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  1. Phoenix - Unknown license
  2. Headhunter - Unknown license
  3. Advert - Unknown license
  4. Art ttnorm - Unknown license
  5. Vassar - Unknown license
  6. Cinema - Unknown license
  7. Ikarus - Unknown license
  8. After ttnorm - Unknown license
  9. Logger - Unknown license
  10. Barney ttnorm - Unknown license
  11. Molecule model - Unknown license
  12. Bolide - Unknown license
  13. Butsubutsu - Unknown license
  14. EmPower42 - Unknown license
  15. Oldchristmas - Unknown license
  16. Wedgie - Unknown license
  17. Caseta Sans by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    Caseta Sans (Regular and Bold with Italics) completing a family of 3 font families with Caseta Regular and Caseta Slab.
  18. Caseta Slab by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    Caseta Slab (Regular and Bold with Italics) completing a family of 3 font families with Caseta Regular and Caseta Sans.
  19. Caseta by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    Caseta Regular (Regular and Bold with Italics) completing a family of 3 font families with Caseta Slab and Caseta Sans .
  20. Drum Komputer - 100% free
  21. Sabon Paneuropean by Linotype, $45.99
    Jan Tschichold designed Sabon in 1964, and it was produced jointly by three foundries: D. Stempel AG, Linotype and Monotype. This was in response to a request from German master printers to make a font family that was the same design for the three metal type technologies of the time: foundry type for hand composition, linecasting, and single-type machine composition. Tschichold turned to the sixteenth century for inspiration, and the story has a complicated family thread that connects his Sabon design to the Garamond lineage. Jakob Sabon, who the type is named for, was a student of the great French punchcutter Claude Garamond. He completed a set of his teacher's punches after Garamond's death in 1561. Sabon became owner of a German foundry when he married the granddaughter of the Frankfurt printer, Christian Egenolff. Sabon died in 1580, and his widow married Konrad Berner, who took over the foundry. Tschichold loosely based his design on types from the 1592 specimen sheet issued by the Egenolff-Berner foundry: a 14-point roman attributed to Claude Garamond, and an italic attributed to Robert Granjon. Sabon was the typeface name chosen for this twentieth century revival and joint venture in production; this name avoided confusion with other fonts connected with the names of Garamond and Granjon. Classic, elegant, and extremely legible, Sabon is one of the most beautiful Garamond variations. Always a good choice for book typography, the Sabon family is also particularly good for text and headlines in magazines, advertisements, documentation, business reports, corporate design, multimedia, and correspondence. Sabon combines well with: Sans serif fonts such as Frutiger, Syntax. Slab serif fonts such as PMN Caecilia, Clairvaux. Fun fonts such as Grafilone, Animalia, Araby Rafique. See also the new revised version Sabon Next from the Platinum Collection."
  22. Calico Cyrillic - Unknown license
  23. CF Anarchy - Personal use only
  24. VTC ScreamItLoud - Unknown license
  25. VTC Lo-Down - Unknown license
  26. VTCBadWhipit - Unknown license
  27. VTCBadHangover - Unknown license
  28. VTCBadPlating - Unknown license
  29. VTCBadDrip - Unknown license
  30. VTC Boseephus - Unknown license
  31. VTC Seeindubbledointriple - Unknown license
  32. VTCBadLuck - Unknown license
  33. LazyMeow - Personal use only
  34. SteveHandwriting - Unknown license
  35. Casino - Unknown license
  36. Knockout - Unknown license
  37. CoolHandLuke ttext - Unknown license
  38. ZirkleOne - Unknown license
  39. Wave - Unknown license
  40. Mama - Unknown license
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