10,000 search results (0.036 seconds)
  1. Embossanova by Emboss, $29.00
    Embossanova was initially sketched to be a monospaced typeface but quickly took on a life of its own. It developed serifs and numerous arcs and stroke weights. I wanted it to retain a pre computer/unmathematical feel so there is a slight variation on curved characters and their relationship to the X height.
  2. Porceleina by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Porceleina is elegant, what more can I say? This handmade and handdrawn font comes with a heavy loadful of diacritics - and the Opentype contextual alternates makes sure that the font cycles between the six different...yes SIX different...versions of each letter from a-z! That's quite awesome, if you ask me!
  3. Slapsie Maxi NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Our old friend Carl Holmes, in another offering from his ABC of Lettering, takes the blacks to the max with this commanding face. A perfect choice for can't-miss headlines. Both versions of this font contain the Unicode 1252 (Latin) and Unicode 1250 (Central European) character sets, with localization for Romanian and Moldovan.
  4. Zamenhof by CastleType, $59.00
    Zamenhof is a family of five fonts that can be used singly or in combination to create a variety of bold, yet elegant, display styles. Inspired by Russian hand-lettering that appears to have been based on Jakob Erbar’s Phosphor, Zamenhof is essentially a Latin interpretation (with Cyrillic and Greek) of a Cyrillic interpretation of a Latin type design, with many changes along the way. (For example, all the Latin-only letters are quite different between the two designs: D, F, G, J, K, N, Q, R, S, U, V, W, Y, Z.) The Inline and Inverse styles of Zamenhof are the basic fonts and can be used effectively on their own. The Plain and Outline fonts — which I recommend using only in combination with the main designs — were created specifically to be combined with Inline and Inverse, as underlay and overlay layers, respectively. (You will need an application that supports layers, such as Adobe InDesign or Photoshop.) Zamenhof supports most European languages as well as modern Greek, and of course, Russian and other languages that use the Cyrillic alphabet. Needless to say, as Zamenhof is named after the father of Esperanto, it also supports Esperanto (as do all fonts from CastleType).
  5. Eurotypo Bodoni by Eurotypo, $48.00
    Talking about the numerous types that today bear the name of Giambattista Bodoni are a kind of tribute as much to his reputation as a printer as to his ability as designer and engraver. In fact, all of them tent to be more in the way or style of Bodoni than simply copy of his letterforms. Like many other type designers, we’ve been seduced also to develop our own point of view of his work, nowadays enriched by some features of OpenType format that allows a variety of combinations: standard ligatures, discretional ligatures, stylistic alternates and old styles figures. Whereas the Bodoni serif in the capitals was of the same weight as the thin stroke but joined with a very slight fillet (Bracket) and the lowercase serif were like his French rivals, the Didots, featured straight- edged serifs that were unbracketed. The ascenders and descenders of this new Bodoni are shorter, giving in this way, more space for enlarge x high. Specially designed for editorial design and advertising, can be used in magazines, annual reports and all kind of fine print materials or web pages. The beauty of his letterforms can enrich headlines; this font can also be used as body text for its good legibility and accurate kerning.
  6. Go To Town JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Vintage sheet music for a song from the 1941 animated feature "Mr. Bug Goes to Town" featured a casual, hand-lettered inline type style on its cover page. Recreated as the digital font Go to Town JNL, this design is presented in all the imperfect glory of pen and ink lettering. Go to Town JNL is available in the regular inline version as well as a solid version. A bit about the cartoon: The project was created by the legendary Fleischer Studios in Miami, Florida (they had relocated from New York City), after they could not obtain the rights to adapt Maurice Maeterlinck's "The Life of the Bee". Beset by the expenses of relocating to Florida, growing production costs on the full-length feature cartoon and other problems; mid-way through the making of "Mr. Bug Goes to Town" the Fleischer brothers were forced to sell their studio to their distributor (Paramount Pictures) in order to continue in operation. It was released on Dec. 5, 1941 - just two days before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The release [and subsequent re-release by Paramount as "Hoppity Goes to Town"] was a disappointing failure, earning [as late as 1946] only $241,000 of the initial cost of $713,511 it took to make the film.
  7. Malabar by Linotype, $29.99
    Malabar is a type family for extensive text. Its design was developed with a nod toward newspapers. Malabar's characters are seriffed and of the Old Style genre. A strong diagonal axis is apparent within the curves. Sturdy serifs help strengthen the line of text in small point sizes, as well as define the overall feeling of the face. Malabar's x-height is very high, a deliberate choice that makes the most important parts of lowercase letters visibly larger in tiny settings. The height of the capital letters is also rather diminutive, allowing for better character fit, as well as eliminating a bit of clumsiness in German, which often includes quite a few uppercase letters. Diacritical marks and additional alphabetic forms required by many Western, Central, and Eastern European languages are naturally a part of the character set, including those needed in the Baltic states, for Romanian, and for Turkish. Malabar's accents are bold and direct, sitting well with their base glyphs. The family includes three weights, each with a companion Italic. Malabar Regular is equipped with small caps, and both it and Malabar Italic include oldstyle figures. All members of the family have both proportional and tabular-width lining figures, as well as special variants of certain punctuation marks vertically adjusted for all-caps text setting. Malabar is informed both by contemporary ideas of typeface design (sheared terminals, the wider-drawn s) as well as by 16th-century masters. Malabar Heavy and Heavy Italic are very loud; their blackness almost shouts out from the page. The Regular's wedge serifs become more slab-ish in nature as the letters' weight increases. Malabar Heavy and Heavy Italic are best relegated to headline use only. Malabar Bold and Bold Italic may be used for text emphasis, a job for which the Heavy is to dark. Malabar received a Certificate of Excellence in Type Design at the Type Directors Club of New York TDC2 competition in 2009.
  8. Desphalia Pro by Ingo, $42.00
    A classic “American” sans serif with a kink Desphalia belongs to the kind of sans serif fonts that were created in the 19th century. You could also name it “American Gothic”, a sans serif in the style of fonts like Franklin Gothic, News Gothic and similar. Above all, the high x-height characterizes this typeface style, as do the identical heights of uppercase and ascenders. However, I allowed myself a few peculiarities ;-) On the one hand, there is the gently sloping horizontal middle line on letters such as H, E, F, A and e. The M also got gently slanted sides. Some of the lower-case letters have an up- or down-stroke: a d m n p u. This "kink" on the shaft also serves to better distinguish the small l from the capital I — as can be seen clearly with the term »Illinois«. In keeping with the tradition of American typefaces, Desphalia does not have a true italic. Rather, the letters of the “Italic” have the same character forms as the normal upright variant, but in oblique — and so it is not called “Italic” but “Oblique”. Style Set 01: Another American peculiarity is the capital I with dashes above and below. It is included in the Desphalia as an alternate character form. An alternative small l with the “kink” in the ascender is also included — as is a y with the “kink” in the descender. Style Set 02: The corresponding “straight” forms a d l m n p u without the break are included as alternatives in a separate style set. Small caps are uppercase letters that are optically the same size as lowercase letters. They offer a very classy way of emphasis. Desphalia is available in the widths Condensed, Normal and Expanded, the weights include Thin, Light, Book, Bold, Black. Using the variable font, all intermediate levels can be freely selected. The figures are optionally available as tabular figures, proportional lining figures or old style figures.
  9. The 1543 Humane Jenson font, designed by Gilles Le Corre, is a tribute to the rich history of typography, blending meticulous craft and historical homage. This font is intricately designed to echo th...
  10. As of my last update in April 2023, "Winob" does not appear to be a widely recognized font within the traditional or digital typography communities, so my depiction will lean into imaginative interpr...
  11. LTC Kennerley by Lanston Type Co., $24.95
    Kennerley Old Style was designed by Goudy for publisher Mitchell Kennerley in 1911. Goudy described it as a "book letter with strong serifs, firm hairlines, and makes a solid, compact page." One of Goudy's best text faces, Kennerley is considered an original American classic as it is not based on historical type designs.
  12. Bajazzo by Schriftlabor, $39.00
    Bajazzo is a multi-weight and multi-width humanist sans-serif typeface. Inspired by old wood-type specimens, its timeless and unapologetic design lends itself for posters just as much as it does for text. Its extensive range of styles, widths, and weights make it fit for use in practically any application.
  13. Altamonte NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Logotype lettering from 1896 for the Italian confection company Talmone provided the inspiration for this curvy, cuddly face. Warm up your headlines today with this antique charmer. Both versions include the complete Unicode Latin 1252, Central European 1250 and Turkish 1254 character sets, as well as localization for Lithuanian, Moldovan and Romanian.
  14. Runaround Sue NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    In his book Brushstroke and Free-Style Alphabets, Dan X. Solo called this typeface "Tamarind Script" but, whatever its name, this sparkly little gem will add rollicking retro charm to any project it graces. The Opentype version of this font supports Unicode 1250 (Central European) languages, as well as Unicode 1252 (Latin) languages.
  15. Puertofino by Typehand Studio, $20.00
    Puertofino is made as if it resembles a ballpoint pen so it looks thick and thin, Puertofino can also be used as a signature font. Puertofino has ligatures, alternates, and supports 68 Multilingual. Puertofino is a casual script font that suitable for various project, like branding, invitation, merchandise, website, advertisement, magazine, and more
  16. Flirtation Walk JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Flirtation Walk JNL was inspired by the lettering on the covers of sheet music for songs taken from the 1934 Dick Powell-Ruby Keeler movie "Flirtation Walk". The typeface features some stylized characters as well as the more familiar Art Deco character designs, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  17. Wonderbear PB by Pink Broccoli, $14.00
    From the title screens and comic books of the Hair Bear Bunch comes the fun and funky Wonderbear typeface. All that 70’s flavor packed into a Caps/Alt Caps typestyle reminiscent of a lovable limited run cartoon show. The Hair Bears miss you as much as you miss them. Relive the laughter.
  18. Churchward Lorina by BluHead Studio, $25.00
    Churchward Lorina is a four weight typeface family originally designed in 1996 by New Zealand type designer Joseph Churchward. A personable geometric sans serif, it possesses some of Churchward's trademark quirkiness but reamins highly legible and readable on screen as well as in print. The family includes Light, Regular, Bold and Black.
  19. Zepto by d[esign], $-
    Zepto is about as small as you can get with pixel fonts without sub-pixel rendering. Featured on Make: A tiny screen font you can actually download and use, free. For optimal use, please turn font anti-aliasing off and set at a size of 8px with image resolution set to 72ppi.
  20. Ornamental Deco 2D by 2D Typo, $36.00
    This font was inspired by Lviv ArtDeco architecture dominating in 1920s-30s. This collection of ornaments is a graphic representation of building decorative elements, mostly of metal tracery elements and wall bas-relief. This font can be used for a variety of purposes, in graphic design as well as in industrial design.
  21. Bajazzo Rounded by Schriftlabor, $39.00
    Bajazzo is a multi-weight and multi-width humanist sans-serif typeface. Inspired by old wood-type specimens, its timeless and unapologetic design lends itself for posters just as much as it does for text. Its extensive range of styles, widths, and weights make it fit for use in practically any application.
  22. DonJulio by Autographis, $39.50
    DonJulio is a handwritten most-of-the-time connecting script, that dates back to the 1930s in Germany. We tried to keep it as true to the original as possible, conserving the shaky and uneven appearance of those days. DonJulio can be mixed together with its very embellished sister font Donna Julia.
  23. Amador by Parkinson, $25.00
    Amador. Designed in 2004 by Jim Parkinson. Originally released as a Type 1 font, Amador was refreshed (version2) and re-released as simple Open Type in 2012. A blackletter designed in the spirit of the Arts and Crafts movement. The works of Frederic Goudy and Rudolf Koch are also reflected in this design.
  24. Winter Style by Yoga Letter, $14.00
    "Winter Style" is a display font with winter and Christmas themes. This font is decorated with a snowman as well as a Christmas hat. This font is equipped with uppercase, lowercase, uppercase alternates, swash, titling, lowercase alternates, numeral, punctuation and multilingual support. Perfect for Christmas, winter, valentines, movie titles, logos and more.
  25. Bajazzo Variable by Schriftlabor, $899.00
    Bajazzo is a multi-weight and multi-width humanist sans-serif typeface. Inspired by old wood-type specimens, its timeless and unapologetic design lends itself for posters just as much as it does for text. Its extensive range of styles, widths, and weights make it fit for use in practically any application.
  26. Wilderness and Home Collection by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Home Sweet Home Dingbats is a 30 dingbat font of home things. Use them as dingbats or enlarge the small pictures and use them as clipart. Silhouettes include several lamps, clock, chaise, chairs, sofa, nightstand, chest, TV & remote, tables, stool, steps, beds, mirror, art, a fireplace and even a baby grand piano.
  27. Harpsichord by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    Harpsichord (as I have named it) is from the late 1940s and was designed at Lucian Bernhard Studios in New York for Bernhard's Magnetype Collection. It was originally published as 'Community Low' along with 'Community Condensed'. Many of his Magnetype Fonts have been dormant which I hope to revive in the near future.
  28. Noelle by Jen Wagner Co., $15.00
    Noelle is a classic, minimalist serif and script duo that functions beautifully in modern design work. Noelle serif features geometric, clean lines; modern serifs, and just a touch of vintage while Noelle script brings in femininity and delicateness. Noelle looks gorgeous in logo work as well as web headings and printed materials.
  29. Daviton by Sarid Ezra, $13.00
    Introducing, Daviton! Daviton is a new handmade font. You can use these fonts for various purposes such as making realistic handwriting, for promotions, or other purposes that will make your design more real as handmade. This font also contain ligatures and underline. What will you get: Daviton Solid Daviton Brush Happy Creating!
  30. Aramaic 450 by Archaica, $30.00
    This font provides a typical set of characters for the ancient Imperial Aramaic language (the form of Aramaic that saw widespread use in the Persian Empire during the sixth to fourth centuries BC). It includes a full set of alphabetic characters, including some variant shapes, as well as the ancient numeral forms.
  31. ITC Forkbeard by ITC, $29.99
    ITC Forkbeard is the work of British designer Michael Gills and named after a famous Viking warrior. Gills was inspired by the work of Victor Hammer as well as a lesser known uncial style called Andromaque. Distinguishing characteristics of ITC Forkbeard are its geometric overtones and its distinct capital and lower case letterforms.
  32. Belora Vintage by Mainelli, $17.00
    Introducing Belora Vintage, a bold serif font with soft, bold edges and curves giving it a groovy 70s feel. Belora Vintage has separate lowercase and uppercase letters, as well as numbers, punctuation, and multilingual letters. With alternates and ligatures it's perfect for fancy retro-style logos, or bold header text and much more.
  33. Softrock by Doehantz Studio, $18.00
    SOFTROCK, a bold sans serif font with 3 styles Regular, Rounded, and Textured Effect. SOFTROCK is made as neatly as possible with great attention to detail. softrock is very suitable to be used in making quotes, headlines, logos, labels, lettering, and packaging. What's Included? Uppercase & Lowercase, Numbers, Punctuation, and Multilingual Support. Thank You
  34. Erler Titling by RMU, $30.00
    Herbert Thannhaeuser’s 1953 titling font Erler-Versalien which was distributed by Typoart in hot-metal times, was carefully redrawn and redesigned. To preserve its handwritten character, irregularities in the letters’ strokes were left as they are. This font spreads best its beauty in book titles, magazines, diplomas, greeting cards or as initials.
  35. Clanton by Monotype, $15.99
    Drawn with marker pens by Rachel Yallop, Clanton is imbued with a sense of simple, casual friendliness, and was created as to evoke handwriting. This solid, naturalistic font is available as a family of light, regular and bold weights, each with subtle natural differences thanks to being hand drawn for each variant.
  36. Zerno by Pepper Type, $25.00
    Zerno is a glyphic typeface with geometric roots. Its symmetrical flared serifs are reminiscent of stone carving techniques. With weights ranging from Thin to Black, it is versatile enough to be used in any environment - from screen to literal stone carving, as well as from posters to body copy that stands out.
  37. WIP Money Maker by WIP Fonts, $49.00
    WIP Money Maker depicts the handwriting of man with verve, strength of purpose and resoluteness. The (lower case) characters are joined as it is usual in German speaking countries. Originally designed in 1995 the font has been extended by a lot of new characters such as accented characters, punctuation, symbols and currency symbols.
  38. Mellin by Greater Albion Typefounders, $7.95
    Mellin takes us to the simple designs of the Streamline era. It is based on heavy vertical strokes with a slight taper. Mellin is offered in a solid form as well as an open outline face, and is ideally suited for posters that aim at the elegant functionality of the 40s and 50s.
  39. Cacko by Edyta Demurat, $29.00
    Cacko has a functional look with an elegant touch. The family is available in 18 weights with complementary italics. Cacko is very readability so is ideally suited for books, magazines, catalogs, posters, invitations as well as web design. Its simplicity with elegance details will also look great in logo, titles and short sentences.
  40. Vettom by Typesketchbook, $55.00
    Vettom is a rounded-geometric typeface made up of 16 fonts across 8 weights. It’s a unique and modern sans typeface, which is well suited for a variety of typographic applications such as headlines and small texts. The Vettom font family supports multiple languages and is available as both webfont and desktop font.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing