10,000 search results (0.052 seconds)
  1. Furioso - Unknown license
  2. D3 Cubism - Unknown license
  3. Moderne Fraktur - Personal use only
  4. D3 Littlebitmapism Round - Unknown license
  5. Strima by Nicolas Deslé, $24.90
    Strima is a geometric sans serif typeface that stands for minimalism and legibility. With over 1000 glyphs and extensive language support Strima offers full professional typographic features. The Strima family consists of 4 weights: light, book, medium and bold.
  6. Boomtown by PleasureFonts, $22.00
    Boomtown is a bold, slightly cursive font for advertising, headlines, packaging design, signposts or posters. Although it is highly constructed, it has some handwriting attributes, too. An italic font is in my planning and maybe a light style, too.
  7. Deco Bevel by Open Window, $-
    Deco Bevel is a filter font based on Deco, an original Open Window classic. It came about while I was experimenting with light and shadows using 3D rendering software and Photoshop. Its ideal use is as a display font.
  8. Toscography by Misprinted Type, $25.00
    Toscography is inspired by vernacular and naive hand-painted walls and signs from Brazil. It feels organic, spontaneous and fresh and it has a light texture on its characters that makes it feel like it is starting to decay.
  9. GHEA Ayb by Edik Ghabuzyan, $40.00
    This light weight Display font includes Basic Latin, Latin 1 Supplement, Latin extended A, Cyrillic + Bulgarian Cyrillic + Ukrainian Cyrillic, Armenian. May be used in titles, posters, labels, etc. Publisher: GHEA Fonts Designer: Edik Ghabuzyan, Yerevan, Armenia. Creation year 2020.
  10. Creion by Horea Grindean, $32.00
    Creion is a minimal round font, perfect for 2.0 logos and contemporary headlines. Creion fonts is an exclusive type fonts inspired by design elements. It includes a light version, a regular version and a bold version for strong type.
  11. Phosphorus Selenide - Unknown license
  12. Gilgongo - Unknown license
  13. Avondale - Unknown license
  14. Covington - Unknown license
  15. BP Diet - 100% free
  16. Plasmatica Outline - Unknown license
  17. Plasmatica Ext - Unknown license
  18. Plasmatica - Unknown license
  19. Plasmatica Open - Unknown license
  20. Covington - Unknown license
  21. Avondale Inline - Unknown license
  22. Plasmatica Cond - Unknown license
  23. Phosphorus Trichloride - Unknown license
  24. Covington SC - Unknown license
  25. Phosphorus Dihydride - Unknown license
  26. Covington Exp - Unknown license
  27. Gilgongo Pap - Unknown license
  28. Avondale Cond - Unknown license
  29. Plasmatica - Unknown license
  30. Covington Shadow - Unknown license
  31. Phosphorus Triselenide - Unknown license
  32. Slukoni - 100% free
  33. Phosphorus Tribromide - Unknown license
  34. Wazoo - Unknown license
  35. Avondale SC - Unknown license
  36. Plasmatica Shaded - Unknown license
  37. Avondale Outline - Unknown license
  38. Avondale Shaded - Unknown license
  39. Really No 2 W2G by Linotype, $124.99
    Really No. 2 is a redesign and update of Linotype Really, a typeface that Gary Munch first designed in 1999. The new Really No. 2 offers seven weights (Light to Extra Bold), each with an Italic companion. Additionally, Really No. 2 offers significantly expanded language support possibilities. Customers may choose the Really No. 2 W1G fonts, which support a character set that will cover Greek and Cyrillic in addition to virtually all European languages. These are true pan-European fonts, capable of setting texts that will travel between Ireland and Russia, and from Norway to Turkey. Customers who do not require this level of language support may choose from the Really No. 2 Pro fonts (just the Latin script), the Really No. 2 Greek Pro fonts (which include both Latin and Greek), or the Really No. 2 Cyrillic Pro fonts (Latin and Cyrillic). Each weight in the Really No. 2 family includes small capitals and optional oldstyle figures, as well as several other OpenType features. Really No. 2's vertical measurements are slightly different than the old Linotype Really's; customers should not mix fonts from the two families together. As to the design of Really No. 2's letters, like Linotype Really, the characters' moderate-to-strong contrast of its strokes recalls the Transitional and Modern styles of Baskerville and Bodoni. A subtly oblique axis recalls the old-style faces of Caslon. Finally, sturdy serifs complete the typeface's realist sensibility: a clear, readable, no-nonsense text face, whose clean details offer the designer a high-impact selection.
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