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  1. Kadya by TM Type, $12.00
    Kadya is a very detailed and thin lettered script font. Get inspired by its beautiful style and use it to create lovely designs. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all the glyphs and sweeps easily!
  2. Gostend by Fype Co, $14.00
    Gostend is a handwritten script font with a natural texture. It has a thin calligraphy look making it perfect for branding and digital designs. Use this font for logos, social media, websites, blogs, Instagram, business cards, branding, and more!
  3. Promo by Borutta Group, $35.00
    Promo is charming rounded sans family. This typeface is defined by multiple features, which give it a friendly feeling. Promo is perfect for branding and display purposes. Entire family consist of 9 styles with italics from Thin to Bold.
  4. Salminah by Letterafandi Studio, $14.00
    Salminah is a fashionable and thin lettered script font. Suitable to a wide variety of designs due to its neat and simple style, this font has the potential to become your favorite go-to font, no matter the occasion!
  5. Rolling Pen by Sudtipos, $79.00
    After doing this for so many years, one would think my fascination with the old history of writing would have mellowed out by now. The truth is that alongside being a calligraphy history buff, I'm a pop technology freak. Maybe even keener on the tech thing, since I just can't seem to get enough new gadgets. And after working with type technologies for so many years, I'm starting to think that writing and design technologies as we now know them, being about 2.5 post-computer generations, keep becoming more and more detached from what the very old humanity arts/tasks they essentially want to facilitate. In a world where command-z is a frequently used key combination, it’s difficult to justify expecting a Morris-made book or a Zaner-drawn sentence, but accidental artistic “mutations” become welcome, marketable features. When fluid pens were introduced, their liquid saturation influenced type design to a great extent almost overnight an influence professional designers tend to play down. Now round stroke endings are a common sight, and the saturation is so clean and measured, unlike any liquid-paper relationship possible in reality. Some designers even illustrate their work by overlaying perfect circles at stroke ends, in order to illustrate how “geometric” their work was. Because if it’s measured with precise geometry, it’s got to be meaningful design. And once in a while, by a total freak accident, the now-cherished mutations prove to have existed long before the technology that caused them. Rolling Pen was cued by just such a thing: A rounded, circular, roll-flowing calligraphy from the late nineteenth century seemingly one of those experimental takes on what inspired Business Penmanship, another font of mine. Looking at it now it certainly seems to be friendlier, more legible, and maybe even more practical and easier to execute than the standard business penmanship of those days, but I guess friendliness and simplicity were at odds with the stiff manner business liked to present itself back then, so that kind of thing remained buried in the professional penman’s oddities drawer. It would be quite a few years before all this curviness and rounding were thought of as symbolic of graceful movement, which brought such a flow closer to the idea of fine art. Even though in this case the accidental mutation just happens to not be a mutation after all, the whole technology-transforms-application argument still applies here. I'm almost sure “business” will be the last thing on people’s minds when they use this font today. One extreme example of that level of disconnect between origin and current application is shown here, with the so-called business penmanship strutting around in gloss and neon. Rolling Pen is another cup of mine that runneth over with alternates, swashes, ligatures, and other techy perks. To explore its full potential, please use it in a program that supports OpenType features for advanced typography. Enjoy the new Rolling Pen designed by Ale Paul with Neon’s visual poetry by Tomás García.
  6. Lisboa Swash by Vanarchiv, $45.00
    Lisboa Swash is a display humanist sans-serif typeface and it was designed for big sizes purposes. The uppercase letterforms are much more decorative than the lowercase, but both contain hook-head terminals and few contrast. This typeface family contain stylish alternates characters which are more calligraphic than the main version. This typeface family has different encoding languages (Latin, Central Europe and Baltic).
  7. North Queen by Typeskets, $22.00
    North Queen is a Variable font and Font Family with 8 weights, starting from thin to extra bold, this font belongs to the classic serif nuanced font, very suitable for making label designs, posters, headlines, and many more, you might be able to add this font in your font collection VARIABLE We hope you enjoy this font! please feel free to comment if you have any thoughts or feedback. Thanks for purchasing and happy creating!
  8. Yassitf by Ingrimayne Type, $6.00
    Yet another san serif typeface, Yassitf is a generic sans, a font meant to blend in rather than stand out. It has little contrast and is almost monoline. It includes three widths: condensed, narrow, and regular. The widths have four to six weights: ultra thin, thin, light, plain, bold, and extra bold. Further, each width and weight combination has both upright and italics styles. The thirty fonts in the family contain several open-type features, including both proportional and tabular (monospaced) numbers.
  9. Goffik-Outline - Unknown license
  10. Europe Underground - Personal use only
  11. Last Ninja - Unknown license
  12. Victorian Initials One - Personal use only
  13. Europe Underground Worn - Personal use only
  14. Proclamate Heavy - Unknown license
  15. triangler - Unknown license
  16. Beast Impacted - Unknown license
  17. Kingthings Italique - Unknown license
  18. Zahariel Demo - Unknown license
  19. Kiloton - Unknown license
  20. Wide awake - Unknown license
  21. Minster No 1 - Unknown license
  22. Collins OE Demo - Unknown license
  23. Kandide Wide - Unknown license
  24. Strenuous - Unknown license
  25. Art Greco - Unknown license
  26. China Town - Unknown license
  27. Kandide Upper - Unknown license
  28. Independant - Unknown license
  29. Teenick - Unknown license
  30. Harsh language - Unknown license
  31. Tantrum Tongue - Unknown license
  32. Grand Stylus - Unknown license
  33. Warm milk - Unknown license
  34. Eroded 2020 - Unknown license
  35. DT 104 - Unknown license
  36. Blunted - Unknown license
  37. Kandide Unicase - Unknown license
  38. Independant - Alternates - Unknown license
  39. Dearest Friend lite - Unknown license
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