3,092 search results (0.011 seconds)
  1. Shinobu by Lurinzu Studios, $15.75
    "Shinobu" is an elegant psychedelic display font that combines characteristics of Art Nouveau and Modren San serif types. The name "Shinobu" comes from the anime character " Shinobu Kocho" from an anime called "Demon Slayer". Like "Shinobu's" characteristics, This exudes elegance and poshness while still having that quirkiness. This display font is intended to be used in big-scale designs such as headlines, posters, flyers, apparel, quotes, greeting cards, product packaging, album covers, movies, and more. *This font includes letters, numbers, alternates, and all essential marks needed.
  2. Let's Go Green by Atom, $15.00
    Let's Go Green is a natural, organic, casual, uneven touch font! Made naturally using brush strokes with ink on paper, giving a very unique and distinctive impression. It is ideal for logos, quotes, print media, product packaging, merchandise, advertising, social media and your design projects. Let's Go Green comes as a single font that is packed with OpenType Features. It contains the complete set of lowercase & uppercase letters, various punctuation marks, numbers, and multilingual and ligature support. Thanks for using this font! Happy Design :)
  3. MFC Deco Diamond Monogram by Monogram Fonts Co., $19.00
    MFC Deco Diamond Monogram finds its historical influence in a vintage monogram transfer sheet of unknown origin. We've digitally recreated it, adding missing characters to fill out the character set, and programming in functionality to make customization a snap. MFC Deco Diamond Monogram is capable of creating two or three letter monograms, either free-floating or surrounded by a selection of different frames. If you are looking for a diamond format monogram with deco influence, then you've found yourself your mark maker in MFC Deco Diamond Monogram.
  4. Rusty Cage by Hanoded, $15.00
    I named this font after one of my favorite songs by Soundgarden: "Rusty Cage". The font is a mishmash of letters, which were hand-drawn and given a photoshop overhaul to make them look grungy and grotesque. I mixed upper and lower case letters, added a whole bunch of alternate letters, spooned in some Salt and Calt and added a pinch of Liga as well. The result is a weird concoction, which looks good on posters, in ads and possibly even tattoos. I dare you!
  5. Alexandria Signature by Ergibi Studio, $20.00
    Alexandria Signature is a modern Signature font crafted in an elegant and professional style with alternative characters. perfect font for creating signature logos and watermarks for photography studios or personal photography logos, best for initial logo or brand signatures.Alexandria Signature includes a full set of beautiful handwritten upper and lower case letters, numbers, assorted punctuation marks. All lowercase letters include start and end strokes, providing a realistic handwriting style. If you have any questions about our fonts, please feel free to contact us Thank You Ergibi Studio
  6. Pelinka by Jehoo Creative, $18.00
    Upholding aspects of geometric shapes Created Pelinka. Pelinka is a Sans serif Family that has a solid foundation of geometric shapes designed to be bold and flexible. This typeface has all the widths needed to meet various design needs, Condensed, Normal and Expanded each width has 9 weights. Pelinka also includes support for Cyrillic and Greek Alphabets. Opentype feature: aalt, frac, liga, locl, numr, onum,ordn, salt, sinf, ss01, ss02, subs, sups, kern, mark. Language support for the Americas, most of Europe,Cyrillic and Greek.
  7. Hebrew Alter Rebbe of Liadi by Samtype, $385.00
    This is the Alter Rebbe of Liadi Ksav. This is a complete font with all diacritic marks (Nikud and Taamim) and also shevana, kamatz katan, dagesh hazak and holam chaser. There are 2 alternatives kinds of Lamed. The Nikud and the Trop are completily independent of the letters. You can use diferent colors in them. There is no combination of letters except for Alef-Lamed ligature. Two diferents kinds of "He" appears in the Tetragramation. You can make any kind of prayer book with this font.
  8. Faithful Fly by ITC, $29.00
    Faithful Fly is an alphabet of capital letters designed by David Sagorski in 1994. Vital and dynamic, the figures of Faithful Fly dance across the base line. Zigzag strokes and energetic forms define this frolicsome font. Little ovals decorate the figures in different places. A marked contrast between finer and stronger strokes can be seen in all characters and builds the foundation of the unmistakable image of this font. Faithful Fly's fresh, young look makes this font perfect for comics, cartoons and trend magazines.
  9. Moon Bleacher by GuseType, $14.00
    Moon Bleacher is a display experimental aesthetic serif font that have sharp edge to make it look more elegant and luxury, Moon Bleacher inspired by nuance of mysterious thing, but keep it elegance with contrast line on each character. This font can be use in various project like, posters, magazines, logos, banner, invitations, brochure, album cover design and many more. Moon Bleacher also has several features including multiple languages support, punctuation marks, symbols, alternative and ligature. Moon Bleacher ready to stylish your beautiful word.
  10. Dog Butter Pro by No Bodoni, $35.00
    This is a curvaceous playful casual upright display script (the name inspired by Tibetan yak butter) and is unique due to the tall ascenders and cap heights combined with a small x-height and small cap height. Due to these variations I designed different heights of quote marks for visual consistency. There are five weights and multi Latin language support. This font is perfect for lingerie catalogs, gorgeous cookbooks, curvaceous branding and logo design, callipygian magazine heads, sumptuous restaurant and food designs, flamboyant word poetry and more.
  11. Carmencita by Underground, $24.90
    Carmencita is a typeface specially designed to give graphic products that hand-made feeling, slightly rustic with a handcrafted touch. It was created with a focus on signage, products and graphics that need to convey closeness, warmth and quality. It includes a set of ornaments that reinforces that gestural mark, and helps to customize logos, banners, posters and other design pieces. Its two versions, bold & regular (in addition to the alternate characters), can be combined to increase even more the amount of resources and possibilities of Carmencita.
  12. Osmont by Jorsetype, $20.00
    Osmont a work that is purely a result of handwriting, has a natural characteristic. this is perfect for invitations, signatures, blogs, social media, business cards, product brands. Osmont has Stylistic standard, Stylistic Alternates and ligatures. and includes uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers and punctuation marks. FILE INCLUDE Osmont (OpenType,PUA) OpenType features can be accessed by using OpenType smart programs such as Adobe Photo Shop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Indesign, Corel Draw and Microsoft Office. special greetings for all, all of us all smoothly in running the routine
  13. Dnipro by Apostrof, $36.00
    Dnipro is a version of experience generalization of Ukrainian decorative font creation. The generalization development was initited by Georgy Narbut and Mark Kirnarsky in the 1920s and continued in 1970-80s. Latin letters of the font have half-uncial forms, which makes it appropriate for the printing of the relevant content. Besides its decorative properties the font is easy to read and quite suitable for short texts. It is well suited for folk tales, Ukrainian and Slavic in general as well as Western European.
  14. Smoothen by Artisan Studio, $15.00
    Smoothen is a font that is purely handmade, has its own characteristics as monoline. It is perfect for invitations, signatures, blogs, social media, business cards, product brands. Smoothen has Stylistic standard, Stylistic Alternate, Stylistic ligatures and includes uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers and punctuation marks. Smoothen (OpenType,PUA) Smoothen (TrueType, PUA) OpenType features can be accessed by using OpenType smart programs such as Adobe Photo Shop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Indesign, Corel Draw and Microsoft Office. Special greetings for all of us all smoothly in running the routine.
  15. Beit El MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Inspired by old letter engraving and tombstones, his font is unique by its flow and contrast, enabling traditional typeface gain a new and clear flow and rhythm. OpenType Pro fonts- Excellent support for Niqqud (Vowels). All marks are programmed to fit each glyph's shape and width. OpenType Pro includes new advanced features like Dagesh Hazak, ShevaNa, Qamatz Katan, Holm Haser and wide letters. Best used with Adobe InDesign CC that support complex Hebrew text. Please check these advanced features in this link: https://tinyurl.com/ybgdsxme
  16. Cross Stitch Coarse by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Cross Stitch Coarse is based on upper case characters 5 stitches tall and contains the upper case characters A-Z, numbers 0-9, ampersand, exclamation and question marks, comma, and period. Also, under the character set are all possible combinations of stitches 5 high from 1 through 5, which allows for the creation of custom glyphs. If the font is set at solid leading, lines following will align and mesh with stitches above. When setting lines of copy, extra leading is required to separate individual lines.
  17. Boberia by Linotype, $29.99
    Linotype Boberia is part of the Take Type Library, which features winners of Linotype’s International Digital Type Design Contest. Designed by Bo Berndal, its historical roots lie in the neoclassicism of the turn of the 20th century. The slender letters with a large x-height and marked stroke contrast give the font an elegant character. The nostalgic, flowing forms are typical of Art Deco fonts and allow designers a number of possibilities for the font’s use. Boberia includes regular, italic and bold type styles.
  18. Fabrica by Fenotype, $40.00
    Fábrica is an exquisite display letter with flair. Its delicate curves have been carefully honed; yet its beauty is seemingly effortless. To add to its appeal, Fábrica is equipped with several handy features such as ligatures (there are plenty of them), old style figures and fractions. Its true crown jewel, however, is the finely tuned hairline accents – no longer will a diacritical mark ruin your heading. Find those under a feature called Thin accents. Use Fábrica to turn your communication into statements of divine elegance.
  19. Racoste by HansCo, $15.00
    Racoste is a retro vintage lettering font style. Use this display font to add that special retro touch to any design idea you can think of!. Equipped with all complete characters ranging from uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, punctuation marks and multi-lingual support, this font is ready to be used in any project. Very suitable for logotype, Stickers, Packaging design, Cricut Project, headlines, brand identity, t shirt or apparel industry, posters, magazines, books, YouTube, Instagram, websites, or any of your creative design projects. Enjoy!
  20. Step Better by Ronny Studio, $19.00
    Step better font Inspired by street graffiti markings, Urban Tag comes with the iconic round tip markers, this style is often used by several graffiti artists around the world because of its very unique style, very fun to write on markers. Perfect if you want a realistic street art or hip hop style for your designs, posters, props, etc. Features : All Caps numbers and punctuation multilingual Swash / Ornament PUA encoded Please contact us if you have any questions. Enjoy Crafting and thanks for supporting us! :) Thank you
  21. Butterfly Effect by PintassilgoPrints, $24.90
    A swarm of butterflies that automagically turns into stunning patterns. This font counts 65 unique glyphs easily accessed through the keyboard (numerals, upper & lowercase plus some punctuation marks), making it possible to design patterns even in simple text editors. Just make sure to set the leading the same as the font size, as some software may override font settings. Well, in fact some glyphs don't require such accuracy and let you play with leading and letterspacing, resulting in sort of chaotic patterns. Sort of... butterfly effect.
  22. Rosalia by preussTYPE, $25.00
    Rosalia is an impulsive typeface designed by Heinz Schumann in 1964 as Stentor for Typoart Dresden. The marked stroke contrast and the spontaneous look typical of handwriting gives the typeface a lively, energetic character. The generous capitals lean slightly to the right and contrast beautifully with the reserved, upright lower case letters and can also be used for initialing. Rosalia is a good choice for headines and texts in middle to large point sizes. OpenType features: Contains 390 Glyhps Central European faces Standard Ligatures Discretionary Ligatures
  23. MVB Calliope by MVB, $39.00
    Gayle Sato, longtime friend of MVB Fonts, has amazing handwriting. It’s a natural, simple hand, with perfect rhythm. Devoid of flourishes, it doesn’t try to be beautiful. It’s just genuine, quick, and clean — the handwriting we all wish we had. The digitization by Mark van Bronkhorst captures these qualities. Retaining the roughness of a felt pen, MVB Calliope is a handwriting typeface that feels much more authentic than most, highly legible but still raw. The Regular was released in 2005, with the other weights shortly thereafter.
  24. Bazar by Linotype, $29.99
    German Designer Klaus Sutter digitized Bazar, a brush script typeface from the 1950s originally drawn by Imre Reiner (1900-1987) and published in 1956 by D. Stempel AG. Bazar is a calligraphic brush type free from accurate horizontal and vertical strokes and a contrast to the objective body type. It has a more static character and could be perfectly applied in headlines or as a figurative word mark. Like tradional chinese calligraphers, Imre Reiner was also a painter; this is reflected in the glyphs of Bazar.
  25. Horse Drawn Carriage JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Picture if you will, a balmy autumn evening in Manhattan during the 1930s and a well-dressed couple out on the town. They hail one of the hansom cabs located near Central Park and climb in for an old-fashioned romantic ride around the green. Such are the type of images the stylized Art Deco hand-lettering comprising Horse Drawn Carriage JNL evokes. The inspiration for this font was the title card for a 1935 Bette Davis feature entitled "The Girl from 10th Avenue".
  26. Moving Formula by Supfonts, $10.00
    Moving Formula Funny Sans Moving Formula is a cute handwritten font with multilingual support. It is perfect for branding, wedding invitations, menu design, YouTube covers and many more Font includes a full set of gorgeous uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, a large selection of punctuation marks & multilingual support Test it out below to see how it could look for your next project! Includes: Regular Script Latin languages support Uppercase and lowercase Numbers and punctuation Check out my blog: https://www.instagram.com/superdizigner https://pinterest.com/dmitriychirkov7
  27. Subroyal by Subtitude, $15.00
    Subroyal was inspired by the official logo of the City of Montreal. The idea came to us while reading an article about a revised version of this logo that didn't have any original typography. We realized it was our civic duty to bring the City logo to life, and the result is a fairly romantic font that reminds us of the many parks around the island, its fragile snowflakes, and its electronic music scene. Voilà! Montreal has its first custom-made (non-official) font package.
  28. Dr066 by 066.FONT, $9.99
    Dr066 is a display font that simulates the appearance of typewritten text. Each letter in Dr066 has been carefully designed to resemble the effect you get with a typewriter. This effect adds a sense of nostalgia to the text, as if it were from a bygone era, adding an authentic charm to the designs. Dr066 retains its varied and extravagant style, giving the text a lightness and a certain nonchalance. Its distinctive and daring letters make it ideal for projects that strive for a unique look.
  29. Troyer AR by ARTypes, $30.00
    The Troyer AR ornaments are based on the first series of ornaments designed for American Type Founders by Johannes Troyer (1902-69). They were cast in 36 and 48 point in 1953 by ATF who said that they ‘mark a distinct and refreshing departure from the motif of earlier ornaments, and add a crisp touch to your finer printing’. Kenneth Day, in The Typography of Press Advertisement (1956), found them 'clean-cut and bright and clearly showing their calligraphic origins . . . useful for single decorative touches'.
  30. Qojarun by Twinletter, $15.00
    Introducing our newest font called Qojarun. With Arabic Style display fonts, you can easily give your designs a genuine Middle Eastern feel. This font features characters in an Arabic style, and goes well with a wide variety of design projects, from posters to logos and beyond. Elegant calligraphy Arabic letters are easy to read, just like writing in general. This download pack contains all the characters needed to translate your project into an Arabic theme, complete with the full character set, punctuation marks, and numbers.
  31. Pageantry Hebrew by Jonahfonts, $42.00
    Hebrew alphabets contain 22 Hebrew letters along with five final letters. These final letters are automatically activated when used in Applications such as Apple Pages® and MicroSoft Word®. Some alternate hebrew letters have been added. Pageantry Hebrew letters do not contain cantillation marks very much used in everyday modern Hebrew accompanied with the complete latin alphabet. View my other Hebrew fonts, Newmark Hebrew, Hebron Hebrew, Hanah Hebrew and Komunidad Hebrew which is a handwritten (script font). Pageantry Hebrew requires OpenType-aware software.
  32. Banknote 1948 by Ingo, $39.00
    A very expanded sans serif font in capital letters inspired by the inscription on a bank note Old bank notes tend to have a very typical typography. Usually they carry decorative and elaborately designed markings. For one thing, they must be practically impossible to forge and for another, they should make a respectable and legitimate impression. And in the days of copper and steel engravings, that meant nothing less than creating ornate, shaded or otherwise complicated scripts. Designing the appropriate script was literally in the hands of the engraver. That’s why I noticed this bank note from 1948. It is the first 20 mark bill in the then newly created currency ”Deutsche Mark.“ All other bank notes of the 1948 series show daintier forms of typography with an obvious tendency toward modern face. The 1949 series which followed shortly thereafter reveals the more complicated script as well. For whatever reason, only this 20 mark bill displays this extremely expanded sans serif variation of the otherwise Roman form applied. This peculiarity led me in the year 2010 to create a complete font from the single word ”Banknote.“ Back to those days in the 40’s, the initial edition of DM bank notes was carried out by a special US-American printer who was under pressure of completing on time and whose engravers not only engraved but also designed. So that’s why the bank notes resemble dollars and don’t even look like European currency. That also explains some of the uniquely designed characters when looked at in detail. Especially the almost serif type form on the letters C, G, S and Z, but also L and T owe their look to the ”American touch.“ The ingoFont Banknote 1948 comprises all characters of the Latin typeface according to ISO 8859 for all European languages including Turkish and Baltic languages. In order to maintain the character of the original, the ”creation“ of lower case letters was waived. This factor doesn’t contribute to legibility, but this kind of type is not intended for long texts anyway; rather, it unfolds its entire attraction when used as a display font, for example on posters. Banknote 1948 is also very suitable for distortion and other alien techniques, without too much harm being done to the characteristic forms. With Banknote 1948 ingoFonts discloses a font like scripts which were used in advertising of the 1940’s and 50’s and were popular around the world. But even today the use of this kind of font can be expedient, especially considering how Banknote 1948, for its time of origin, impresses with amazingly modern detail.
  33. Ah, Brassiere by Apostrophic Labs – if fonts were garments, this one would definitely be a lacy number you'd find hidden in the mischievous corner of your wardrobe. Picture this: a font that flirts w...
  34. Ah, the Edo font by Vic Fieger, you say? Imagine if a brush, after a night out drinking with its inky pals, decided to take a stroll across the canvas, leaving behind a trail filled with personality,...
  35. Claude Garamond (ca. 1480-1561) cut types for the Parisian scholar-printer Robert Estienne in the first part of the sixteenth century, basing his romans on the types cut by Francesco Griffo for Venetian printer Aldus Manutius in 1495. Garamond refined his romans in later versions, adding his own concepts as he developed his skills as a punchcutter. After his death in 1561, the Garamond punches made their way to the printing office of Christoph Plantin in Antwerp, where they were used by Plantin for many decades, and still exist in the Plantin-Moretus museum. Other Garamond punches went to the Frankfurt foundry of Egenolff-Berner, who issued a specimen in 1592 that became an important source of information about the Garamond types for later scholars and designers. In 1621, sixty years after Garamond's death, the French printer Jean Jannon (1580-1635) issued a specimen of typefaces that had some characteristics similar to the Garamond designs, though his letters were more asymmetrical and irregular in slope and axis. Jannon's types disappeared from use for about two hundred years, but were re-discovered in the French national printing office in 1825, when they were wrongly attributed to Claude Garamond. Their true origin was not to be revealed until the 1927 research of Beatrice Warde. In the early 1900s, Jannon's types were used to print a history of printing in France, which brought new attention to French typography and the Garamond" types. This sparked the beginning of modern revivals; some based on the mistaken model from Jannon's types, and others on the original Garamond types. Italics for Garamond fonts have sometimes been based on those cut by Robert Granjon (1513-1589), who worked for Plantin and whose types are also on the Egenolff-Berner specimen. Linotype has several versions of the Garamond typefaces. Though they vary in design and model of origin, they are all considered to be distinctive representations of French Renaissance style; easily recognizable by their elegance and readability. ITC Garamond? was designed in 1977 by Tony Stan. Loosely based on the forms of the original sixteenth-century Garamond, this version has a taller x-height and tighter letterspacing. These modern characteristics make it very suitable for advertising or packaging, and it also works well for manuals and handbooks. Legible and versatile, ITC Garamond? has eight regular weights from light to ultra, plus eight condensed weights. Ed Benguiat designed the four stylish handtooled weights in 1992." In 1993 Ed Benguiat has designed Handtooled versions.
  36. Adoloen by Gian Studio, $16.00
    Adolone We are proud to present our new font. The new natural Adolone look with a classy and modern style makes this font look elegant, natural, stylish. Adolone will be perfect for invitations, logos & branding, photography, advertising, watermarks, social media posts, product packaging, product designs, labels, wedding designs, stationery, special events or anything else needed to create a theme. Adolone is built with OpenType features and includes initial and final language styles, alternative characters for most lowercase letters, numbers, punctuation marks, alternatives, ligatures, and also supports other languages.
  37. Skapa by Fontoura, $24.00
    Skapa is all about creation (translation from Old Norse: "to create"). It's simply the font I always needed and wanted. A well balanced, modern with delicate round corners sans serif, comprised of 5 weights with matching italics. Great for varied graphic design projects and perfect for logos and headlines, print art, billboards etc. Extended support for Central, Eastern and Western European languages. OpenType layout features: Fractions, oldstyle figures, ligatures, slashed zero, superscript, subscript, numerator, denominator and combining diacriticals (Mark Positioning) plus tabular figures for standard figures ,oldstyle figures & currency symbols. Think. Design. Create.
  38. Mak by Tkachenko design, $21.00
    Mak is a display font with a Ukrainian feeling inspired by Ukrainian music. This is a big update of the first free two styles of Mak (SemiBold High & Black High) that were created in 2019 and become widespread among free display fonts. The big update wasn't been only adding more weights and contrasts but also changing a lot of glyphs and adding new ones. Now Mak supports all Latin-based languages and European Cyrillic. Experiments with historical forms, contrasts, and daring shapes to create a new image of Ukrainian Cyrillic and Latin based on it.
  39. Bargain Shopping by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    F.W. Woolworth was once one of the giants of the variety store chains, along with the likes of Kress, S.S. Kresge, McCrory’s, Neisner Brothers, Ben Franklin and others. In 1960, the company brought out a new corporate logo with a type design harking back to the Art Deco style of the 1930s and 1940s. A photo of one of their old store fronts (despite having only eight letters to work with) inspired the digital interpretation of the signage as Bargain Shopping JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  40. Stencil by Monotype, $36.99
    Stencil™ was designed by Gerry Powell for American Type Founders in 1938. It's a faithful imitation of a stenciled alphabet, much like those used on boxes and crates, with rounded edges and thick main strokes. The font is composed of capital letters and figures; there is no lowercase. Use Stencil™ for graphic designs that call for a rough-and-ready look, a military look, or even to create real stencils for signs and marking boxes or luggage. Alexei Chekulaev made a Cyrillic version of Stencil™ in 1997.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing