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  1. Mirumir by Spacemotion, $29.00
    MIRUMIR is a variable display grotesk typeface which has latin, cyrillic and hebrew scripts. It comes in 16 weights and its matching italics It contains 451 characters. Designed with powerful opentype features in mind. Each weight includes extended language support (+ Cyrillic), fractions, tabular figures, arrows, ligatures and more. Perfectly suited for graphic design and any display use. It could easily work for web, signage, corporate, newspaper, display, magazines as well as for editorial design.
  2. Easton by Typemotion, $15.00
    I wanted to combine a classical antiqua with corners and edges. I was convinced this combination would create a new, a fresh design of types. At the beginning I used the forms from "Goudy Old Style", later I modified the sizes, the widths of the letters, the x-height and their forms in general. At the moment the Easton Family consists of 3 styles called Easton Serif, Easton Semiserif and Easton Sans.
  3. Moderna Sans by Latinotype, $29.00
    Moderna Sans, a modern sans-serif inspired by the American culture, is a clean and contemporary interpretation of American Gothic typefaces like "Alternate Gothic". Moderna Sans comes in 5 weights, with matching italics, and 3 widths—condensed, standard and extended. The font's character set supports over 200 Latin-based languages. Moderna Sans is an excellent choice for branding and corporate design and a versatile 3-width workhorse suitable for newspaper or magazine headlines and subheadings.
  4. HT Arcadia Grotesk by Hype Type, $34.00
    The versatile neo-grotesk typefamily, inspired by the swiss academia with a contemporary mood. The shape of the letters are more pliable compared to classics grotesk typefaces. -- Taking inspirations from classic grotesk letterforms, both from the European tradition (specifically the Swiss school) and the American tradition, HypeType's Arcadia Grotesk is modernized with its shorter ascenders and descenders to give more compact blocks of text and with its more contemporary and dynamic forms. -- hype-type.com // kidstudio.it
  5. Floreal by Reyrey Blue Std, $16.00
    Floreal is an elegant, modern and classy serif font with fashionable touch. That includes two styles : regular and true Italic. This font includes alternates and ligatures, with them you can make your project more elegant and unique. Floreal is perfect for corporate identities, websites, publications, titles, books, magazines, business cards, logos, product labels, packaging, or any kind of advertising purpose. Features : · All Uppercase and Lowercase · Number & Symbol · Supported Languages · Alternates and Ligatures
  6. Troia by Ahmet Altun, $10.00
    Troia Font Family comes in three weights; normal and italic. In addition, with rounded corners, each weight has its own smoother version. Thanks to its large letters and added spaces between the letters, this font can be used to get perfect results and create great works such as web typography, banners, logos, texts, t-shirts and printings, and also presentations. Troia's eye-pleasing and nice-looking style makes writing much more pleasant.
  7. Magis by Showup! Typefoundry, $35.00
    Magis® is a modern sans serif with a geometric touch. It comes in 18 weights, 9 uprights, matching italics, and variable font. Magis® bringing energy and making it suitable for modern design. Designed with powerful OpenType features in mind. Each weight includes extended language support (+ Cyrillic), arrows, ligatures, and more. Perfectly suited for graphic design and any display use. It could easily work for web, signage, corporate as well as editorial design.
  8. Cloud Dancer by Reyrey Blue Std, $16.00
    Say Hi to Cloud Dancer. It is bold and high-contrast display serif typeface with delightful nostalgic feeling. Cloud Dancer contain several stylistic alternates that can make it unique and different. This typeface is perfect for corporate identities, websites, publications, titles, books, magazines, business cards, logos, product labels, packaging, or any kind of advertising purpose. Features : · All Uppercase and Lowercase · Number & Symbol · Supported Languages · Alternates and Ligatures · PUA Encoded Hope you enjoy with our font!
  9. Coreta by Wasabib Type Foundry, $13.00
    Coreta is an elegant serif font that combines classic charm with modern flexibility. With its smooth curves, this font creates stunning visual harmony. Perfect for a variety of projects, from wedding invitations to corporate designs. Thoughtful letter proportions ensure optimal readability at any size. Coreta is not just a font, it's an impressive statement of art. With its unique capabilities, it elevates the appeal of every design with a versatile touch of elegance.
  10. Castle by Linotype, $29.99
    This family, which includes faces in light, book, bold, and ultra weights, more stroke contrast than is typical of sans serifs, making it very legible in text. Because of its large x-height, it is recommended for used in point sizes ranging from 12 point upward. Of course, it functions well in display sizes, too. The contrast between the four weights makes this family optimal for use in hierarchical advertising systems, and corporate identity uses.
  11. Benevolent by Attractype, $15.00
    Introducing "Benevolent" - A pretty vintage font. With a subtle touch and unique design, Benevolent is an incredibly versatile font, perfect for any type of project from invitations and posters to magazines and corporate identity. Benevolent has two styles, solid regular and decorative which are packaged separately. Each of them comes with a swash and alternative feature. Of course, Benevolent can also be applied to various arts, crafts and jewelry. Happy crafting with Benevolent.
  12. Luckiest Softie Pro by Stiggy & Sands, $29.00
    Our Luckiest Softie Pro is a softened variation of our Luckiest Guy Pro typeface, inspired by hand-lettered vintage 1950's advertisement. The charm of the original typeface is enhanced with softened corners to give the typeface a more cuddly charisma. Opentype features include: - SmallCaps. - Full set of Inferiors and Superiors for limitless fractions. - Tabular, Proportional, and Oldstyle figure sets (along with SmallCaps versions of the figures). - Stylistic Alternates for Caps to SmallCaps conversion.
  13. Bezura by Adam B. Ford, $14.00
    Bezura is a font designed with an emphasis on minimal nodes. All bezier curves in this font have reference points on 90° or 45°. All corners have a smooth curve to them. It would probably work great when used in vinyl-cutting applications on signage. While it has a very methodical construction, there is enough sway in the font to give it a loose feel for professional projects with an unprofessional feel.
  14. RNS Pictografica Cocina by RNS Fonts, $9.00
    RNS Pictografica Cocina (Kitchen, culinary arts and food related font) it is comprised of 230 glyphs, it's based on a modular structure of a minimal thickness on lines and round corners, making a clean visually drawing, give importance to the surround white for improve contrast. The font is better used on a big white canvas for achieve visual focus. And in great sizes for more impact, however the font is legible even at small sizes.
  15. Pentay Sans by deFharo, $10.50
    Pentay is a Sans Serif typefaces family with 10 styles designed especially for editorial design and publications in general. The proportions of the font as well as the metrics and the kerning have been carefully calculated to obtain maximum readability. The fonts also have a complete set of lowercase alternatives and advanced OpenType features. Pentay fonts are also available in Slab Serif versions that complete a typographic system for editorial and corporate design.
  16. Mechanikschrift by Victory Type, $12.00
    Mechanikschrift, roughly German for “mechanical writing”, is a typeface from Noah Rothschild and Victory Type. The aesthetic of this font is just what its name points towards: machine-like structure with a German flare. Minimalism is often associated with German design, and Mechanikschrift is a minimalist typeface. Furthermore, the designs of the characters, outside of the general theme of squared-off corners and angular appearance, are related to Herbert Bayer’s work at the Bauhaus.
  17. Leather by Canada Type, $24.95
    Over the past few years, every designer has seen the surprising outbreak of blackletter types in marketing campaigns for major sports clothing manufacturers, a few phone companies, soft drink makers, and more recently on entertainment and music products. In such campaigns, blackletter type combined with photos of usual daily activity simply adds a level of strength and mystique to things we see and do on a regular basis. But we couldn't help noticing that the typography was very odd in such campaigns, where the type overpowers all the other design elements. This is because almost all blackletter fonts ever made express too much strength and time-stamp themselves in a definite manner, thereby eliminating themselves as possible type choices for a variety of common contemporary design approaches, such as minimal, geometric, modular, etc. So extending the idea of using blackletter in modern design was a bit of a wild goose chase for us. But we finally found the face that completes the equation no other blackletter could fit into: Leather is a digitization and major expansion of Imre Reiner's forgotten but excellent 1933 Gotika design, which was very much ahead of its time. In its own time this design saw very little use because it caused problems to printers, where the thin serifs and inner bars were too fragile and broke off too easily when used in metal. But now, more than seventy years later, it seems like it was made for current technologies, and it is nothing short of being the perfect candidate for using blackletter in grid-based settings. Leather has three features usually not found in other blackletter fonts: - Grid-based geometric strokes and curves: In the early 1930s, blackletter design had already begun interacting back with the modern sans serif it birthed at the turn of the century. This design is one of the very few manifestations of such interaction. - Fragile, Boboni-like serifs, sprout from mostly expected places in the minuscules, but are sprinkled very aesthetically on some of the majuscules. The overall result is magnificently modern. - The usual complexity of blackletter uppercase's inner bars is rendered simple, geometric and very visually appealing. The contrast between the inner bars and thick outer strokes creates a surprising circuitry-like effect on some of the letters (D, O, Q), wonderfully plays with the idea of fragile balances on some others (M, N and P), and boldly introduces new concepts on others (B, F, K, L, R). Our research seems to suggest that the original numerals used with this design in the 1930s were adopted from a previous Imre Reiner typeface. They didn't really fit with the idea of this font, so we created brand new numerals for Leather. We also expanded the character set to cover all Western Latin-based languages, and scattered plenty of alternates and ligatures throughout the map. The name, Leather, was derived from a humorous attempt at naming a font. Initially we wanted to call it Black Leather (blackletter...blackleather), but the closer we came to finishing it, the more respect we developed for its attempt to introduce a plausible convergence between two entirely different type categories. Sadly for the art, this idea of convergence didn't go much further back then, due to technological limitations and the eventual war a few years later. We're hoping this revival would encourage people to look at blackletter under a new light in these modern times of multiple design influences.
  18. Guaruja Grotesk by Tipogra Fio, $-
    Guaruja Grotesk is the first Tipogra Fio family for headlines & body copy. The grotesque form factor is much inspired in the Modernism movement from the mid of 20th Century but the Italic weight is a great cursive contrast aside the Roman ones so you can make very brutalist layouts or craft humanist projects, without losing the communication between all the family. Do not be afraid to type words with uppercase I and lowercase L because this last one has its own personality so do others glyphs like Italic lowercase G, Y and K and the straight corners in the Roman uppercase A, K, V, W, X, Y and Z. The same curves and corners are transferred to the numbers, symbols and so on. If your text is in a latin alphabet even though has lots of diacritcs, Guaruja may get it done! If you’re making a mathematical equation, it also can make it. If there’s a signaling project with lots of destinations, trust the arrows to help with together with the whole family.
  19. Nudista by Suitcase Type Foundry, $39.00
    Nudista is a monolinear, geometric sans-serif based on the proportions of the Purista typeface, released in 2007. The forms are not based strictly on square shape, but rather on a pleasant oval, round shape. The letter outlines are smooth, even technicist, the geometric precision is however compensated in places where it would get in the way of legibility and compromise the desired visual impact. Nudista was originally conceived as a display type, but it is sufficiently legible even in text sizes. Thus, it suits short texts in corporate prints. Carefully chiselled letter curves are sturdy and well suited for the harsh conditions of low-resolution printing devices, they work well on computer screens and mobile phone displays. However, Nudista works best in corporate systems, navigation and orientation systems, where it may be, also thanks to the sufficient range of weights, a good alternative to the well-known and thus a little overused DIN. Naked typeface with no needless decorations humbly serves in all places where too expressive types could be disturbing.
  20. Baedar by Craft Supply Co, $20.00
    Introducing Baedar – Bold Rounded Sans Serif Font Baedar – Bold Rounded Sans Serif, a font designed to captivate your attention, is both inviting and approachable. Its rounded corners create a warm and friendly vibe that instantly draws in readers. Eye-Catching Appeal Baedar’s boldness immediately grabs your eye, making it perfect for headlines and attention-grabbing text. Whether it’s a poster, website, or marketing material, this font ensures your message unequivocally stands out. Versatile Usage Furthermore, with its rounded edges, Baedar exudes friendliness. Consequently, it suits a wide range of projects, from branding to social media posts, adding a touch of approachability to your content. Readability and Impact Moreover, Baedar combines readability with visual impact, making it ideal for conveying important messages with flair. Its boldness ensures crystal-clear clarity, while the rounded corners gently soften the overall look. In Conclusion Baedar – Bold Rounded Sans Serif Font strikes the perfect balance between eye-catching design and friendliness, making it an excellent choice for various creative endeavors. Therefore, seize your audience’s attention and convey your message effectively with this versatile font.
  21. Leprechaun Vomit by Bellafonts, $39.00
    Leprechaun Vomit is just a pretty way of saying Lucky Charms, which I had to use something else besides the name of a cereal anyway. Leprechaun Vomit is a ding bat of luck including images of rainbows, horseshoes, clovers, diamonds, moons, the number 7, japanese "lucky" calligraphy, The Maneki Neko (the Beckoning Cat which is a lucky symbol), and some shooting stars (make a wish). You can use these images to create Irish themed designs like St. Patrick's Day art, or you can use them for lucky purposes. Bellafonts' user license allows for commercial use, so you can make products for re-sale, including services offering graphic design. You can choose from a variety of clovers for your own version of a "Kiss me I'm Irish" T-shirt, and you can add some shooting stars and rainbows to make any design for any occasion extra special. If you are a graphic designer with any clients like a ranch, horseback riding schools, and so forth, you may like these lucky horseshoes for your library.
  22. Shentox by Emtype Foundry, $69.00
    During a visit to London in 2008 I fell in love with the square font used on the British car number plates. I was immediately inspired to start working on this font and have been developing it intermittently ever since. Several more trips to London and the project evolved before it finally took off and became Shentox. Despite the starting point being inspired by simple, everyday car plates, the font soon evolved into something fine and very rich in detail. Even though the square genre is very restrictive, Shentox is a highly legible contemporary font with a full range of weights, useable not only as a display family for headlines and posters, but as a distinct, clean font family for branding and general editorial use (Especially magazines). It has been carefully drawn paying extra attention to the details, high end finishes that makes Shentox a safe font for use in large scale work. For example, the curves of every individual corner have been adjusted character by character to avoid the common problems encountered with square fonts (Eg. darker corners between weights or a visually inconsistent radius between the Upper and Lowercases as a result of copy/paste). Shentox italic, which has a 12 degree slant, has been corrected to avoid distortion when slanted. The radius of the upper-right and lower-left corners are more pronounced, giving it a more fluid Italic feel. Shentox is available in Open Type format and includes ligatures, tabular figures, fractions, numerators, denominators, superiors and inferiors. It supports Central and Eastern European languages. This type family consists of 14 styles, 7 weights (Thin, UltraLight, Light, Regular, Medium, SemiBold and Bold) plus italics. Shentox PDF
  23. Decima Mono by TipografiaRamis, $39.00
    Decima Mono – condensed geometric monospaced Sans Serif typeface, released back in 2009 and quite successful ever since (MyFonts Rising Star, February 2009). This new edition is an upgraded version of Decima Mono and Decima Mono X, combining both into one edition. New version supports more Latin languages with an extension to glyph amounts. Also, six more alternate styles have been added to the original six styles.
  24. Vintage Galore by Letterhend, $12.00
    Vintage Galore is a handmade blackletter font font with casual & classic feels. This font will bring you back to 90s feel.This font perfectly made to be applied especially in logo, and the other various formal forms such as invitations, labels, logos, magazines, make up, stationery, novels, labels or any type of advertising purpose. Features : Uppercase & lowercase, Numbers and punctuation, Alternates & Ligatures, Multilingual & PUA encoded
  25. Fagetone by Prioritype, $15.00
    Dating back to the 60s 70s, this retro script font comes in bold bold and thin, perfect for your projects and supports multilingualism and other character additions. Can be applied to various print and digital media such as food packaging, clothing stores, accessories, clothing, creative goods, antique workshops, sports, entertainment and even logos. For reference, see preview. Features: -Uppercase -Lowercase -Numeral -Punctuation -Ligature -Multilingual
  26. Yardbird Numerals by Coniglio Type, $9.95
    Yardbird, insinuating prison numerals, was lifted from a wooden block print poster press, that would have indeed besides providing dates for the local carnival would have just as easily ink-chucked them over the backs of those denim blues. Part of Market LTD, a collection of limited faces, mostly alpha-numeric and some just plain numeric, used primarily in retail and display situations and titling.
  27. Syom by Luxfont, $38.00
    Take a trip back in time with our unique color font family Syom! The rounded and inflated shapes of the letters embody the atmosphere of decades of the last century, while remaining relevant in modern design. Features: - Real 3D effect - Extras - Multilingual - Ability to adapt 3D letters to other languages - Kerning IMPORTANT: - Check the glyphs in the font before buying! - SVG fonts contain raster letters.
  28. Poster Casual JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Poster Casual JNL is based on the hand lettered title on the cover of the 1929 sheet music for the song "Give Yourself a Pat on the Back"; touted at the time as being "the cheer-up song of England". Available in both regular and oblique versions, the font is perfect for applications where a less-formal look is desired in headlines or brief text.
  29. Sixties Flashback by Mysterylab, $15.00
    Here's a lettering style that just might be exactly on your wavelength. Add just the right dose of vintage freak-a-delia to your retro graphics with this original psychedelic-style design. Great for music posters, album graphics, book titles, etc. Evoke a warpy, wavy, whimsical vibe that harks back to the carefree 1960s or early 1970s era with Sixties Flashback; it's pure hippie, trippy fun!
  30. Pixel Pants by PizzaDude.dk, $18.00
    Pixel Pants is my wanna-be 1980-ies pixelfont. Well, it really looks like a pixel font, but it's kid of fake - at larger sizes you will notice the wacky and uneven lines, but it sure do bring back memories of the 80-ies! I've made 5 different versions of each letter - just to break the monotony of the usual pixel font! Insert coin and enjoy!
  31. Cover Charge JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Although less prevalent today, a cover charge was added to better class night clubs of the 1930s and 1940s to discourage patronage by people of questionable social graces. The general idea was that the lower strata of society (meaning the "average Joe" or "hoi polloi") would balk at paying an extra fee just for entrance to a place of good entertainment and fine dining.
  32. Deco Redux JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A long-set aside Art Deco typeface design begun (but not completed) may or not have been from a vintage source, but its roots go well back into Art Deco lettering. Taking the existing letters and thickening their weights, removing the counters and ending up with a completely new, solid alphabet design resulted in Deco Redux JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  33. Nouveau Handlettered JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The roots of Nouveau Handlettered JNL go back to the sheet music cover for the 1917 song "(Someday) Somebody's Gonna Get You". This simple style of sans serif titling has the casual, imperfect charm of the pen and ink lettering so prevalent in the decades before metal type and other technical advancements made the craft almost obsolete. The typeface is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  34. Perigord by Scriptorium, $18.00
    Perigord has mixed origins. It was inspired by Gutenberg’s capitals and by lettering developed by German designer Ernst Bentele, but its calligraphic antecedents go back to French initials of the Carolingian period. The result of this is a formal, attractive and antique look which we hope you'll like. The full version includes alternate forms for many of the letters, as well as numbers and punctuation.
  35. Driven Unicase Extended by Typekirk, $12.00
    Driven Unicase Extended is sleek and modern, yet hearkens back to the first advertising to catch my eye as a kid in the glorious 1970s – automobile ads that captured the thrill of speed, for sports cars I dreamed of experiencing. Driven is available in 6 individual weights or as a family of 6 fonts, plus ornaments. Includes accented characters supporting for many European languages.
  36. Hackbot by Typefactory, $14.00
    Hackbot is a font which is both retro-inspired and amusing to the eye. The gaps between the letterings allows you to feel vintage and travel back to the old times. It’s a font which uses a sans serif style of writing, but uses a retro design to make an overall unique font. It’s flawlessly suitable for promoting games, creating quotes, retro designs and much more.
  37. Brighton vintage by Dealita Studio, $18.00
    Brighton Vintage is a stylish font that is both retro and bold font. Its thick curves give a 70s groovy vibe with the serifs bringing it slightly back to traditional. This font is perfectly made to be applied especially in logos, and other various formal forms such as invitations, labels, logos, magazines, books, greeting/wedding cards, packaging, fashion, makeup, stationery, novels, labels, or any advertising purpose.
  38. Staluco by Konstantine Studio, $17.00
    Jump back to the classics with Staluco - A bold sans-serif font inspired by vintage greeting cards and town signs in the 70s 80s era. This font captures the vibes and sense of going-home and childhood-like spirits from your grandparent's house. Perfectly fit for logo, a town sign, branding, poster, clothing, merchandise, music project, books, greeting cards, street, and urban culture concepts, you name it.
  39. PiS Creatinin Pro by PiS, $38.00
    PiS Creatinin pro is based on a vintage ABC learning game for kids found in my grandparents attic. The narrow and high hand-drawn letters combine delicacy and chunkyness in a wonderful way, so it can be used both in huge display sizes and in small text sizes. PiS Creatinin pro - Makes you want to go back to school and learn the alphabet all over again!
  40. NS Gibswing by Novi Souldado, $35.00
    Gibswing born based on the reference of old fancy lettering, vintage illustration, and victorian calligraphy. The Gibswing decorative style make it as an instant time machine to the era from 1800-1900 victorian visual style of the products, printed advertising, and signs back in the day. It will be a perfect companion of your classic visual direction for decorative sign, labels, branding, logotype, you name it.
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