foundry, $39.99
    The characteristic ‘French face’ was originally made in 1899 under the supervision of Joseph Pinel. Thus, what was originally French 10 pt. Nº 2, got its present name. The Frenchman Joseph Pinel called himself a "typographical engineer", but was at the time employed as a type draughtsman at the Linotype Works in Altrincham. It appears that this and some other faces that he supervised, were, except for use on the Linotype, also meant for manufacturing matrices for the Dyotype. This composing machine was an invention of Pinel. The Dyotype was a rather complicated machine and consisted, like the Monotype, of two separate contraptions, a keyboard which produced a perforated paper ribbon and a casting machine which produced justified lines of movable type. Unlike the Monotype which has a square matrix carrier, the Dyotype had the matrices on a drum (in fact two drums, hence the name of the machine). A Pinel Diotype company was founded in Paris and a machine was built with the help of the printing press manufacturer Jules Derriey. As is often the case, a lack of sufficient capital prevented the commercializing of this ingenious composing machine. Coen Hofmann digitized the font from a batch of very incomplete, damaged and musty drawings, which he dug up in Altrincham. He redrew all characters, bringing up the hairstrokes somewhat in the process. The result is a roman and italic, while the roman font also includes Small Caps
  18. Drummon 3D by GemFonts | Graham Meade stands out in the bustling city of typography like a neon sign at a Las Vegas casino, beckoning the eyes of passersby with its undeniably bold and three-dimensio...
  19. Solpera by Storm Type Foundry, $32.00
    This type face fills one of the gaps between the world of Roman alphabets and that of linear alphabets. The first to be designed was the set of upper-case letters. The expression of these characters cannot conceal that they were originally intended only for the sculptor's use, as a type face for three-dimensional inscriptions. Their width proportions reflect a dialogue between the contemporary feeling and the legacy of classical Roman inscriptions. The type face was later complemented with a set of lower-case letters and elaborated into further designs. Its clear, concise letter forms end with small serifs which not only make the type face more refined, but above all anchor the individual letter signs visually to the horizontal of the text line. The austere construction of the majority of the letters is balanced by the more exuberant, humanizing forms of the most frequently used letters "a"; "e". (The three variants of the lower-case "e" enable to create rhythmically differentiated texts.) The letters in which a straight stroke is connected with an arch are designed in two ways. That means that the letters "n", "h","m" and the group of letters "b","d","p","q" are conceived in a different way. Thus an interesting tension is created in the structure of the text, which, however, does not endanger legibility. The economizing, slightly narrowed design of this type face predetermines its use for the setting of usual texts. In larger sizes, however, it produces a rather serious, even solemn, impression.
  20. Pinky Love by Soft Creative, $15.00
    Allow me to introduce Pinky Love Font. A carefully crafted collection of fonts combining informal, romantic, sweet, lovely design elements and hand-drawn typographic design elements. Pinky Love Font has many alternative characters, including multiple language support. You can use this font for your work very easily. Because there are many features in it. Contains a full set of upper and lower case letters, punctuation marks, numbers, and multilingual support.
  21. Assegai by Scholtz Fonts, $19.00
    Named for the Zulu traditional spear, Assegai evokes the long, slim outline of the weapon, and the strength of the Zulu warrior. The font combines the irregular shapes of tribal African art with the simple, clean elegance of contemporary design. It is especially useful for headings, subheading, for shorter passages and also works as a body font since it has both upper and lower case and is striking and readable.
  22. Obcecada Sans & Serif by deFharo, $15.00
    Obcecada Sans & Serif are two geometric digital typefaces in regular and bold versions, very condensed and thin with a rounded finish on the horns and joints with a modern style. They include the Cyrillic and Greek alphabet. These fonts are the result of my obstinacy for very condensed fonts, in this case I have inclined to a very fine proportion with short ascending and descending that gives them elegance decó.
  23. Cursivo Saxonio by Intellecta Design, $21.90
    Cursivo Saxonio is a typeface inspired in the famous book The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, by H P Lovecraft. It shows better than I get with my studies the authentic "Insularis" or "Cursivo Saxonio" handlettering of the VIII and XI centuries used by some people in Britain. The text on the accompanying poster reads: “Corwinus necandus est. Cadaver aq(ua) forti dissolvendum, nec aliq(ui)d retinendum. Tace ut potes”
  24. Brazza by Scholtz Fonts, $17.00
    Brazza is a a font that fuses the look of handwriting, brush and comic script. It is loose, very versatile and informal, yet it is very readable. Suggestions for use: - music video marketing - greeting cards - valentines day media - comic books - captions The font is fully professional: carefully letterspaced and kerned. It contains over 235 characters - (upper and lower case characters, punctuation, numerals, symbols and accented characters are present).
  25. The Rouged by Letterhend, $19.00
    The Rouged is a display script. This typeface has bold monoline which make it looks stand out, and the unique swashes make you easy to create a nice logotype or cool lettering. This font perfectly made to be applied especially in logo, and the other various formal forms such as invitations, labels, logos, magazines, books, greeting / wedding cards, packaging, fashion, make up, stationery, novels, labels or any type of advertising purpose.
  26. FF Nelio by FontFont, $41.99
    Finnish type designer Sami Kortemäki created this display and script FontFont in 2001. The family has 7 weights, ranging from Light to Regular and is ideally suited for festive occasions, film and tv, music and nightlife, poster and billboards as well as software and gaming. FF Nelio provides advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, alternate characters, case-sensitive forms, and stylistic alternates. It comes with proportional oldstyle figures.
  27. Mister Mustard by AdultHumanMale, $12.00
    MisterMustard is a chubby art deco style font, not thin or elegant, but plump and jolly. The font is available in two styles regular and italic. While it was designed to be playful, this font has both an uppercase and a lower case, so it works for practically everything (maybe not a headstone or obituary). It’s loaded with extra foreign glyphs so it gives you plenty of options. Buy. Install. Enjoy.
  28. Porker by Ingrimayne Type, $6.95
    Porker was an experiment in making a barely readable but very simple and very bold typeface with no curves. It is caps only with some of the letters on the lower-case keys giving alternate versions. Include are three variants, a tall version, a striped version, and a randomized version. The striped version can be placed in a layer above the regular version to give two-colored letters.
  29. Kesto by Valentino Vergan, $16.00
    Kesto is an elegant Art Nouveau style typeface. The idea for the Kesto came from the early Nouveau type designs. Kesto is designed with creative letters, which makes it perfect for creating nostalgic and retro designs such as: posters, magazines, logos and much more. Kesto also has a variable version, which makes it easy to manually adjust the weight and slant. I hope you enjoy using the Kesto typeface.
  30. Dahlia Darling by Sulthan Studio, $12.00
    This beautiful handwritten font we made very attractive with a natural touch we worked back to clean smudges and into smooth lettering it's easy when you cut as well as print stickers and other cool work you're working on this font has 3 front swashes and 3 back swashes for lowercase and one alternative for uppercase, 98 ligature Fonts include uppercase and lowercase letters, punctuation numbers, and language support
  31. Delvona by Great Studio, $19.00
    Delvona is a contemporary serif typeface, retro styled with a strong personality and a soft look. And also its high contrast and very simple and easily recognizable shape make it very easy to read. Delvona was inspired by the serif typography used in editorial headlines in the 80s. Delvona excels in display settings such as headlines, titles, branding projects, Logo design, packaging, magazine titles, advertisements, short or long text.
  32. Donatella by Arendxstudio, $18.00
    Donatella - Handwritten Fonts are elegant handwritten fonts, with texture, to be as authentic as possible while still being able to read clearly on your project. Donatella is a truly versatile font - combining sophisticated, casual and even fun sides depending on the style you use. A complete set of upper and lower case letters, and a second set of lowercase letters, Donatella - Handwritten Font also has 37 Ligatures for question just email.
  33. Novaletra Serif CF by Connary Fagen, $35.00
    Legibility. Flexibility. Personality. No need to pick two; Novaletra Serif CF has it all. Liven up body text, captions, and headlines with Novaletra’s smooth, low-contrast design set across seven weights with italics. Versatile and easy to read at any size, Novaletra includes useful features like wide language support across Latin and Cyrillic scripts, international currency symbols, fractions, tabular numbers, and more. Includes lifetime updates, technical support and feature additions.
  34. JetJaneMono by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    JetJaneMono is a large family of sans-serif faces which are monospaced. It is very plain (plain=plane=jet). The font family has two widths and three weights, with each upright style paired with an italics style. These twelve fonts are then duplicated with another set in which small caps replace the lower-case letters. The typeface was created in 1994 and in 2021 the condensed widths were added.
  35. Rogshine by madjack.font, $7.00
    Rogshine is a textured brush font, a contemporary approach to design, naturally handmade with irregular base lines. Suitable for use in title design like clothing, invitations, book titles, stationery designs, quotes, branding, logos, greeting cards, t-shirts, packaging designs, posters, and more. Rogshine includes a complete set of upper and lower case letters, as well as multi-language support, numbers, punctuation, binders. Thank you very much for watching and enjoying it!
  36. Hamis Pro by Fo Da, $9.00
    Hamis Pro is a display font of 12 weights: Regular, Shadow, Solid, Book, Book Shadow, Book Solid & Italics. Hamis Pro is an advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, case-sensitive forms, fractions, super and subscript characters, and stylistic alternates. It's ideally suited for advertising and packaging, festive occasions, editorial and publishing, logo, branding and creative industries, posters and billboards as well as web and screen design.
  37. Bandbox by Sean Thorenson, $22.00
    Inspired by classic sport logo lock-ups, Bandbox delivers with its heavy, streaming cursive letterforms. Bandbox's wide, gently-sloped script comes bundled with a collection of ligatures and 18 athletic swash banners, perfect for logotype, posters and t-shirt designs. Here's what's included in the single-weight typeface Bandbox: Upper (A-Z) and lower case (a-z) characters Numbers (0-9) Standard punctuation and glyphs Alternates, Ligatures and Swashes Multilingual support
  38. Justin Gelisa by Crowntype Studio, $14.00
    Justin Gelisa is a modern Calligraphy font created in an elegant and professional style with alternate characters. perfect font for creating signature logos and watermarks for photography studios or personal photography logos, best for initial logos or brand signatures. Justin Gelisa includes a full set of beautiful handwritten upper and lower case letters, numbers, assorted punctuation marks. All lowercase letters include starting and ending strokes, providing a realistic handwriting style.
  39. De Sandey by Rochart, $10.00
    De Sandey is a hand brushed font, with natural authentic brush, and also provided some alternate, ligatures and Swashes Extra. Brand new stylish textured fonts and Make it easy for made logotype Handlettering Style. It will be great for Logotypes, Posters, Digital Lettering Arts, Clean Design, Branding Design, Sign, Merchandise and Social Media Posts. This font contain of Uppercase, Lowercase, Number, Symbol, Punctuation, also support multilingual and already PUA encoded.
  40. Chalk and Friend by Alit Design, $12.00
    Introducing Chalk and Friend Typeface Chalk and Friend Typeface is a font inspired by writing on a blackboard. This font is very cool and can be mixed and matched with any ornament you like. Chalk and Friend has 4 unique and expressive font families, very easy to use and combine according to your wishes. Chalk and Friend Typeface is suitable for blackboard menu design, book menus, sign boards and so on.
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