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  1. Bosox - Unknown license
  2. Pamela - Personal use only
  3. MCF bad manners - 100% free
  4. Hoedown - Personal use only
  5. Estilographica - Personal use only
  6. Puppeteer - Personal use only
  7. CBGBFont - Unknown license
  8. Wild West Shadow - Unknown license
  9. Cheap Stealer - Personal use only
  10. Burris - Unknown license
  11. Dearest Open - Unknown license
  12. Belwe Gotisch - Personal use only
  13. JFRingmaster - 100% free
  14. Monky Business - Unknown license
  15. Ghosttown BC - Personal use only
  16. Fiddums Family - Unknown license
  17. Dearest Friend - Unknown license
  18. Poseidon - Unknown license
  19. The·Fire - Personal use only
  20. Mellogothic - Personal use only
  21. Steelplate Textura - Personal use only
  22. Ardenwood Demo - Unknown license
  23. Pillbox Opaque - Unknown license
  24. Rediviva - Unknown license
  25. Screw DSG - Unknown license
  26. StageCoach - Unknown license
  27. Dearest Friend lite - Unknown license
  28. Göt - Unknown license
  29. Bill Hicks - Unknown license
  30. KaiserzeitGotisch - Personal use only
  31. Medici Text - Personal use only
  32. Parigee Initials Simple - Unknown license
  33. CantzleyAD1600 - 100% free
  34. Gothic Flames - Personal use only
  35. MCF bad manners ww - 100% free
  36. Elida JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Elida JNL was modeled from an image of some wood type for sale online. Although the type design most likely has its roots in the classic Bodoni, there were a few characters in the original wood type that had a bit of a square or block shape to them. Those characters were modified in order to keep with the overall roundness of the other characters. The name Elida JNL comes from a small town in New Mexico. Available in six styles: Regular, Oblique, Extra Condensed, Extra Condensed Oblique, Ultra Condensed and Mega Condensed.
  37. Vernaccia by Eurotypo, $32.00
    Last year I went to visit a friend in Tuscany. One day he took me to meet his neighbor, a nice old man; Mr. Giulio. After giving us a tour of his small vineyard, he insisted us to try his production: a delicious Vernaccia! When his wife left the bottle containing the gold liquid on the table, I fell in love with the label: it was handwritten by herself, as if to highlight the "homemade" feature. As a tribute to this beautiful and hardworking couple, I asked permission to be inspired to make a typeface ... and here goes! The family Font Vernaccia... Vernaccia is a type family of four fonts: Regular, Bold, Condensed and Condensed Italic. Is a modern and casual calligraphy family font.
As an exclusively Open Type release, with 759 glyphs and 45 ornaments, it has several special alternatives for all letters with lots of possibility and an infinity of combinations. Most of the ornaments can be used alone, but really were especially designed to combine with the different glyphs. There are plenty of options to allow you to create something unique and special: standard and discretionary ligatures, several swashes and stylistics alternates for each letter, catchwords, tails that can be added to the beginning or end of each letter, ornaments, and much more. These lovely fonts have already an extended character set to support Western European languages. Vernaccia was made to make your project more beautiful and attractive! Have fun with it!
  38. The Cats Whiskers by Hanoded, $15.00
    Ok. Another font with cats in it. I asked my son, Sam (age 4), to draw some cats and I have to say: I'm very proud of what he created. The tiger I asked him for became a spinosaurus mom with her baby and I also got some happy hearts thrown in for good measure. The Cat's Whiskers is a very legible hand made font. Nice and loose, not too messy and with just a hint of childishness. Comes with a litter of diacritics. Oh… and a big thank you to Jakob from pizzadude.dk for suggesting I should post more pics of cats on FB - which eventually led to the name of this font.
  39. Bureau Grot by Font Bureau, $40.00
    Bureau Grot is now accepted as the essence of tooth and character in an English 19th-century sans. The current family was first developed by David Berlow in 1989 from original specimens of the grotesques released by Stephenson Blake in Sheffield. These met with immediate success at the Tribune Companies and Newsweek, who had commissioned custom versions at the behest of Roger Black. Further weights were designed by Berlow for the launches of Entertainment Weekly and the Madrid daily El Sol, bringing the total to twelve styles by 1993. Jill Pichotta, Christian Schwartz, and Richard Lipton expanded the styles further, at which point the family name was shortened from Bureau Grotesque to Bureau Grot; FB 1989–2006
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