1,045 search results (0.008 seconds)
  1. Midnight Chalker by Hanoded, $15.00
    Midnight Chalker is, well, a chalk(ish) font and it was (fro the greater part) created around the midnight hour. That’s usually when I get my inspiration. Midnight Chalker is a tall, eroded font - all caps, but the upper and lower case differ and can be mixed. Of course it comes with more diacritics than you can throw a chalkboard at.
  2. Skinny Pencil by Mvmet, $16.00
    Skinny Pencil is a skinny handwritten font with pencil or chalk texture that you can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts, book designs, packaging, and greeting cards to stickers and posters, or anything that needs a casual touch, it will be your perfect font to pick. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style, and use it to create lovely designs!
  3. Zuben - Personal use only
  4. Mesh Stitch - Personal use only
  5. Pixel - Personal use only
  6. Glitten by ryan creative, $10.00
    Glitten is a rough, chalk-textured typeface. With hand-drawn strokes and broken lines that make this font look like chalk. Get every stroke real and realistic, with glyphs and open type features with styles and straps, ornaments, and alternative additions. It can be used for various purposes. such as, greeting cards, t-shirt designs, product designs, etc. Glitten is supported with additional characters that have Alternate and Ornament forms, which will help you achieve a realistic style with your own creations. FEATURES; -Support Foreign, Numbers and Punctuation -Alternative, Ornament -Works on PC -Simple installation -Accessible in Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop. Adobe InDesign, even works in Microsoft Word -Fully accessible without additional design software. Glitten is encoded with Unicode PUA, which allows full access to all additional characters without having to design special software. Mac users can use the Font book, and Windows users can use the Character map to view and copy any extra characters to paste into your favorite text editor/app.
  7. Coo Coo by chicken, $23.00
    So I made five rather odd characters for a logo for a friend… Then I thought I'd fill a couple of spare hours expanding it to a single alphabet… And some considerable time later I ended up with a whole font with full punctuation, a bunch of alternates, pretty broad international support and some OpenType features to keep things varied… There are elements of Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Lego, circuit boards and Ceefax, Memphis lamps and lab clamps, hieroglyphs, googly eyes and who knows what else… Intricate, insane, highly irregular, but somehow it hangs together… Throw down a few letters nice and big when the fancy takes you…
  8. PIXymbols Chess by Page Studio Graphics, $29.00
    Attractive chess and checkerpieces, as well as board components, in a font. Generate boards with light, bold or no border, or a border with rank and file identifiers.
  9. CrawfishPopsicle - Unknown license
  10. STROKIN by AdultHumanMale, $15.00
    STROKIN is an inky, messy, Omnicase display font. It’s part charcoal part paint strokes, reversed in lighter tones it looks like chalk, add a splash a red and it starts to look like blood. It has over 250 glyphs including all those extra pesky foreign features. OpenType coded, It has various letter pairings that interlock automatically to create a more randomized, bespoke feel to your copy. Hope you like it.
  11. Chakie by Garisman Studio, $20.00
    Just call me CHAKIE. I'm born from the old natural brush chalk look from the 60's and 70's. Use meto create very bold and strong design! Great for posters, t-shirt designs, branding, packaging, labels, and more. Bring back me to the 60's brother! :D And why you must grab me? - Simple installation - Support for 23 languages (WOW!) - Compatible with MAC or PC - PUA encoded - Lots of fun!
  12. Wallet by Fontforecast, $19.00
    Wallet is an expressive handwritten font with loads of personality, suitable for many different projects. It comes in three styles: Felt, Felt bold and Chalk. Wallet has 391 glyphs and supports multiple languages. Opentype features, such as contextual alternates, for replacing beginning and ending glyphs as you type and double letter ligatures are also included. To make full use of its potential Wallet requires an opentype-savvy application.
  13. Snippletweak - Unknown license
  14. Chippewa Falls by Chank, $49.00
    In the spirit of the old days, before water sparkled and before typefaces were known as fonts, Chank is proud to introduce Chippewa Falls the font. This font comes with fancy swirly uppercase letters and stout small caps for lowercase, as well as a heart-warming story. Chank rescued this former custom font from an abandoned design proposal. He gave it some TLC and before long a retro typeface emerged, with lettering worthy of good old fashioned sleigh rides and candy canes. Enjoy this font as you would a cup of hot cocoa next to a potbelly stove on a snowy day.
  15. FS Shepton by Fontsmith, $80.00
    Handy Andy Andy Lethbridge had only just completed his graphic design BA at the University of Portsmouth when he was spotted by Jason, who’d seen Andy’s exquisite hand lettering at his degree show and on Instagram. Keen to push the handwritten theme further, having recently launched a digitally-created, chalky script font (FS Sammy), Jason offered Andy a job and the chance to develop a suite of more stylised, truly hand-drawn fonts. Andy duly got out his pads, pencils and pens, and started experimenting with styles and textures. Magic followed. Imperfection perfected Most ‘handwritten’ typefaces are created entirely digitally. Not FS Shepton. From the start, the intention was to create a collection of alphabets of similar character but different texture and style – 100% hand-drawn and purposely imperfect, with the kind of inconsistent, organic shapes and textures of market stall signs, dashed off in chalk or paint. FS Shepton Regular, drawn with a wet brush pen, is solid with a rough outer edge and a casual but controlled feel. The dry brush used to create FS Shepton Light gives it more inner texture and a more formal, slanted, calligraphic style. FS Shepton Bold, drawn using a wider, looser dry brush pen, has a woody grain in the middle of its broad strokes and greater solidity where the brush moves more slowly. Fresh as a daisy Think of FS Shepton not as a family of three weights of the same font so much as a collection of three fonts penned by the same author. All of them – the light, regular and bold – were created independently as display fonts that offer something different to labelling, packaging, point-of-sale and advertising. Lovingly crafted by hand, they’re a good match for products and settings that share the same artisinal qualities: organic foods, drinks and healthcare products, as well as premium chocolate, coffee and condiments.
  16. spanky 20 second version - Unknown license
  17. Sydney by Aboutype, $24.99
    Broad pen script typeface from 1930s magazine advertising.
  18. Occidental Tourist JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Occidental Tourist JNL is based on a set of die-cut cardboard letters used by teachers. They were primarily found on classroom bulletin boards or felt boards. The font's name is a pun on the movie The Accidental Tourist.
  19. Rooky Hand - Personal use only
  20. Mantisboy by Chank, $49.00
    Screeech! Ack! Ack! Mantisboy was created by Chank Diesel in 1995 as a custom font for the Cartoon Network's Space Ghost Coast to Coast web site. This font represents the printed voice of the talk show's bandleader, an evil alien mantis.
  21. Merrimac by Aboutype, $24.99
    Broad pen script typeface from 1930s and 40s; magazine advertising.
  22. Charles by Aboutype, $24.99
    Broad pen script typeface from 1930s and 40s; magazine advertising.
  23. Float by Aboutype, $24.99
    Broad pen script typeface based on late 1960s Turkish signage.
  24. Willem by Aboutype, $24.99
    Broad pen script typeface from 1930s and 40s; magazine advertising.
  25. Salonika by Aboutype, $24.99
    Broad pen script typeface based on late 1960s Turkish signage.
  26. Bloc - Personal use only
  27. Troubadour Pro by RMU, $35.00
    A script font of broad nib style, both plain and engraved.
  28. Quill by Monotype, $29.99
    The Quill font is based on classic Renaissance broad-pen calligraphy.
  29. Lavaman by Chank, $49.00
    Lavaman was created by Chank Diesel in 1995 as a custom font for the Cartoon Network's Space Ghost Coast to Coast web site. This font represents the printed voice of the talk show's surly backstage engineer, who is a man made of molten lava.
  30. Basecoat by Jonathan Ball, $19.00
    Basecoat is a handcrafted, geometric sans serif inspired by sign painting and influenced by modern gothics. It has a subtle organic feel without sacrificing legibility. The design of the uppercase began with chalk marker lettering for a side project and eventually grew into a small type family. Basecoat comes in three weights and includes more than 500 glyphs with European language support. It has popular OpenType features plus catchwords in multiple languages and arrows for all your sign making needs.
  31. NorB Note by NorFonts, $28.00
    NorB Note is a handwritten text font with an angled fat marker lettering style. You can use this font with any word processing program for text and display use, print and web projects, apps and ePub, comic books, graphic identities, branding, editorial, advertising, scrapbooking, cards and invitations and any casual lettering purpose… or even just for fun! NorB Note comes with 3 weights, each with their matching Italics, Oblique and in a Light, Normal and Condensed version. (a Chalk version is also featured!)
  32. Brand by Lián Types, $37.00
    Jam jars; Warhol’s “Tomato Soup”; chalk lettering and baseball. Those were the triggers to make this soft chancery cursive turned into a script font. Brand is thought mainly for packaging but can be used in magazines and invitations also. It can be easily converted into a logo when using it and its features. Pro styles are loaded with the most complete sets of alternates, ligatures and ornaments; while Std styles are smaller versions of the font, with no decorative alternates.
  33. Today Sans Now by Elsner+Flake, $59.00
    With the publication of the “Today Sans Now” Elsner+Flake extends its offering of the “Today Sans Serif” type family, developed in 1988 by Volker Küster for Scangraphic, by another cut so that the gradation of the stroke width can now be more finely calibrated. The type complement is available for 72 Latin-based languages as well as Cyrillic. Where available, small caps were integrated, and mathematical symbols as well as fractions were included. In order to make the symbols for text applications in regard to headlines more flexible, the insertions which were formerly added, for technical reasons in order to sharpen the corners, were eliminated, and the optical size adjustments of the vertical and diagonal stem endings (I, v, H, V) to the horizontal bars (z, Z) were scaled back. Already since the end of 1984, Volker Küster experimented with broad sticks of chalk and a broad felt pen in order to develop a new sans serif typeface which, in the interest of easy legibility, would be built on the basic structures and proportions of the Renaissance-Antiqua. Using a normal angle of writing, his experiments lead to the form structure of the characters: a small contrast between bold and light weights, serif-like beginning and end strokes in some of the lower-case characters, and the typical, left-leaning slant of all round lower-case letters and the typical left-leaning axis of all round letter forms. In this way, a rhythmization of a line of type was achieved which created a lively image without being “noisy”. With this concept, Volker Küster has enlarged the Sans Serif by a distinctive, trend-setting form variation.
  34. Ronde Pro by RMU, $35.00
    Ronde Pro is an expressive and decorative broad-nib font for multilingual usage.
  35. Thymesans by Chank, $49.00
    Thymesans was one of Chank’s earliest fonts, created way back in 1994 for CAKE Magazine. Sometimes it's got serifs, sometimes it doesn't. “What a weird and fickle futuristic font!” says Chank. Emancipate your designs with this decidedly modern font. Good for funk or country album covers.
  36. Chunder by Chank, $49.00
    Created in Minneapolis in 1996, Chunder is inspired by the hand-painted cursive signage of urban boutiques where a shopkeeper can't afford to hire a very good sign painter. Kinda clunky, kinda flowery. Like beer spilled on a daffodil. "It's not pretty, but it's mine," says Chank.
  37. Gambino by Monotype, $15.99
    Childlike, sure; utterly affable, yes, but ultimately actually very cool. Yup, that’s Gambino. This chalky, super textured, semi connected script is a kooky playground pal and a grown-up technically savvy typeface all rolled into one. Upright yet tumbling, these simple, crayon-like letterforms are a delight.
  38. Manic - Personal use only
  39. Naville by Letterhend, $16.00
    Introducing, Naville Sans, the all caps font family. This family has 6 weights - extra light, light, reguler, medium, semibold and bold. The clean and simplicity look of the font suitable for wide range of graphic needs especially for headline, title, sign board, information board, billboard and for UI/UX design.
  40. York Handwriting by Thinkdust, $10.00
    A hand-drawn font inspired by the menu from a tearoom in York. York Handwriting is simple but with accentuated features, creating an effect that is decorative and distinct while still being clear. Giving the look of chalk or wet-wipe pens, this font will provide you with texture to make your work stand out, almost literally. With York Handwriting, any design can be granted the humble, homely look of a small, side-alley tearoom, especially with the emphasised x-height helping the text to stand out.
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