6,036 search results (0.025 seconds)
  1. Ingleby Regular - Personal use only
  2. MAWNS' Serif - Personal use only
  3. Osaka-Sans Serif - Unknown license
  4. Fibel Nord - Unknown license
  5. Albertino - Personal use only
  6. Sanserifing - 100% free
  7. KG Payphone - Personal use only
  8. Sophie - Personal use only
  9. Sevil alias Esra Lite - Unknown license
  10. Sui Generis Free - Unknown license
  11. Smartfair - Unknown license
  12. Excalibur Monospace - Unknown license
  13. COM4t Sans Medium - Unknown license
  14. PKP - Unknown license
  15. Grandesign Roman - Unknown license
  16. TrajanusBricks - Unknown license
  17. GAU_font_modern - Unknown license
  18. Hackers - Unknown license
  19. Ben Brown - Unknown license
  20. Alphabeta - Unknown license
  21. 11.20 - Unknown license
  22. Perolet - Unknown license
  23. Clearblock circular - Unknown license
  24. SF Willamette - Unknown license
  25. Walkway Condensed SemiBold - Unknown license
  26. Absurdies by Typephases, $25.00
    Absurdies is a trilogy of pictorial typefaces with lots of mischief, fun, weirdness, black humour and amusement. It includes 143 digitized illustrations. You will find many inexplicable behaviours, madmen, strange occupations, absurd and chaos-loving characters, and general whimsy. This little crowd can be used in many ways, from spot illustration to big illustration work or graphic designs, taking advantage of the vectorial format of the font file. The characters in Absurdies (together with their kin, the Illustries, Whimsies, Ombres, Bizarries and Genteta dingbats) are drawings from the sketchpad of Joan M. Mas, drawn from imagination and with no reference, except in a handful of cases pulled from historical photography. He wanted an easy-to-use format to collect his hundreds of imaginary ink drawings and he realized a digital typeface was an ideal solution. Having the illustrations gathered in a font file means you can use them instantly in any program you like. You may choose to use the images out of the box, or further customize them with colours and textures. The possibilities are endless.
  27. Loreto by Tipo, $69.00
    This font gets its inspiration from the typography of the Manuale ad Usum (1721), printed by Jesuit missionaries who worked at the beginning of the XVIII century with communities of "Guarani" native indians from the Northeast region of Argentina. It is a manual of sacraments published by Paulo Restivo and some collaborators among the native population. This manual features the peculiarity of being the first printed piece where there is a record of the place where it was printed: at the Loreto mission.
  28. Empire State Deco by Comicraft, $19.00
    Every face tells a story but this font is 77 stories high (1,046 feet with antenna included)! A lofty companion to Empire State Gothic , Empire State Deco is a tall, stately font containing four different styles, sometimes contradictory, united by the desire to be modern. Those familiar with the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes will notice a post-postmodernism combined with the fine craftsmanship and rich materials for which those awfully nice chaps at Comicraft are known. During its Art Deco heyday, Comicraft represented luxury, glamour, exuberance, and faith in social and technological progress -- this new font recaptures those halcyon days in letter form.
  29. Delecta by Robert Corseanschi, $9.99
    Delecta is a sans serif family of seven weights + matching italics. Influenced by the geometric-style sans serif faces. The font has a slightly geometric touch with a simple and clean personality which makes it suitable for advertising and packaging, festive occasions, editorial and publishing, logo, branding and creative industries, poster and billboards as well as web and screen design. It has some OpenType features like all new and modern fonts such as “stylistic alternates” which includes an elegant set of chars changing the feel of the font. The font also has an extended character set to support Central and Eastern European as well as Western European languages.
  30. Maladroit by Comicraft, $29.00
    Okay, we admit it! Comicraft's latest offering -- wrenched heavy-handedly from the pages of CHARLEY LOVES ROBOTS – is definitely a little awkward, maybe even loose-limbed and goofy. Those (usually) awfully nice chaps in the Comicraft studio are perhaps best known for their dexterity, their lightness of touch and nimbleness of finger rather than the kind of bungling, graceless, clumsy work evident in their latest digital alphabet. So, yes, MALADROIT is probably the most inept, cack-handed, undiplomatic addition to our catalogue ever submitted by freewheelin' John Roshell (formerly GAUCHE-ell) but might just possibly be the perfectly wrong font choice for your more bungling, inept, incompetent and hamfisted characters.
  31. LT Aspirer Neue - 100% free
  32. Font - Unknown license
  33. Guayaba Sans - personal use - Personal use only
  34. KG What the Teacher Wants - Personal use only
  35. Azoft Sans - 100% free
  36. Foobar Pro - 100% free
  37. Happy Sans - Personal use only
  38. Aviel - 100% free
  39. Canadian - Unknown license
  40. CartoGothic Std - 100% free
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