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  1. SANTOS DUMONT - Personal use only
  2. Airstream - 100% free
  3. Promenades - Personal use only
  4. fancyPens - Unknown license
  5. akaFrivolity - 100% free
  6. lauralinda - Unknown license
  7. Hesperides Demo - Unknown license
  8. Clementine Sketch - 100% free
  9. Jefferson - Unknown license
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  11. First Crush - Personal use only
  12. etch a sketch - Personal use only
  13. Poesie_Noire_DEMO - Unknown license
  14. Apollyon™ - Unknown license
  15. Beautiful Ink - Unknown license
  16. Violation - Unknown license
  17. Melrose - Unknown license
  18. KG Legacy of Virtue - Personal use only
  19. I'm Bored - Personal use only
  20. Civilian - Unknown license
  21. Rosemary Roman - Personal use only
  22. Derniere - Unknown license
  23. Coca Cola ii - Unknown license
  24. AquilineTwo - Unknown license
  25. a Theme for murder - Unknown license
  26. Zothique Demo - Unknown license
  27. Holmes001 - Unknown license
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  29. vtks 38 - 100% free
  30. Hog Bold - HMK - Unknown license
  31. MamaeQueNosFaz - Unknown license
  32. lydeke Handwrithing - Unknown license
  33. NoodleShaded - Unknown license
  34. DAISYWAY PERSONAL USE - Personal use only
  35. The Astise - Personal use only
  36. Kareema - Personal use only
  37. Walecriture - 100% free
  38. Aerle by Hackberry Font Foundry, $24.95
    My first font for 2009 was Aerle. It is a new dark sans serif font in my continuing objective of designing book fonts that I can really use. It made a little ripple in the industry, but more than that I found that I loved it with Aramus and Artimas — my latest book font family with the same proportions. In many ways, Aerle is a very different direction for me built on what I have learned on Aramus and other recent developments in my style. The concept came to me while using Bitstream's Mister Earl on a site online—though there is no direct reference. I wanted a more playful heavy sans with a much smaller x-height than I have been using lately, plus taller ascenders. As I was using Aerle, I constantly needed a light and bold version. The new direction I am taking is a result of a decision that my fonts, though I loved the character shapes, produced an even type color that is too dark or a little dense. Aerle was an attempt to get away from that look even though the letterspacing is quite tight. For Aerle Thin I pushed a little further in that direction and increased the letterspacing. The hand-drawn shapes vary a lot, many pushing the boundaries of the normal character. This gives a little looseness and helps the lightness in feel I am looking for. It will be interesting to see where this all goes. Most new type around the world is far too perfect for my taste. While the shapes are exquisite, the feel is not human but digital mechanical. I find myself wanting to draw fonts that feel human — as if a person crafted them. In most ways this is a normal font for me in that it has caps, lowercase, small caps with the appropriate figures for each case. These small caps were very small (x-height as is proper). So Aerle's small caps are a little oversize because they plugged up too bad at x-height size. The bold is halfway between. These size variations seem important and work well in the text. This font has all the OpenType features in the set for 2009. There are several ligatures for your fun and enjoyment: bb gg sh sp st ch ck ff fi fl ffi ffl ffy fj ft tt ty Wh Th and more. Like all of my fonts, there are: caps, lowercase, & small caps; proportional lining figures, proportional oldstyle figures, & small cap figures; plus numerators, denominators, superiors, inferiors, and a complete set of ordinals 1st through infinity. Enjoy!
  39. Gelato Luxe by Eclectotype, $60.00
    Back in 2011, Gelato Script was the best-selling brush script font on MyFonts, and has remained popular, appearing on everything from designer handbags to primetime TV shows; from food blogs to wedding invitations; from glossy magazines to (not so imaginatively!) ice cream shops. All these years on, and it struck me that there is much that could be improved on; there are certain glyphs that never quite felt right. So I decided to update Gelato Script, and this is the result, Gelato Luxe. What started as a simple update quickly spiralled into a total overhaul. There is not a single glyph in the new version that’s the same. The entire font has been tweaked and tinkered with and redrawn and respaced and rekerned to get it to this point. While I wanted to maintain the feel of Gelato Script, Gelato Luxe represents a massive leap in sophistication, with new alternates for smoother connections, and a totally new OpenType engine, with no fewer than seventeen stylistic sets. Gelato Luxe is a truly versatile script font. You can effortlessly change the feel by playing with the many OpenType features. Make sure contextual alternates and standard ligatures are switched on, and it will work like a charm right out of the box. See also Gelato Fresco for a further updated version, this time with extra weights!
  40. Ongunkan Old Turkic Arrival by Runic World Tamgacı, $40.00
    It's the old Turkish runic script, which I adapted the written language of the three-legged aliens, the characters of a fantastic science fiction movie called Arrival.
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