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  1. Amrys by Monotype, $65.00
    There's an appealing quirkiness about Amrys, which offers a confidently unusual alternative to more conventional designs. Its charm lies in its tapering tips, flexing stems, and unexpected notches, which combine to suggest something of the chiseller's tool at work. As a modulated serif, its letter shapes live between serif and sans serif, lending the design a sense of pleasing irregularity – something that's really highlighted at larger sizes. However this is also a typeface that works for text, injecting rhythm and texture into reading. “It's distinctive, idiosyncratic, and weird,” says its designer, Ben Jones. He started designing Amrys while studying an MA at Reading University, creating it in response to a brief for a magazine typeface. Amrys features an extensive and impressive character set. In addition to Latin, Amrys covers several scripts including Cyrillic, Greek, Arabic and Armenian. The family consists of 8 weights, from Light to Black, with matching italics.
  2. Rotola TH Pro by Elsner+Flake, $40.00
    Karl-Heinz Lange presented his first drafts of Rotola during a Typoart® type design competition in 1985 under the name "Boutique". A year later, Norbert du Vinage, former manager of the type design department, integrated "Boutique" in his production plan. Due the Fall of the Wall, it took about 18 years until Lange finished this font family in cooperation with Elsner+Flake. Karl-Heinz Lange was born on July 29, 1929 in Wiesenkirch in West Prussia. He was enrolled in the Humanistic Gymnasium at Elbing from 1939 to 1945 and changed to the Wernigerode High School after his family had to flee to central Germany. From 1949 to 1951, Karl-Heinz Lange studied at the Werkkunstschule Halle, where one of his teachers was Professor Post. After 1951, he continued his studies at the Hochschule for Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig with an emphasis on book design. He received his diploma in 1955 with distinction based on his design of a hot metal typeface. From 1956 to 1961, Karl-Heinz Lange worked as a lecturer for Type and Commercial Graphics at the Hochschule für Angewandte Kunst in Magdeburg. From 1961 to 1963, he taught at the Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig, and finally as a freelance commercial designer in Magdeburg. He worked on a variety of assignments, one of which was the design of trick films. From 1969 to 1976 he took the position of Artistic Director of the Henschelverlag, Berlin; from 1976 to 1994 he was Professor of Type and Typography at the Fachschule für Werbung und Gestaltung in Berlin; and, until 2004, he taught at various institutes for advanced professional education. From 2005 to 2007 he taught at the Fachhochschule Magdeburg/Stendal. Karl-Heinz Lange was awarded the second prize at the "International Type Design Contest 1971" for a headline typeface, and, in 1984, at the XI. Biannual of Graphic Design in Brno, he won a Silver Medal for the design of his typeface family Publica. He created the telephone book typeface Minima and re-designed the Typoart Super Grotesk® (Arno Drescher, 1930) as well as the Newspaper typeface Magna® by Herbert Thannhaeuser for the use on digital typesetting systems. To the day of his death on June 29, 2010, Karl-Heinz Lange lived and worked as a type designer. Among others, he closely followed the designs of the typefaces which were developed under his guidance for Typoart®: "Publica®", "Typoart Super Grotesk®" and "Minima®" which he launched as "Publicala", "Minimala" and "Superla" in 2009. In cooperation with Elsner+Flake, he developed the Typeface family "Rotola" between 2006 and 2009 as well as the script families of the "Viabella®" series. To the end, he followed the development of his first typeface, the "Diplom Antiqua", which he also wanted to bring to market together with Elsner+Flake.
  3. Nature Beauty Personal Use - Personal use only
  4. LT Carpet Text - 100% free
  5. Project Z - Personal use only
  6. Plasmatica - Unknown license
  7. Covington Exp - Unknown license
  8. Plasmatica Outline - Unknown license
  9. Avondale SC - Unknown license
  10. Avondale Shaded - Unknown license
  11. Covington SC Shadow - Unknown license
  12. Covington SC Cond - Unknown license
  13. Avondale Outline - Unknown license
  14. Covington Cond - Unknown license
  15. Covington Exp - Unknown license
  16. Avondale SC Cond - Unknown license
  17. Covington SC Exp - Unknown license
  18. Avondale Cond - Unknown license
  19. Plasmatica Open - Unknown license
  20. Arsenale White - Personal use only
  21. Covington - Unknown license
  22. Avondale Inline - Unknown license
  23. Plasmatica Shaded - Unknown license
  24. Plasmatica Ext - Unknown license
  25. Covington SC - Unknown license
  26. Covington SC - Unknown license
  27. Avondale SC Outline - Unknown license
  28. Covington Rev - Unknown license
  29. Covington Shadow - Unknown license
  30. Plasmatica Cond - Unknown license
  31. Avondale SC Shaded - Unknown license
  32. Avondale SC Inline - Unknown license
  33. Plasmatica Rev - Unknown license
  34. Covington Cond - Unknown license
  35. Giraffe by Fenotype, $19.00
    Giraffe is a wide and bold rounded serif in two styles. Giraffe occupies a large space and is best used as display type to convey a confident look. Giraffe comes with a set of Stylistic Alternates for letters C,G,J,R,S, a, c, f, g, r, s and $.
  36. As of my last knowledge update in April 2023, there's no widespread recognition or specific information about a font named "COnsume." However, given the intricate nature of font design and typography...
  37. AddCityboy - Unknown license
  38. Fennario - Unknown license
  39. Quickie - 100% free
  40. Dunebug Alternates 45MPH - Personal use only
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