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  1. Guinevere Pro by Canada Type, $29.95
    Guinevere Pro is a typeface designed by Icelandic art director Sigurdur Armannsson. It started in 2001 as simple hand-drawn sketches of a few letters built from modules, then became an experiment with four goals: - Construct an original alphabet from a specific set of predetermined modules. - See how certain letter forms built without said modules would behave within the totality of the module-constructed alphabet. - See if certain letters would actually enforce their own shapes to be drawn a certain way within the totality of the typeface. Likewise, see if the totality of the alphabet demands that individual letters be drawn in a specific way, and if so, how much room for variation would there be? - See how all of the above reacts/changes to implementing the alphabet across different weights. The experiment was finessed and re-worked over many years of technology changes, and Guinevere Pro is the final outcome, ten years later. The Guinevere Pro set is four cross-platform Open Type fonts, with built-in small caps, alternates, ligatures, and support for a wide range of Latin-based languages.
  2. Zierde Grotesk by Lewis McGuffie Type, $35.00
    Zierde is a take on early advertising, small-copy grotesks of the late 19th/early 20th century, and is largely inspired by Miller & Richard’s own range of Grotesques. More importantly, Zierde is accompanied by a large set of ornaments (+200) which hark back to the look-and-feel of the early-modernist arts and crafts movement. The ornaments in, and presentation of, Zierde owe much credit to J.G Schelter & Giesecke’s 1913 type specimen book ‘Die Zierde’. The strong functional uppercase sans-serifs alongside luscious, beautiful patterns in ‘Die Zierde’ make for beautiful combinations. This early-modernist use of grotesk alongside ornament looks bizarre in the eyes of us used to seeing sans-serifs in more formal, sterile settings. The face itself retains some historical flourishes such as the eccentric leaning angle of the italics, the long cross-bar on the ‘G’, the gammy-leg of the ‘R’, a strange ampersand and some irregular terminals across the weights. Zierde is display face meant for headlines, titles, short-copy, labels and logos. It comes in caps and small caps, Latin and Cyrillic.
  3. Burning Hammer by Putracetol, $28.00
    Burning Hammer is a fire display font. This font is inspired by the fire flame shape. There is a version of fire that has sparks on it and there is also one that doesn't, it becomes an alternate character in this font. In addition, this font also has a ligature that makes the fire impression of this font more real. With these variations, it will make it easier for you to create creativity for your project. Burning Hammer would be perfect for branding, logo, product, title, quotes, doodle, comic, books, greeting cards, toys, posters, baby clothing, picture books, etc.
  4. Space Deco JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Hand lettering used on the packaging of a space-themed rubber stamp toy set is the basis for Space Deco JNL. Blending the classic thick-and-thin line weights of the Art Deco style with sharply angled cross strokes evoked a sense of movement and "future" in this unique lettering design.
  5. Naive Sans by S&C Type, $8.00
    Naïve Sans is a sans serif handwritten font designed by Fanny Coulez and Julien Saurin in Paris. Our goal was to draw a font with finely irregular lines that give a human and whimsical feeling. We drew five finely balanced weights to assure a good readability whatever the size, with contrasting upstrokes and downstrokes to add an unusual, fancy touch. We also designed five shaked versions with different lowercases and uppercases, to improve your designs and bring a more organic and playful feeling. Mixed or not, both styles can be used for various purposes, such as headings, logos, posters, wedding invitations... This font is part of our Naïve superfamily that contains lot of variations: Line, Inline, Serif, Sans Serif, and a special Art Deco one. Just click on our foundry name to see them all! We hope you will enjoy our work. Merci beaucoup!
  6. Cry Uncial - Unknown license
  7. Doodlebirds by Greater Albion Typefounders, $5.95
    Here's a bit of fun! Need a dingbat with character? Let these birds strut their hand-drawn way across your work.
  8. Archipelago - Unknown license
  9. Mono Spec Stencil by Halbfett, $30.00
    Mono-Spec Stencil is a monospaced family of sans-serif type. At least in default settings, all characters across the typeface share a common width, which is immediately noticeable for its condensed nature. Mono-Spec Stencil is a sibling of a non-stencil family, simply named Mono-Spec. Characters in each are just as wide, allowing Mono-Spec Stencil to be used together with Mono-Spec, as a secondary typeface. As a typeface whose characters are stencil-shaped, this design channels the spirit of resistance and street culture. When you look at the family, remember that it ships in two different formats. Depending on your preference, you can install the typeface as a single Variable Font or use the family’s five static OpenType font files instead. Those weights run from Light through Bold. While the static-format fonts offer a good intermediary-step selection, users who install the Variable Font have vastly greater control over their text’s stroke width. The Mono-Spec Stencil Variable Font’s weight axis allows users to differentiate between almost 1,000 possible font weights. That enables you to fine-tune your text’s exact appearance on-screen or in print. Whatever format you choose, the Mono-Spec Stencil fonts are equipped with several OpenType features. The most striking of these can be activated via a Stylistic Set. That will replace several letters – like “B”, “E”, “F”, “H”, and “I” with double-width alternates. Those alternates take up as much space as two characters placed next to each other otherwise word. The effect of Mono-Spec Stencil’s double-width alternates is striking, and their use strikes a strong chord in any display typography applying them.
  10. Stina by profonts, $41.99
    profonts Stina is an cursive font based on cross stitch pattern. It can be used in (very) tall letters but it also keeps legible in smaller sizes. Because of its joined letter pairs and ligatures it keeps the flow of a "handwritten" cursive font. So, you ever felt like stitching? - Start today.
  11. XXII Daemon by Doubletwo Studios, $25.99
    The Daemon is the cheap alternative for you to easy create a logo for your band or whatever. It comes with a basic characterset and a little bunch of symbols and signs often used in the extreme music sector – classical stuff from Death- and Blackmetal like pentagrams and crosses, drips, roots and branches.
  12. Hypotermia by Arendxstudio, $18.00
    Hypotermia is very stylistic so you can easily create a logo for your band or whatever. It comes with basic characters and a group of symbols and signs that are often used in the extreme music sector - classic items from Death- and Blackmetal such as pentagrams and crosses, droplets, roots and branches.
  13. Sylar by The Northern Block, $16.70
    A linear modern typeface suited for branding & advertising projects. The variations in weight give great contrast when used across body copy & headlines.
  14. Novaletra Serif CF by Connary Fagen, $35.00
    Legibility. Flexibility. Personality. No need to pick two; Novaletra Serif CF has it all. Liven up body text, captions, and headlines with Novaletra’s smooth, low-contrast design set across seven weights with italics. Versatile and easy to read at any size, Novaletra includes useful features like wide language support across Latin and Cyrillic scripts, international currency symbols, fractions, tabular numbers, and more. Includes lifetime updates, technical support and feature additions.
  15. Slim Pro by WAP Type, $25.00
    This font is stylish, clean, clear, firm and still looks luxurious. Slim Pro is a fine and all round sans serif font. No matter the topic, this font will be a genuine asset to your fonts’ library, as it has the potential to elevate any creation. Slim Pro is a modern and futuristic sans serif font. The combination of futuristic and geometric elements renders a modern design.
  16. Combust by Typefactory, $14.00
    Combust is a modern playful display font with fire. The font is thick so it can still be read even if there is a burning fire, suitable for various purposes, poster design, for video game or movie titles, or promotions on social media.
  17. Print Damosel JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Kevin Curtis runs a site called Damosel's Printer's Blocks, specializing in rare an unusual examples from the years when letterpress was the main source of printed material. He graciously provided the source material for Print Damosel JNL. The collected images represent a varied cross-section of ornamentation, embellishments, attention getters, decorations and whimsical illustrations.
  18. Ames' Shaded by Greater Albion Typefounders, $16.00
    Ames’ Shaded is one of three display typefaces designed to complement the Ames’ Roman and Ames’ Text typeface families. Ames’ Shaded has that semi-industrial feel that somehow is evoked by diagonal cross-hatching. Delightful for use on its own of with the families mentioned. A delightful introduction to the Ames’ ‘Super’ typeface family.
  19. Brushwork by Celebrity Fontz, $24.99
    Brushwork is a free-flowing brush font that combines a modern aesthetic with a very unique style. Some have suggested that Brushwork looks like a cross between Roman and Japanese characters but most agree it evokes total freedom of expression. Includes a full set of accented characters to accommodate most of the Romance languages.
  20. Upperclass by Enrich Design, $24.95
    Upperclass was a font I created back in 1995. I had a brainstorm about the uppercase letter “A”. I noticed that the cross bar for the letter A is always toward the bottom, what if I moved it toward the top. The result is a unique font, a great addition to your font collection.
  21. ShirlyUJest by Ingrimayne Type, $9.95
    The letters of ShirlyUJest have serifs that have gone wild, crossing over themselves, giving them the look of overgrown vegetation. It is weird and bizarre and out of control; the name says it all. It is caps-only with the lower-case keys containing the glyphs identical to those on the upper-case keys.
  22. Promethian by insigne, $19.99
    Dynamic, strong and athletic. Promethian brings fire to your designs.
  23. Martian Hull Markings - Unknown license
  24. Great Western by FontMesa, $22.00
    Great Western is an engraved roman font that reminds you of the old railroad days when steam locomotives made their way across the countryside.
  25. Honeydrop by insigne, $17.00
    Honeydrop is a script that mimics the action of a heavily-laden inky pointed brush, dancing across the page . Designed by Jeremy Dooley, its unique form is great for branding and packaging, especially for all-natural food items. The typeface also has a bit of Eastern flavor to it. Five different distressed variants make Honeydrop stand out. Its many alternatives help to advance your project. These variants allow you to change the final character of the lowercase letters. Besides, there are ligatures that extend the natural writing feel. Opentype override options round out the fonts, including random replacements to create a unique look and feel; each time you use the font you get a unique result. Each font has sixty five alternate characters. Also included are many unique textures that help the typeface adapt to different situations; you will find them of great use. Grab the extra sweet and flavorful typeface Honeydrop today.
  26. Remsen Script by Three Islands Press, $39.00
    The 1765 Stamp Act ignited in American colonists a simmering distrust of the distant British Parliament, whose oppressive trade duties they deemed unfair assaults on their rights as English subjects. Before long, of course, this little dustup spawned The Boston Tea Party, the American Revolution, and the birth of the U. S. of A. But before the Battles of Lexington and Concord, a group of Philadelphia merchants made one last-ditch call for commercial cooperation across the Atlantic. This futile appeal survives to this day on a three-page broadside, finely engrossed by a penman of the period and passed down through the generations of a family named Remsen. Remsen Script is an interpretation of that penman’s neat, formal cursive—from its broad antique flourishes to its subtle unevenness and gently ragged strokes. Perfect for event announcements, fine product packaging, recreations of historical documents, or anywhere you wish to offer a whiff of a bygone era.
  27. Uptown Line JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Ask any typical New Yorker about subway directions and they'll tell you to take the "uptown line", "downtown line" or "cross-town line". Uptown Line JNL is yet another variation of the Art Deco monoline style of lettering prevalent during the 1930s and 1940s, and is based on titling from vintage sheet music for a Johann Strauss classical piece.
  28. Dance and Sing JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A 1932 fan magazine from Spain entitled “Films Selectos” (“Select Films”) had those words hand lettered in a decorative Art Deco type style that was a cross between the “Futura Black” style of stencil influenced display lettering and “Fiesta” lettering. This hybrid design is now available digitally as Dance and Sing JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  29. Graveyard Smash by Comicraft, $19.00
    Tombstones tumble as the night shift begins; as bloodsucking bats turn into pale predators and the undead reach through the dirt that covers their coffins to crush and destroy those who dare cross the cemetery path... Finally there emerges a cold cast of creepy characters, a macabre cadre of lurid letters we had to call… GRAVEYARD SMASH.
  30. Acton by Device, $29.00
    Acton is a deceptively simple, grid-based design. Though derived from a 2 by 3 arrangement of blocks, it uses white spaces to allow for more complex shapes – for example as the R – where the underlying 3 by 5 arrangement is apparent. It also departs from this strict grid-based logic for characters such as the the T, L, f and r, whose cross-bars are shorter than they would otherwise be in order to promote optical evenness. No elegant solution could be found for the V, which in geometric fonts can appear very similar to the U, lacking as it does the cross-bar that can differentiate a square A from the capital form of the n. However, the resultant diagonal retroactively proved useful on the lower-case e and a, characters that otherwise would have more uninteresting design solutions.
  31. Punkinhead - Unknown license
  32. Ammurapi by Proportional Lime, $5.99
    Ammurapi was the last king of Ugarit, which was destroyed circa 1200 B.C. Back then all writing was done by hand and all that has been preserved is on clay tablets many of which were fired in the very destruction of the cities that enabled these documents to withstand the rvages of time. Ugarit unlike the other cuneiform scripts has a very limited number of glyphs. It is somehow exotically attractive. This font has been encoded in the appropriate unicode block to permit ease of use for scholarly purposes, but would also make a fine use as a decorative element.
  33. OregonDry - Unknown license
  34. Da Bronx Sans by Good Gravy Type Co, $9.00
    DaBronx is an downright nifty condensed grotesque font family. It comes with 12 righteous weights. DaBronx is ready for a wide range of uses. It would look great scrolling across a screen and would give extra presence to titles and headlines in a number of different applications. DaBronx is like a finely tailored suit for your content, upright, spiffy and slick. It has been painstakingly tweaked to perfection in the Good Gravy lab to make it so easy on the eyes. It looks stellar in an ad campaign, logo design, apparel, or anything else that requires a sleek modern look. DaBronx would pair well with Koozie Script, another one-of-a-kind Good Gravy font!
  35. Cock Boat - Unknown license
  36. Rounded Block Display by NDS Fonts, $15.00
    Rounded Block Display is a blocky san serif font perfect for headlines. Its clean facade and easy readability make this a great font to get your message across.
  37. Eccentric by Monotype, $29.99
    Eccentric was designed in 1881 by Gustav F. Schroeder. It is an all-capital, narrow-bodied, monoline display face that could be described as high waisted. With cross-bars and main junctures more than halfway up the letterforms, every letter - except the W - has a long-legged appearance. Eccentric has a wide range of display uses, from playbills to fashion advertisements.
  38. Nouveau Display JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Vintage sheet music for the 1920s song "Where Did Robinson Crusoe Go with Friday on Saturday Night?" yielded the hand lettered Art Nouveau alphabet for Nouveau Display JNL. Because the Art Nouveau movement was so influential in the graphic designs of the 1960s "Love Generation" counter culture, this typeface blends itself well with projects crossing many decades and varying styles.
  39. Stitch Warrior by Roland Hüse Design, $19.00
    Stitch Warrior is a a gothic style stitch font. It's made of cross stitches ("x") even the kerning - the distance between the letter pairs varies between 1, 2 or 3 stitches distance. I was trying to be as accurate and close to reality as possible. It can be pefectly used for stitch lettering or text pattern to create visual effects.
  40. Gracious Azaleas by Intellecta Design, $15.50
    Gracious Azaleas, the flourished ornaments typeface, was designed entirely by hand, without use of auto-tracing, by Iza W. Its well elaborated and unusual design was inspired by old cross-stitch and craft books. Good to use in arts and crafts works, books of arts, stationery, publishing stuff and many other applications. Another recherché masterpiece by Iza W from Intellecta Design.
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