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  1. Janda Sparkle And Shine by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    This font is studded with sparkles but is still completely readable. Perfect for the holidays or for anything requiring a touch of glitz!
  2. Continental Gothic JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Continental Gothic JNL is elegant and sophisticated... perfect for an Art Deco project needing a font that is not too bold or overpowering.
  3. Tuscan Italian Round by Wooden Type Fonts, $20.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century, for large display. Lowercase not designed for this type.
  4. No Parking JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    No Parking JNL was inspired by a hand-cut stencil of those words painted in an area of a department store's parking lot.
  5. Sea by Luke Thompson, $30.00
    Sea is a versatile sans serif font that works well in a variety of sizes and applications. It's friendly, but robust and professional.
  6. Kabuk MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    This is a wild and vivid choice when you want to effortlessly make your designs stand out with a remarkable clearly crafted handwriting.
  7. Ongunkan Greek Athen by Runic World Tamgacı, $45.00
    It is the athenian version of the ancient Greek script. Ancient Greek numerals are included. It's not Unicode, it's a Latin based font.
  8. Deco Pimp by Hanoded, $15.00
    Deco Pimp is a trashy, handwritten font with a deco-look to it. It has some unusual letters, but is very legible nonetheless.
  9. Fabrics - Personal use only
  10. Fleet Street - Unknown license
  11. BudHand - Unknown license
  12. Aklatanic TSO - Unknown license
  13. Brooklyn Kid - Unknown license
  14. Angryblue Controlled - Unknown license
  15. Strike Swiss - Unknown license
  16. Achtung Baby by Comicraft, $19.00
    Pull up your Jackboots and check out this Teutonic title font designed by Richard Starkings for Rob Liefeld's controversial relaunch of Marvel's CAPTAIN AMERICA.
  17. Exphany by Danil Reyman, $12.00
    The font is made in the direction of Tribal aesthetics. He is restrained, but at the same time very cityistic, has an aggressive mood.
  18. Exablock by Scannerlicker, $22.00
    Exablock is a display typeface based on a 6x6 grid, highly modular and geometric. Diacritics appear as negative space cut into the glyph form.
  19. Ankle by VType, $8.00
    An elegant sans serif typeface with style. Fashionable, classy but still modern! Designed and shared by Vikers | RerdSystems. Perfect for logos, posters and more.
  20. Odditype JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Odditype is a font that surely lives up to its name... Odd, quirky, techno...yet not. Its use is as broad as your imagination.
  21. Butti by RMU, $25.00
    In 1951 Alessandro Butti cut a fontfamily for Nebiolo which he called Fluidum. Both weights, light and bold, were now revived and named Butti.
  22. Capstan by Studio K, $45.00
    Bold yet distinctive, Capstan is a stand out slab serif ideal for signage, headlines, branding and other applications intended to convey strength and character
  23. Andron Freefont by SIAS, $-
    Try out one of the most distinguished text faces for free! Andron is a new design inspired by the best of classical Roman typefaces.
  24. Stripwriter by Typotheticals, $10.00
    Stripwriter is a comic style font that has a multitude of uses. While not an original idea, this style of font is always useful.
  25. Eight by Zang-O-Fonts, $25.00
    Eight was desinged to be heavily geometric. The main lines were intended to be entirely comprised of lines of eight different but set angles.
  26. Elamar MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    This font is a vivid choice when you want to effortlessly make your designs stand out with a remarkable clearly crafted and dynamic handwriting.
  27. Laughin by GroupType, $19.00
    Designed by Andrew Smith this bouncy and playful headline font does not take itself seriously. Perfect for headlines, children's books or on the web.
  28. Illinoise by Just in Type, $18.00
    Illinoise is a mutation of one of the most beautiful screen fonts ever. But, there are no straight lines. Everything is shaking. Let's party!
  29. Thistle Borders by Wiescher Design, $19.50
    Thistle Borders are yet another "trouvaille". Great borders made out of thistles, teasles and flowers from the meadows of Victorian times by Gert Wiescher
  30. Swing Bill by Monotype, $29.99
    The Swing Bill font was designed as a display face for sport material or pop music posters, but has also been seen on TV.
  31. Print Enhancers JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Decorative border, spacer and ornamental elements comprise the bulk of Print Enhancers JNL, with a few extra goodies included to round out the collection.
  32. Janda Swirlygirl by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    The swooshy swirls of the uppercase paired with the simple lowercase creates a very useful title font. Romantic and girly but still perfectly legible.
  33. KG True Colors by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    This teacher-friendly polka-dotted font is perfect for kids and teachers. It is fun but still perfectly neat and legible for little readers.
  34. DB Roman Philosophy by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    Ancient Rome boasted some of the most gifted Philosophers and Roman Philosophy puts those ideas to words in this fun and very wise DoodleBat!
  35. HildiniaDonut by JOEBOB graphics, $-
    HildiniaDonut is the second font designed by Hilde Rikken (age 10). I think a mouse took a little bite out of all the characters...
  36. Avigail MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    The Avigail font family is a vivid choice when you want to effortlessly make your designs stand out with an outstanding clearly crafted handwriting.
  37. RePublic by Suitcase Type Foundry, $75.00
    In 1955 the Czech State Department of Culture, which was then in charge of all the publishing houses, organised a competition amongst printing houses and generally all book businesses for the design of a newspaper typeface. The motivation for this contest was obvious: the situation in the printing presses was appalling, with very little quality fonts existing and financial resources being too scarce to permit the purchase of type abroad. The conditions to be met by the typeface were strictly defined, and far more constrained than the ones applied to regular typefaces designed for books. A number of parameters needed to be considered, including the pressure of the printing presses and the quality of the thin newspaper ink that would have smothered any delicate strokes. Rough drafts of type designs for the competition were submitted by Vratislav Hejzl, Stanislav Marso, Frantisek Novak, Frantisek Panek, Jiri Petr, Jindrich Posekany, and the team of Stanislav Duda, Karel Misek and Josef Tyfa. The committee published its comments and corrections of the designs, and asked the designers to draw the final drafts. The winner was unambiguous — the members of the committee unanimously agreed to award Stanislav Marso’s design the first prize. His typeface was cast by Grafotechna (a state-owned enterprise) for setting with line-composing machines and also in larger sizes for hand-setting. Regular, bold, and bold condensed cuts were produced, and the face was named Public. In 2003 we decided to digitise the typeface. Drawings of the regular and italic cuts at the size of approximatively 3,5 cicero (43 pt) were used as templates for scanning. Those originals covered the complete set of caps except for the U, the lowercase, numerals, and sloped ampersand. The bold and condensed bold cuts were found in an original specimen book of the Rude Pravo newspaper printing press. These specimens included a dot, acute, colon, semicolon, hyphens, exclamation and question marks, asterisk, parentheses, square brackets, cross, section sign, and ampersand. After the regular cut was drafted, we began to modify it. All the uppercase letters were fine-tuned, the crossbar of the A was raised, E, F, and H were narrowed, L and R were significantly broadened, and the angle of the leg and arm of the K were adjusted. The vertex of the M now rests on the baseline, making the glyph broader. The apex of the N is narrower, resulting in a more regular glyph. The tail of Q was made more decorative; the uppercase S lost its implied serifs. The lowercase ascenders and descenders were slightly extended. Corrections on the lower case a were more significant, its waist being lowered in order to improve its colour and light. The top of the f was redrawn, the loop of lowercase g now has a squarer character. The diagonals of the lowercase k were harmonised with the uppercase K. The t has a more open and longer terminal, and the tail of the y matches its overall construction. Numerals are generally better proportioned. Italics have been thoroughly redrawn, and in general their slope is lessened by approximatively 2–3 degrees. The italic upper case is more consistent with the regular cut. Unlike the original, the tail of the K is not curved, and the Z is not calligraphic. The italic lower case is even further removed from the original. This concerns specifically the bottom finials of the c and e, the top of the f, the descender of the j, the serif of the k, a heavier ear on the r, a more open t, a broader v and w, a different x, and, again, a non-calligraphic z. Originally the bold cut conformed even more to the superellipse shape than the regular one, since all the glyphs had to be fitted to the same width. We have redrawn the bold cut to provide a better match with the regular. This means its shapes have become generally broader, also noticeably darker. Medium and Semibold weights were also interpolated, with a colour similar to the original bold cut. The condensed variants’ width is 85 percent of the original. The design of the Bold Condensed weights was optimised for the setting of headlines, while the lighter ones are suited for normal condensed settings. All the OpenType fonts include small caps, numerals, fractions, ligatures, and expert glyphs, conforming to the Suitcase Standard set. Over half a century of consistent quality ensures perfect legibility even in adverse printing conditions and on poor quality paper. RePublic is an exquisite newspaper and magazine type, which is equally well suited as a contemporary book face.
  38. Prosty by Fontsphere, $12.00
    PROSTY is a family of minimalistic and geometric fonts. It follows the style of other Fontsphere's forms, but goes one step further. It contains both uppercase and lowercase characters, which makes it useful for display, titling, captions but also for composing short, intermediate and longer texts, which is a very interesting and useful combination here. It was created carefully with details in mind. PROSTY contains a large number of characters as well as multilingual support.
  39. Audy Script by Dieza Design, $9.00
    Thanks for checking out Audy Script Font, a fabulously fun yet elegant script font with tons of energy, allowing you to create beautiful typography in an instant. With extra bouncy curves & loops, Audy Script is guaranteed to make your text stand out - perfect for logos, printed quotes, invitations, cards, product packaging, headers and whatever your imagination holds. Audy Script is also suitable for branding, wedding invitations, magazine. Audy Script looks modern and stylish.
  40. Cristal by Corradine Fonts, $24.95
    Cristal is a modern typeface inspired in the cuts of a bevel effect. Its lines build each letter as a cutted gem giving an unique elegant aspect. It comes in two weights to be used at different sizes and has positive and negative versions. Also has a solid version that allows compose more legible texts. Cristal Dingbats and Cristal Frames are two essential complements to obtain a great typographic system of 15 fonts.
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