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  1. Recta by Canada Type, $24.95
    Recta was one of Aldo Novarese’s earliest contributions to the massive surge of the European sans serif genre that was booming in the middle of the 20th century. Initially published just one year after Neue Haas Grotesk came out of Switzerland and Univers out of France, and at a time when Akzidenz Grotesk and DIN were riding high in Germany and Gill Sans was making waves in Great Britain, it was intended to compete with all of those foundry faces, and later came to be known as the “Italian Helvetica”. It maintains traditional simplicity as its high point of functionality, while showing minimal infusion of humanistic traits. It shows that the construct of the grotesk does not have to be rigid, and can indeed have a touch of Italian flair. While the original Recta family lacked a proper suite of weights and widths, this digital version comes in five weights, corresponding italics, four condensed fonts, and small caps in four weights. It also includes a wide-ranging character set for extended Latin language support.
  2. Intro Script by Fontfabric, $19.00
    Intro Script carries with it ideas of resurgence, renewal and unconditional freedom. An updated and expanded version of the Intro Rust sub-family, itself developed from the popular Intro type system, Script comes with 8 different weights and a whole slew of goodies and additional features for you to tinker with. These consist of 3 supplementary fonts with ready-made words, patterns and even banners, so you can put the spark back into your project. The set includes a large number of ligatures and contextual alternates, including both lower and upper case versions, as well as positional variations. The latter allow for symbols to connect at different joints, and help you dodge unnecessary voids, resulting in an efficient work process and a more natural flow. With its broad language support and wide range of OpenType features, Intro Script’s friendly, hand-crafted appearance makes it a suitable and flexible choice for any design. Features: • An updated and polished version of the famous multifaceted bundle • 8 refined monoline styles; • Extended language support; • Supplementary goodies - words, patterns, banners; • Additional ligatures and contextual alternates; • Stylistic positional variations;
  3. Zauberer by Scriptorium, $24.00
    The Scriptorium got its start in the early days of personal computers with a few font designs for the Commodore 64, and the very first font which we did back then in the early 1980s was a gothic calligraphy font. That style of fonts - the medieval, gothic and black letter genre - has always been the backbone of our collection, but with recent releases we've stayed away from them to introduce a bit more variety. Well, with our new Zauberer font the antique, medieval and gothic look is back with a vengeance. Zauberer isn't a true medieval calligraphy style. It's based on early printed type from Germany which combines calligraphic elements with decorative embellishments from the woodcut printing era. The result is decorative and antique looking and rather appealing. The name comes from the German word for a magician or illusionist.
  4. Arzachel by CAST, $45.00
    Arzachel is a humanistic sanserif with a big x-height and a specific organic look. Its design is scientifically sharp and efficient in small type sizes as well as rugged and dramatic in headlines. Arzachel’s essential feeling comes from several features: all the letters are slightly sloped, stem terminations are flared at the top, and the terminals in letters a, c, e, f… are widening with the inside parts completely flat. The stroke contrast is low in the regular weight while it increases in the black; finally the capitals have an inscriptional flavor. Despite being a sanserif (thus a product of recent typography) Arzachel’s roots stretch back to the Renaissance tradition: Olocco took inspiration from some of the early and rather weird types cut in Venice in the 15th century. Arzachel was conceived during Olocco’s MA in Reading to provide a companion for his Zenon for use in small type sizes. But instead of expanding the Zenon family with optical sizes, the designer decided on a sans with its own personality rather than a sanserif version of Zenon with chopped-off serifs.
  5. Sonny Gothic Vol 2 by W Type Foundry, $25.00
    Sonny Gothic Vol 2 is an extension of our popular font Sonny Gothic. All corners have been softened to get a friendlier and fluffy visual language. As Sonny Gothic, this typeface has ligatures inspired by the incredible work of Herb Lubalin, chiefly Avant Garde. We designed carefully Sonny’s Vol 2 ligatures, and we also created new ones to control the whites formed between softened characters such as FL, FB, FD, FE, FF, FH, FI, FK, FN, and FR. Developed with powerful OpenType features in mind. Each weight includes alternate characters, ligatures, fractions, special numbers, arrows, extended language support, small caps, and many more. Perfectly suited for graphic design advertising.
  6. Ritafurey by Device, $39.00
    Ritafurey is an extended sans in seven weights, with characteristic low bowls on the P and R. Modern, sleek and corporate, but with a dash of character. It has been used on tech logos, summer blockbuster movies and Playstation skateboarding games. This new version reinstates the original Unicase versions of the M and N (available through the Glyph palette or Opentype options), adds extensive international character support, redrawn and respaced glyphs, a new Regular weight for better weight flow distribution, and many other additional glyphs. (Note the the new weights differ slightly from the old of the same name, so may change the appearance of existing files.)
  7. Signque by dayflash, $31.99
    Signque is a contemporary sans serif typeface based on geometric shapes. The persistent tension between precise lines and accurate curves as well as the ongoing contrast between open and closed contours constitute the main characteristics of this fresh and modern font family. While unconventional letterforms make up signque’s distinctive appearance, extended widths, tall x-heights and clear shapes provide good legibility and nice readability. With its unique look and feel, signque will perform outstanding for headlines as well as for almost any other type of analogue and digital application. The signque font family comes in nine weights and includes unique letterforms as well as extensive ligatures, fractions, and figures.
  8. Brag Pro by Eclectotype, $36.00
    The now discontinued Brag & Brag Stencil are hereby available as Pro fonts, with an extended character set (Latin Extended A) and Oldstyle figures. All features of the original fonts are still there, but now you can talk with Brag's signature bold look in many more European languages.
  9. Destrod by Tanya Savchenko, $11.00
    Destrod is a modern techno sans serif font. Its futuristic and minimalist style makes it incredibly suitable for all your projects that need a sci-fi touch. Uppercase letters with alternate characters in lower case. Included: Latin base and extended. Cyrillic base and extended. Multilingual support.
  10. Yoshida Sans by TypeUnion, $29.00
    Yoshida is a modern sans serif made up of 2 widths, 8 weights and their matching italics offering an array of uses and applications with it’s 32 styles. The weights range from a delicate Thin, to a punchy Black that is perfect for branding or headlines. The curvaceous characters create a fun, fluid feel whilst keeping a modern, balanced look and structure. The font has extensive language support making it perfect for large corporations or small start ups. Yoshida also has several ligatures to enhance it’s visual appeal. Yoshida is a versatile font suitable for many applications such as web, print, branding and anything else that takes your fancy.
  11. Lucida Grande by Monotype, $50.99
    Lucida Grande is a humanist sans serif font with a large x-height, clear letterforms, and space-saving economy. Its easy reading qualities make it legible for printing and screen displays even down to small sizes. Lucida Grande is part of the Lucida superfamily of fonts from Bigelow & Holmes. Lucida is highly regarded for legibility and its extensive range of type styles. The Lucida Grande family has eight fonts with weights from Thin to Black with matching italics. Each font has 674 glyphs and supports the W1G character set. This includes Latin, Greek and Cyrillic alphabets to support many languages in Europe, the Americas, and worldwide.
  12. Artisual Deco by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Inspired by 1920's Art Deco, Artisual Deco is a 2020's celebration dedicated to the hundred-year-old history of geometric design. This retro typeface will be the perfect fit for your logo designs or graphic project. Drawn, created and published in 2021, the typeface has vintage letterforms with a classy personality. Artisual Deco contains ten high-quality styles: Thin, Light, Regular, Bold and Black with each weight provided as Upright and Italic. It has extensive lingual support, covering all Latin-based languages, from North Europa to South Africa, from America to South-East Asia. It contains all characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  13. Jantur Type by Lemon Studio Type, $12.00
    Jantur Type is a simple geometric sans family with charming curves and natural flow. variable font technology, and its axis weight range spreads from thin to black forms. Flexible and adaptable, it is 100% Latin Plus, Supporting 219 Latin-based languages, which are spoken in different 212 countries. This font is suitable for any project. Great for graphic design and any display use. It can easily work for web, signage, corporate as well as editorial designs. Jantur Type has 9 weights with a total of 9 styles. and legibility makes it suitable for any kind of text application, from brand design to extensive text layouts.
  14. Ashbury by Hoftype, $49.00
    Ashbury derives its inspiration from 18th century transitional types such as Caslon and Baskerville. It is, however, not a revival but interprets formal aspects in a new and individual fashion. With a flowing outline, it remains warm and pleasant but assertive because of its solid stroke weights. It is very well equipped for a wide range of ambitious applications. Ashbury comes in ten styles, in OpenType format, and with extended language support for more than 40 languages. All weights contain small caps, swash capitals, standard and discretional ligatures, proportional lining figures, tabular lining figures, proportional old style figures, tabular old style figures, matching currency symbols, fractions, and scientific numerals.
  15. ITC Deli by ITC, $29.99
    Jim Spiece has a taste and a talent for reviving type styles from earlier in this century. ITC Deli Supreme is a “futuristic retro” face that would be at home as a logo on a car or a roadside diner from the 1940s or '50s; the lowercase nearly joins, in script style, thanks to the long extenders stretching out from the bottom-right corner of most letters, while the caps have beginning strokes leading in from the top left. ITC Deli Supreme, like ITC Deli Deluxe, features slightly rounded corners on all the letters, for a soft, streamlined look despite the squareness of the letterforms.
  16. Wardshus Calligraphy by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Wardshus Calligraphy is a unique blend of medieval gothic style and modern script, creating a distinctive and eye-catching blackletter font. The heavy, hand-drawn design brings an air of the Middle Ages to your projects, making it perfect for logos, posters, rock or hip-hop music album covers, and other display purposes that require a cool and striking touch. The beautiful cursive elements add a touch of elegance to the font, while the bold strokes and intricate details give it a strong presence. Wardshus Calligraphy is a testament to the rich artistic history of the past, reimagined for contemporary design projects. Use # after any letter to make a crown. Example: Que#en Use underscore _ anywhere to make a swash. Example: Kingdom_Heroes Use multiple underscores to make underlines of different lengths. Example: Knig___hters The Wardshus Calligraphy font family includes nine high-quality styles to suit various design needs: Regular: A well-balanced, classic blackletter script style. Regular Upright: Adds a more controlled, vertical look to the regular style. Regular Italic: Combines the balance of regular with a touch of expressiveness. Bold: A stronger, more assertive version of the script for impactful designs. Bold Upright: Merges the boldness of the bold style with the structure of upright. Bold Italic: A dynamic fusion of the bold style and the energy of italic. Black: The heaviest, most powerful iteration of the blackletter script. Black Upright: Combines the weight of the black style with the upright structure. Black Italic: Adds expressiveness and flair to the intense black style. Built with advanced OpenType functionality, Wardshus Calligraphy ensures top-notch quality and provides you with full control and customizability. It includes stylistic and contextual alternates, ligatures, and other features to make your designs truly unique. It has extensive lingual support, covering all Latin-based languages, from Northern Europe to South Africa, from America to South-East Asia. It contains all characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  17. Smart Casual by Scholtz Fonts, $21.00
    The name "Smart Casual" says it all. This is the font to use when you want to create that smart impression without being too formal. It is based on the font "Black Tie" but it is less formal than "Black Tie". It conveys an impression of relaxed elegance without being either sloppy or too intimate. Smart Casual is ideal for invitations to stylish but relaxed events, for advertisements that are intended to create that special ambience, for posters and for announcements. Smart Casual has a full character set and has been carefully letter-spaced and kerned. It comes in two styles: Baseline and Staggered. In "Baseline" all characters refer to the same baseline (the lower part of the characters are in line), while in "Staggered" the capitals are placed lower than the lower case characters, creating a slightly more dramatic, yet formal and retro look.
  18. Techstencil by Stereo Type Haus, $20.00
    A futuristic stencil typeface characterized by its extended forms and rounded terminals.
  19. Zchok MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    A unique serif font with extended edges for logo's, headlines and signage.
  20. Ultra Pro by Stiggy & Sands, $29.00
    Our Ultra Pro is an ultra bold slab typeface with nods to wood type styles like Clarendon and Egyptian. Its powerful and dramatic letterforms are both serious in form but friendly in appearance yet it is still easily legible. Perfect for power headlines and titling for impact, the SmallCaps and extensive figure sets only work to further expand the usefulness of the typeface across a wider gamut of design options.
  21. Santini by Canada Type, $25.00
    Santini began as an experiment in mixing historical art deco, art nouveau, arts and crafts, and to a lesser extent Bauhaus sources. Surprised at the pleasant outcome of the experiment, we expanded it to become three weights, and included some alternates within the fonts themselves. Santini is an excellent choice for art- and architecture-related design, where the message needs to be conveyed in a clear yet sturdy and modern fashion.
  22. Uncial Antiqua Pro by Stiggy & Sands, $29.00
    Uncial Antiqua Pro is a hybrid type combining the styles of Uncial & Half Uncial letterforms in a formal text form. Signature letterforms to the styles are not sacrificed, yet readability is surprisingly maintained. The SmallCaps and extensive figure sets expand the range of usability & appeal. Opentype features include: - SmallCaps. - Full set of Inferiors/Superiors for limitless fractions. - Tabular, Proportional, and Oldstyle figures. - Stylistic Alts for Caps to SmallCaps conversion.
  23. Vivala Unicase by Johannes Hoffmann, $15.00
    Vivala Unicase is a modern, rounded linear grotesque that is easy to read even in small font sizes. The composition of uppercase and lowercase letters results in a unique typeface. The new version contains five weights, including a boldface, which greatly expands the design possibilities. With an extensive set of characters and symbols, it is ideal for posters, t-shirt design, promotional products, car design, labeling, trademarks and headlines.
  24. FF Sanuk Big by FontFont, $57.99
    FF Sanuk Big is a clean and crisply drawn headline typeface intended for high legibility with a distinct character. Compared to the regular version, FF Sanuk Big has an extensively high x-height—with shorter ascenders and descenders. The tight spacing makes it perfect for big and powerful headlines. The family consists of 16 styles in total, including a wide range of weights and up-to-date OpenType features.
  25. Luckiest Guy Pro by Stiggy & Sands, $29.00
    Our Luckiest Guy Pro was inspired by hand-lettering by vintage 1950’s advertisements. The uber-bold unicase letterforms exude charm and light-heartedness, while the SmallCaps and extensive figure sets expand the range of usability and appeal. 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.
  26. Supercard by Alphabet Agency, $15.00
    Supercard's creation is inspired by traditional athletic block lettering often only seem in uppercase form Supercard font family has captured the blue collar feel and expanded the range of this traditional look in six different weights all with uppercase, lowercase, numbers, punctuation and simple Latin international characters. The versatility of the different font weights allows for broader and fresh design possibilities in your work.
  27. Monoplan by Plantype, $30.00
    Monoplan is a versatile monospaced sans serif typeface. Minimal shapes and straight sides are definitive features of the typeface. Tables, headers, code blocks, signages or other small informative texts are the standard places where Monoplan shines. Different alternatives such as square dots, alternate /a /y /6 /9, coverage of 94 Latin languages, various Opentype features, and 5 styles expand the usage area of ​​Monoplan.
  28. Textus Receptus by Lascaris, $60.00
    Textus Receptus is a historical revival based on the Roman and Greek types used by Johann Bebel (and later also Michael Isengrin) in Basel in the 1520s. The Roman is a low-contrast medium-to-heavy Venetian reminiscent of Jenson or Golden Type. The unusual polytonic Greek, not previously digitized, is lighter in weight and supplied with all the ligatures and variants of the original. Yet when used without historial forms the Greek has a surprisingly contemporary feel: it’s quirky and playful as a display face, but still easily legible in running text. Bebel’s Greek extended and refined the one used for the first printed Greek New Testament, Desiderius Erasmus’ Novum Instrumentum Omne, published in Basel in 1516 by Johann Froben. The name of the font was chosen in honor of this edition, which was so influential that it was later called the Textus Receptus (the “received text”), serving as the basis for Luther’s German Bible in 1522 and much subsequent scholarship for over 300 years. Following 16th century practice, Textus Receptus contains 130 ligatures and stylistic alternates for Greek, accessible either with OpenType features or with five stylistic sets. The Greek capitals, often printed bare in early editions, have been equipped with accents and breathings for proper polytonic or monotonic typesetting. The Roman includes both standard and historical ligatures along with the abbreviations and diacritics typically employed in early printed Latin. For expanded language coverage it has the entire unicode Latin Extended‑A range and part of Latin Extended-B. The capital A is surmounted by a horizontal stroke, as in some 16th century Italian designs, and the hyphen and question mark have both modern and historical form variants. Mark-to-base positioning correctly renders fifty combining diacritics, and with mark-to-mark positioning the most common diacritics may be stacked, permitting, for example, accents and breathings on top of length-marked vowels. Numerals include old-style, proportional lining and tabular lining. For further details, please download the 31-page Textus Receptus User Guide.
  29. Alien Alphabet by ParaType, $25.00
    Alien Alphabet is inspired by the ideas of change, transformation, creative deconstruction and mutual penetration of various cultures, languages, and opposing cognitive systems, which seem to be prevalent in our 'globalized' civilization. It appears as various visual constructs -- archetypal symbolism, pieces of the world alphabets, socio-cultural icons, mathematical formulae, etc., -- broke down into pieces and were reassembled in a way that carried traces of previous meanings. However, this contradictory mutation invokes enigmatic meanings and emotions begging for further definition and interpretation. Alien Alphabet shapes arranged in linear sequential manner tend to evoke a sense of written language. The fact that a message cannot be understood does not really change its emotional appeal. Moreover, the less message can be deciphered, the more seems to be the appeal -- for it triggers our imagination. In fact, we may not want to know the actual meaning because deep inside we are afraid that this might be just another alien dry-cleaning receipt.
  30. Craft Roman by Baseline Fonts, $24.00
    From scrapbooking to intensive graphic design applications, Craft Roman is a wonderful choice for charming and lighthearted communications. Craft Roman is based on Speedball and signpainter books from the 1920s and 30s, and reminiscient of the style of some of the lettering accompanying Mary Engelbreit artwork. Craft Roman is perfect for capturing the feel of vintage posters and retro stylings dating back to simpler times or handworked arts & crafts projects- even elementary school and childhood art. Extended character sets and intensive kerning provide foreign language support for many regions, plus bonus glyphs for quick stylistic flair.
  31. Cardillac by Hoftype, $49.00
    Cardillac, named after E.T.A. Hoffmann’s literary figure, refers back to classical Didonesque, yet presents unique details which set it apart from historic models by adding a new flavour. Its clarity, noble appearance and cool elegance predestine it for magazines and newspapers. The Cardillac Family consists of 14 styles, provides many features which allow its application for ambitious typography. It comes in OpenType format with extended language support. All weights contain small caps, ligatures, superior characters, proportional lining figures, tabular lining figures, proportional old style figures, lining old style figures, matching currency symbols, fraction- and scientific numerals, matching arrows and alternate characters.
  32. Vonnes by Font Bureau, $40.00
    Vonnes was designed by David Berlow working closely with Neville Brody on corporate redesign for Jim Von Ehre at Macromedia. Core weights are loosely based on Bauer’s Venus, 1907–1910. Berlow expanded the ideas behind the series to 56 fonts, the heart of the redesign. The Macromedia program was hailed as one of the most successful models of modern total design for innovative cutting edge companies; FB 2007
  33. Tuff by Stone Type Foundry, $49.00
    Tuff began with Magma. Set as text, they appear to be similar and are quite comfortable as typographic companions. The child-safe softness of Tuff owes something to the letterforms of the earliest extant Greek Manuscript, The Persae by Timotheos in the 4th Century BC. It is beholden to Morris Fuller Benton's original Souvenir, and its revival by Ed Benguiat. My own Stone Informal was also an influence.
  34. Benton Modern by Font Bureau, $40.00
    Benton Modern was first prepared as a text face by Font Bureau for the Boston Globe and the Detroit Free Press. Design and proportions were taken from Morris Fuller Benton’s turn-of-the-century Century Expanded, drawn for ATF, faithfully reviving this epoch-making magazine and news text roman. The italic was based on Century Schoolbook. These display cuttings were prepared by Dyana Weissman and Richard Lipton; FB 2008
  35. Burt by Renegade Fonts, $35.00
    Burt is extended grotesk with condensed uppercase. Its combines modern bauhaus features with old grotesk details. And the X, what a banger! Well it actually is. That what gave the font name - buřt = sausage. Full Latin extended A support, many features, stylistic sets and alternates. All together 9 styles.
  36. Ebura by preussTYPE, $25.00
    Ebura is a funny and fashionable sansserif (or semi-serif?) type. Extended Latin, extended figures and SmallCaps are supported in OpenType. OpenType features: Ebura contains 740 Glyhps Standard Ligatures Discretionary Ligatures Denominators Ordinals Scientific Features Superscript Slashed Zero Small Capitals Old Style & Lining Figures Proportional Numerals & Tabular Figures
  37. Diegeometrische by Michael Browers, $25.00
    Diegeometrische is an all uppercase geometric-based serif typeface featuring Latin, Extended Latin and Cyrillic character sets. - Latin, Extended Latin and Cyrillic character sets offer multilingual support. - Over 1000 kerning pairs for optimal letter spacing. - Unique combination of serif, geometric, and stencil design elements provides a distinct design.
  38. Juvelith by Keristyper Studio, $14.00
    Proudly present Juvelith a modern black letter font inspired by contemporary design and calls back to Old English Gothic Scriptures. This font is good for logo design, Social media, Movie Titles, Books Titles, short text even long text letters, and good for your secondary text font with sans or serif. **Featured:** * Standard Uppercase & Lowercase * Numeral & Punctuation * Multilingual : ä ö ü Ä Ö Ü ß ¿ ¡ * Alternate & Ligature * PUA encoded We recommend programs that support the OpenType feature and the Glyphs panel such as Adobe applications or Corel Draw. so you can use all the variations of the glyphs. Hope you enjoy our fonts!
  39. Bucintoro by Three Islands Press, $24.00
    Bucintoro is a modern version of the rotunda blackletter, the Gothic book hand of Italy and Spain in the 14th, 15th, and 16th centuries. As the name implies, it's more "rotund" than the tall, angular Textur blackletter used in Germany that Gutenberg imitated. While the use of blackletter continued far into the 20th century in Germany and Scandinavia, the rotunda gave way to roman (and later also italic) letterforms in Italy, France, and Spain. It's less well known these days. Bucintoro has upper- and lowercase alphabets, numerals, punctuation, diacritics but lacks such modern characters as currency symbols. Has light, medium, and black weights.
  40. Espinosa Nova by Estudio CH, $-
    Espinosa Nova is a revival based on the types used by Antonio de Espinosa, the most important Mexican printer of the sixteenth century and very probably the first punchcutter anywhere in the American continent (1551). In 2010, its main fonts were awarded two certificates of excellence: one by TDC2 (Type Directors Club Typeface Design Competition), one by Tipos Latinos (Biennial of Latin American Typography). According to Robert Bringhurst, it is “an unusually intelligent family of type, reaching back to one of the most exciting moments in typographic history and reaching forward to the typographic future”. All of the fonts intended for setting text include small caps, five sets of figures (oldstyle and lining, both proportional and tabular, plus tabular small caps), many f and long s ligatures, and capital sharp S (U+1E9E). In addition, the Capitular fonts allow to create interesting effects by overlapping layers. This family feels very comfortable in books, but it can be used everywhere a touch of classic & elegance is required.
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