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  1. Lab Sans Pro by Vanarchiv, $25.00
    Lab Sans Pro is a geometric sans-serif typeface with a technological and minimalist look and is suitable for use in large sizes. It has eight versatile weights, (from Thin to Black) including true italics for each one, and a wide range of stylish alternate characters to improve its use in different graphic contexts. The name of this typeface was inspired by an experiment, mixing a structure with calligraphic influences and completely geometrical and structured drawings. Lab Sans Pro has a wide range of OpenType® features such as: small caps, old style/titling and small caps figures, fractions, superior and inferior scripts, scientific components and ligatures. Versatile but original, precise but lively, Lab Sans Pro is a carefully crafted technological typeface designed by Tiponautas.
  2. Monkton Aged by Club Type, $36.99
    This antique-aged version of Monkton can be used to imitate old letterpress printed documents such as old English text. The rough edges resemble ink spread on paper to give an old look. The inspiration for this typeface family came from my childhood experiences at Monkton, amidst an historic part of the South West of England. Studies of the original incised capitals of the Trajan column in Rome were analysed and polished for this modern version. The lower case letterforms and numerals were then created in sympathy, taking their proportions from the incised letters of local gravestones. Its name honours not only the area where the original alphabet was conceived and drawn, but also the people responsible for fostering my initial interest in letters.
  3. Uma by Sudtipos, $39.00
    Uma is a typeface family consisting of two weights: light and bold. The typography is fresh, informal and friendly at first glance, but the constructive architecture makes it elegant and modern. It works equally as well in large or small sizes, and the combination between the two weights is very interesting to work with. It is a contemporary typeface, ideal for use in magazines, brochures, flyers and advertising among other applications. Uma may seem simple at a first glance, but it is very functional and professional, with aesthetic enchanting details. Uma has a wide range of functionality and has a great personality. Designed by Ariel Di Lisio and digitized by Ale Paul, Uma includes alternates, fractions, ligatures and a wide range of latin languages.
  4. Appetite Pro by Serebryakov, $39.00
    Appetite Pro is a total upgrade of the world wide popular display font Appetite (2011). It is based on original lettering and belongs to the upright script like. Appetite Pro consists of 10 weights of the refreshed curves — 5 regular and 5 italic — from Light to Heavy. It’s a multilingual and international font, with a full Western Latin, Cyrillic (Russian, Belarusian, Ukrainian) and basic Greek support. The Appetite Pro font family is specially designed for food identity and packaging design projects. In addition to standard letter cases, Appetite Pro also includes dingbats set. Due to the 10 weights font palette, you can solve a wide variety of professional problems without spending money on extra fonts for titles, subtitles, and main text. Try and buy!
  5. Hombre by Monotype, $50.99
    Hombre™ is a sure-fire attention-getter for projects requiring a straight out of the old west flavor. Authentic, weather-beaten, time-ravaged, and a bit haphazard, it’s also a sure-fire attention-getter. Drawn by Thomas Oldfield and loosely based on popular typefaces of the 19th century, Hombre offers all the gun-slinging swagger and rugged style of Jesse James and his crew of outlaws. But don’t typecast this design. The Hombre typefaces are equally at home in ads, banners, headlines and subheads – in both hard copy and digital environments. Add to this, a large character set supporting most Western European and many Eastern European languages, including Cyrillic and Greek, and you can bring a rustic and timeworn look to a passel of applications.
  6. Paris by kapitza, $99.00
    Walking around Paris looking for inspiration for our latest people font, we encountered chic Parisians, yummy food markets, and bakeries on virtually every street corner with delicious baguettes and pastries. We were surprised how many people were cycling, motorcycling and rollerblading along the vast boulevards and side streets of Paris. We spotted classic French cars like the 2CV and Citroën CX and watched the world go by in one of the many sidewalk cafes whilst enjoying a 1664 or a café crème. With our latest people font, Paris, we tried to capture this unique Parisian atmosphere and hope we succeeded. All 64 illustrations are based on photographs taken on location over a period of time. The photographs are then hand traced to create high quality, detailed silhouettes.
  7. Enwicken Typeface by FoxType, $12.00
    Enwicken is a Brand New Elegant Slab-Serif Typeface with a powerful font family. It has a dependable and uncompromising style, with controlled letterforms and modern touches. It looks amazing in logos, magazines, and movies . Enwicken Font would be perfect for branding, headlines, Captions, paragraph, and posters . The various weights allow you to experiment with a wide range of applications. It's created to make an impression without sacrificing its beauty and readability. It's shown a clean, minimalist, warmth, quirky, yet still purposed to be versatile. The Typeface includes 07 Weights - Thin, ExtraLight, Light, Regular, Medium, SemiBold, & Bold. All offer wide language support, upper and lower cases, numerals and extended punctuation. Thank you for taking the time to look into the font.
  8. Fox TRF by TipografiaRamis, $29.00
    Fox is a completely new typeface based on my previously designed Fox family font, which has been in distribution by T26 type foundry since 2001. Old Fox typeface design decisions were reconsidered in a way to improve legibility without sacrificing its originality. This new Fox family consists two subfamilies: Fox TRF and Fox Sans TRF. Fox TRF is upright italic typeface with light, regular and bold weight styles. The most distinguished Fox characteristic is the lowercase letters. Their curly, playful and vivid letter forms were derived from handwritten lettering then carefully shaped and adapted onto sans serif category. Fox typeface is recommended for use as a display font, and has been generated in a single OpenType format with Western CP1252 character set.
  9. FHA Tuscan Roman by Fontry West, $20.00
    The first Tuscan lettering was penned in the mid-fourth century by the calligrapher Furius Dionysius Filocalus. The style was still in common usage as calligraphy when Vincent Figgins designed the first Antique Tuscan for print in 1817. Antique and Gothic Tuscan woodtype fonts appeared in the 1830’s. By the 1850’s, Tuscan fonts had become popular in America. These styles continued in print use into the twentieth century. Tuscan Antique and Gothic styles, borrowed from print and calligraphy, were perfect for signs, posters, handbills and other large format advertising. Sign painter, Frank Atkinson demonstrated several Tuscan forms in his book Sign Painting, A Complete Manual. Modified & Spurred Tuscan Romans were inspired by this and other works of the same period.
  10. Borest by Flavortype, $20.00
    Borest, a new carefully crafted roman sans serif display font. The ideas for this font has a wide range of reference, from vintage, classic, art deco, until the modern era. So the looks of this font must be in the wide range of the reference above. Borest has a versatile and luxury feel as you can see in our creations on the display, such as Branding, Header, Logotype, Poster, Magazine, Packaging, Wedding Invitation with art deco style, and more. It shows that Borest can accommodate various design style. Borest comes with OpenType Features. such as Stylistic Alternates as an Ascender swash and Descender Swash and Ligatures. Every glyphs for alternates are curated for the best and without eliminating the characteristics of this font.
  11. Ekeras V2 by Type Innovations, $39.00
    Ekeras V2 Inline is an original design by Alex Kaczun. It is a display font not intended for text use. It was designed specifically for display headlines, logotype, branding and similar applications. Primarily a display, this extremely versatile font has generous proportions, large counters and loose fitting which also allow the font to work well across a wide range of text sizes. The entire font has an original look which is strong, dynamic, machine generated and can be widely used in publications and advertising. Ekeras is a futuristic, techno-looking and dynamic typeface with an appearance of machined-like parts with sharp and rounded edges. The large Pro font character set supports most Central European and many Eastern European languages.
  12. Montoro Display by FoxType, $12.00
    Montoro Display is a Brand New Luxury Typeface with a powerful font family. It has a dependable and uncompromising style, with controlled letterforms and modern touches. It looks amazing in logos, magazines, and movies . Montoro Font would be perfect for branding, headlines, Captions, paragraph, and posters . The various weights allow you to experiment with a wide range of applications. It's created to make an impression without sacrificing its beauty and readability. It's shown a clean, minimalist, warmth, quirky, yet still purposed to be versatile The Typeface includes Six Weights - Regular, Medium, SemiBold, Bold, ExtraBold, and Black. All offer wide language support, upper and lower cases, numerals and extended punctuation. Thank you for taking the time to look into the font.
  13. Aabak by Polimateria, $39.00
    Aabak is a sumptuous modern typeface family. The high contrast, super elegant, didone like shapes were infused with a little fluidity from 60’s psychedelic lettering, the results is a contemporary face that screams freshness. It is ideal for branding, advertising, headlines, posters, movie titles, and much more! This design deliberately sabotages a lot of white space to have that compressed punchy look. The tear drop terminals and the melting serifs create a surprisingly superb combo. Sharp joints were smoothen to convey a warm and subtle feeling. Aabak comprises a total of 18 styles, 6 weights in 3 different cuts: Upright, Italic and Swash. The Swash styles have also a terminal forms feature that gives that extra lush feel. Have fun playing with it!
  14. Cal Roman Modern by Posterizer KG, $19.00
    Cal Roman Modern is one more font from PKG “Cal” (Calligraphic) group. This time for calligraphic sketches we used a wide brush instead of the iron pen. Instead of minuscule letters, there are Small Caps (which are the same weight as capitals). Because there is no difference in the stroke thickness of capital letters and lowercase capital letters the difference in height is only one pen width, because of that, it is possible to use small capitals together with capital letters without noticing a difference in the thickness of the letters. Cal Roman Modern font is rhythmic, informal elegant, bright and light. As such, this font is widely used in the typographic creation of shorter text forms: magazine, catalogs and book titles, logos, posters, movie spots, banners...
  15. Magenos by Graphite, $18.00
    Magenos is a modern geometric sans serif family characterized by its simplicity and extensive functionality. With its open apertures, geometric architecture and low contrast strokes, it expresses a sincere tone with a modernistic, neutral, yet friendly personality. It has been designed to work well for a wide range of applications and is a reliable workhorse. Equally suitable for print and screen usage, it works well for both text and display at a wide range of point sizes. The addition of true italics gives the whole family a dynamic edge and flexibility. Magenos comes with many OpenType features including stylistic alternates, standard ligatures, oldstyle and lining (proportional and tabular) numerals, slashed zero and a variety of symbols, making it a perfect choice for contemporary and professional typography.
  16. Bodoni by ParaType, $30.00
    Designed at ParaType in 1989 by Alexander Tarbeev. A modern replica of the typeface by Giambattista Bodoni, the Italian punchcutter and typographer of the late 18th century. Bodoni was a director of printing house of Duke of Parma in Italy. His early types were based on those of Fournier and Didot, but he developed the designs to become what are now considered to be the first modern typefaces. His letters have strong vertical stress, sharply contrasting thick and thin strokes and unbracketed hairline serifs. The contrast of thick and thin in Bodoni typefaces can produce a sparkling effect on a page: should be carefully used in texts; good for headlines and display. Condensed and decorative styles were added in 1993–97.
  17. Apothicaire by Sudtipos, $49.00
    Apothicaire is a new font designed by Ale Paul and the Sudtipos team that is inspired in, but not limited to, an antique style casted by a German type foundry during the late XIX century. With the addition of a contemporary design approach, Apothicaire comes in three widths —from condensed to expanded— and five weights —from light to extra bold—, offering a wide range of combinations to explore. As a bonus the font family is also available in a single variable format. An elegant small caps set, a variety of ball terminals and delicate swashes, as well as the possibility to choose from many alternates are also included in the OpenType features. Apothicaire supports a wide range of Latin alphabet-based languages.
  18. Chalobah by Natural Ink, $17.00
    Chalobah - a serif look with simple, clean and visual elegance with smooth curves and beautiful ligatures, A very versatile font that works in both large and small sizes. This font is suitable for a wide variety of projects such as: headlines, logos, labels, branding projects, magazines, homeware designs, product packaging, mugs, quotes, posters, and more. It can also be more expressive and fun, thanks to the many alternatives and binders that combine harmoniously in this font and make it more interesting and versatile. Try to change alternatives, binders and you will get many options for your project which will make it Smooth & beautiful. Features: Section • Full set of uppercase, lowercase • Ligatures • Alternative • A wide variety of numbers, symbols & punctuation • Characters with accents • Support Multiple Languages • PUA encoded
  19. Humpty Dumpling NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    This rollicking romp through the alphabet is based on an offering from the irrepressible M. Draim, seen in La Lettre dans le Décor & la Publicité Modernes, published by Monrocq Frères of Paris in 1932. Its animated and friendly demeanor will add personality to any headline it graces. Both versions of this font contain the Unicode 1252 (Latin) and Unicode 1250 (Central European) character sets, with localization for Romanian and Moldovan.
  20. Deco Drop Caps JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    From the pages of the 1939 French lettering book “Modèles de lettres modernes par Georges Léculier” (“Models of Modern Lettering”) comes an attractive and unusual set of initial drop caps made from square letters adorned with multiple vertical lines. Originally designed as white letters on black backgrounds, an additional set with black letters on white backgrounds comprise Deco Drop Caps JNL; available in both regular and oblique versions.
  21. Salden by Canada Type, $40.00
    The Salden fonts are our tribute to the man who was dubbed the face of the Dutch book, and whose work is considered essential in 20th century Dutch design history. Helmut Salden’s exquisite book cover designs were the gold standard in the Netherlands for more than four decades. His influence over Dutch lettering artists and book designers ranges far and wide, and his work continues to be used commercially and exhibited to this very day. At the root of Salden’s design work was a unique eye for counter space and incredible lettering skills that never failed to awe, regardless of category or genre. This made our attention to his lettering all the more focused within our appreciation to his overall aesthetic. Though Salden never designed alphabets to be turned into typefaces (he drew sets of letters which he sometimes recycled and modified to fit various projects), we thought there was enough there to deduce what a few different typefaces by Salden would have looked like. The man was prolific, so there were certainly enough forms to guide us, and enough variation in style to push our excitement even further. And so we contacted the right people, obtained access to the relevant material, and had a lot of fun from there. This set covers the gamut of Salden’s lettering talents. Included are his famous caps, his untamed, chunky flare sans serif in two widths, his unique Roman letters and an italic companion and, most recognizable of all, his one-of-a-kind scripty upright italic lowercase shapes, which he used alongside Roman caps drawn specifically for that kind of combination titling. All the fonts in this set include Pan-European glyph sets. They’re also loaded with extras. Salden Roman (908 glyphs) and Salden Italic (976 glyphs) each come with built-in small caps (and caps-to-small-caps), quite a few ligatures, and two different sets of alternates. Salden Black and Salden Black Condensed (636 glyphs each) come with a set of alternates, and both lining and oldstyle figures. Salden Caps (597 glyphs) comes with a set of alternates, and Salden Titling (886 glyphs) comes with a quite a lot of swashed forms and alternates (including as many six variants for some forms), a few discretionary ligatures, and two sets of figures. There are also some form alternates for the Cyrillic and Greek sets included in all six fonts. These alphabets were enjoyably studied and meticulously developed over the past ten years or so. We consider ourselves very fortunate to be the ones bringing them to the world as our contribution to maintaining the legacy of a legendary talent and a great designer. The majority of the work was based on Salden’s original drawings, access to which was graciously provided by Museum Meermanno in The Hague. The Salden fonts were done in agreement with Stichting 1940-1945, and their sale will in part benefit Museum Meermanno.
  22. Camy by Scholtz Fonts, $9.50
    I wanted to create a "handwriting" font which could be used professionally. I have often needed such a font with a variety of weights and styles for a particular project and have had to resort to mixing fonts, creating a rather messy, amateur job. Camy is named for a little village in South West France where I did much of the initial work on this font. Camy is ideal for contemporary display work, comes in ten styles, and has a contemporary appeal with its casual, easy to read letters. Camy was designed as a total professional package for designers looking for a handwritten font suitable for all kinds of contemporary display work: the idea being that once you have the Camy Professional Pack you don't have to waste time searching for other handwritten fonts. The Family: LIGHT -- NARROW - light weight, condensed width, delicate line -- MEDIUM - light weight, delicate line -- WIDE - light weight, expanded width, delicate line NORMAL WEIGHT -- NARROW - of medium weight and condensed width - perfect for limited space -- MEDIUM - of medium weight -- WIDE - of medium weight and expanded width BLACK - for best readability -- NARROW - condensed width for bolder statements in small areas without losing legibility -- MEDIUM - for bolder statements -- WIDE - expanded width for bolder statements FAT -- WIDE - for maximum impact Use a combination of styles for product branding, book covers, invitations, greeting cards. The Camy combination works well for both headings and body text. Camy contains over 250 characters - (upper and lower case characters, punctuation, numerals, symbols and accented characters are present). It has all the accented characters used in the major European languages.
  23. 112 Hours by Device, $9.00
    Rian Hughes’ 15th collection of fonts, “112 Hours”, is entirely dedicated to numbers. Culled from a myriad of sources – clock faces, tickets, watches house numbers – it is an eclectic and wide-ranging set. Each font contains only numerals and related punctuation – no letters. A new book has been designed by Hughes to show the collection, and includes sample settings, complete character sets, source material and an introduction. This is available print-to-order on Blurb in paperback and hardback: http://www.blurb.com/b/5539073-112-hours-hardback http://www.blurb.com/b/5539045-112-hours-paperback From the introduction: The idea for this, the fifteenth Device Fonts collection, began when I came across an online auction site dedicated to antique clocks. I was mesmerized by the inventive and bizarre numerals on their faces. Shorn of the need to extend the internal logic of a typeface through the entire alphabet, the designers of these treasures were free to explore interesting forms and shapes that would otherwise be denied them. Given this horological starting point, I decided to produce 12 fonts, each featuring just the numbers from 1 to 12 and, where appropriate, a small set of supporting characters — in most cases, the international currency symbols, a colon, full stop, hyphen, slash and the number sign. 10, 11 and 12 I opted to place in the capital A, B and C slots. Each font is shown in its entirety here. I soon passed 12, so the next logical finish line was 24. Like a typographic Jack Bauer, I soon passed that too -— the more I researched, the more I came across interesting and unique examples that insisted on digitization, or that inspired me to explore some new design direction. The sources broadened to include tickets, numbering machines, ecclesiastical brass plates and more. Though not derived from clock faces, I opted to keep the 1-12 conceit for consistency, which allowed me to design what are effectively numerical ligatures. I finally concluded one hundred fonts over my original estimate at 112. Even though it’s not strictly divisible by 12, the number has a certain symmetry, I reasoned, and was as good a place as any to round off the project. An overview reveals a broad range that nonetheless fall into several loose categories. There are fairly faithful revivals, only diverging from their source material to even out inconsistencies and regularize weighting or shape to make them more functional in a modern context; designs taken directly from the source material, preserving all the inky grit and character of the original; designs that are loosely based on a couple of numbers from the source material but diverge dramatically for reasons of improved aesthetics or mere whim; and entirely new designs with no historical precedent. As projects like this evolve (and, to be frank, get out of hand), they can take you in directions and to places you didn’t envisage when you first set out. Along the way, I corresponded with experts in railway livery, and now know about the history of cab side and smokebox plates; I travelled to the Musée de l’imprimerie in Nantes, France, to examine their numbering machines; I photographed house numbers in Paris, Florence, Venice, Amsterdam and here in the UK; I delved into my collection of tickets, passes and printed ephemera; I visited the Science Museum in London, the Royal Signals Museum in Dorset, and the Museum of London to source early adding machines, war-time telegraphs and post-war ration books. I photographed watches at Worthing Museum, weighing scales large enough to stand on in a Brick Lane pub, and digital station clocks at Baker Street tube station. I went to the London Under-ground archive at Acton Depot, where you can see all manner of vintage enamel signs and woodblock type; I photographed grocer’s stalls in East End street markets; I dug out old clocks I recalled from childhood at my parents’ place, examined old manual typewriters and cash tills, and crouched down with a torch to look at my electricity meter. I found out that Jane Fonda kicked a policeman, and unusually for someone with a lifelong aversion to sport, picked up some horse-racing jargon. I share some of that research here. In many cases I have not been slavish about staying close to the source material if I didn’t think it warranted it, so a close comparison will reveal differences. These changes could be made for aesthetic reasons, functional reasons (the originals didn’t need to be set in any combination, for example), or just reasons of personal taste. Where reference for the additional characters were not available — which was always the case with fonts derived from clock faces — I have endeavored to design them in a sympathetic style. I may even extend some of these to the full alphabet in the future. If I do, these number-only fonts could be considered as experimental design exercises: forays into form to probe interesting new graphic possibilities.
  24. InstaLove Smooth by Nicky Laatz, $18.00
    With smooth curves and a deliciously bold personality, InstaLove Smooth leaves good vibes wherever it goes. The InstaLove Smooth Brush font is loaded with opentype features including character alternates and a large selection of natural looking ligatures. Scroll through the previews to get a good feel for what it can do. Included in the glyphs are 8 super handy swashes , and a few extra doodles, to add some extra punch to your designs. Perfect for making a bold statement, and getting second glances - InstaLove won’t let you down.
  25. Palaima by John Moore Type Foundry, $19.00
    Palaima is a geometric display font, its name means word-image and is inspired by our aboriginal pictographs, Palaima was created to compose texts informal, where each character is an entertainment, featuring several variations of this font letters to make more enjoyable composition. Palaima has a set of characters that include swash, stylistic alternates, ligatures, fractions and twenty funny icons. Palaima was selected in the third Biennial of Latin American Typography "Tipos Latinos" also was honored by the Ruben Fontana's JournalTipográfica of Argentina "Best Latin American Typographic Creativity".
  26. Ruth Pro by David Engelby Foundry, $25.00
    Ruth Pro is a creative work horse primarily designed to be used for typographic design of magazines, posters and books. Though roughly inspired by fonts like Mendoza and Stone Serif, it has its own distinctive look, carefully crafted following all the classic ideals of typography. If you are also looking for that special display font, you will be surprised by all the great details of Ruth Pro, including dingbats, arrows, alternative characters, special designed ligatures and small caps characters—and much more! Ruth Pro also includes a vast selection of Slavic and Scandinavian characters.
  27. Baisteach by Fontdation, $15.00
    Introducing Baisteach, our latest all-caps vintage serif. Inspired from early 1900's typography that often used in sign paintings, packaging labels, and advertisements. This typeface is made of sharp serifs, clean edges and strong form, give you a simple yet impactful feels. Suits best for headline, logo/logotype, and many more. If you're a fan of classic typography, make sure you add this font to your design toolbox. Last but not least, don't forget to activate its OpenType Feature to get the wider selection of letter combinations.
  28. Special Charisma by Say Studio, $17.00
    Special Charisma is a stylish vintage font inspired by 70’s groovy vibe with a touch of modernity. It looks amazing at display sizes and is easily readable in text size. Olive Village comes with access to your OpenType features, large selection of alternate glyphs and ligatures. There are three versions of this font : REGULAR, ITALIC, and OUTLINE. WHAT'S INCLUDED : Multilingual Support For access to Stylistic Alternates is required software with glyphs panel like Photoshop and lllustrator. No special software is required to use Ligatures. Have a wonderful day, Saystudio
  29. Dona by Harbor Type, $30.00
    🏆 Selected for Tipos Latinos 9. Dona is a non-boring sans serif. While very legible in text sizes, its friendly details really come to life on headlines, packaging and visual identities. To make it even more interesting, Dona Alt brings a different feeling with just a few different glyphs. The Dona type family comes in 5 weights, from Regular to Black, matching italics and an Alt version, totalling 20 fonts. If you need even more control, variable fonts are also available. Each font contains 528 glyphs and supports over 200 languages.
  30. Begina Display by Masa Type, $17.00
    Begina Display is a modern vintage serif font packaged in a modern and classy style, complete with access to your OpenType features to access a large selection of alternates letters and ligatures, the choice of letters you like from variations of uppercase and lowercase letters to get a display luxurious and elegant. What is included: Begina Display Regular BeginaDisplay Italic Begina Display Outline Features All Uppercase and Lowercase Number & Symbol Supported Languages Alternates and Ligatures PUA Encoded If you have any questions, don't hesitate to contact me. Thank you,
  31. Foundry Flek by The Foundry, $99.00
    Foundry Flek and Foundry Plek are created on the same dot matrix grid system. Each family includes: light, regular, medium and bold weights – with a selection of dot patterns that can extend the grid vertically and horizontally. The underlying matrix common to each weight allows experimentation with overlays, and mixing weights produces varying effects. Foundry Plek used conventionally works well for serious correspondence, with a 'typewriter font' effect. Foundry Flek has an integral dot matrix grid as a background. With these two fonts a whole new graphic language can be explored.
  32. Breuer Headline by TypeTrust, $30.00
    Breuer Headline exhibits a modern geometric structure tempered with subtle strokes of friendly humanism. Its neutral forms and sturdy rhythm are convincing without being forceful. The lowercase has a slightly casual feel. Set in all caps for a sterner message. Breuer Headline is the display complement to the Breuer Text family. Differences are found in the inside curvature of the lowercase arms and the simplified Oblique as opposed to the Text Italics. Breuer Headline is equipped with Small Caps, Old Style Figures, Tabular Figures, and a selection of dingbats.
  33. Kunta by ArimaType, $18.00
    Kunta is a modern vintage serif font packaged in a modern and unique style, complete with access to your OpenType feature to access a large selection of alternative fonts and binders, choose the font you like from a variety of uppercase and lowercase letters to get a luxurious and elegant look. A quirky, fun, and versatile serif series with lots of ligatures and alternatives to spice up any design you fancy. This font is perfect for branding projects, Logo designs, Clothing Branding, packaging, magazine titles, advertisements, T-shirts, postcards and many more.
  34. Alter Biom by Glen Jan, $30.00
    Alter Biom is eclectic sans-serif inspired by many type styles from calligraphy and blackletter to modernism. It will work great as titles and headlines, short display-textlines on book covers, magazines, packaging or posters. On the web this type must be used in large point sizes for best legibility. It supports Latin Extended-A (Western, Central Europe, Baltic, Turkish) and Cyrillic encoding languages and contain minimal set of opentype features – lining digits, case sensitive punctuation, small-numeric forms and scripted fractions. Fully functional Demo style is distributed free for non-commercial using.
  35. Olive Village by Ivan Rosenberg, $16.00
    Olive Village is a stylish vintage font inspired by 70’s groovy vibe with a touch of modernity. It looks amazing at display sizes and is easily readable in text size. Olive Village comes with access to your OpenType features, large selection of alternate glyphs and ligatures. There are two versions of this font : REGULAR and ITALIC. Olive Village is a display font made mainly for headlines, titles, and other short texts and is well-suited for advertising, vintage mood board, branding, logotypes, packaging, titles, editorial design and modern and vintage design.
  36. Winter Delight by Supfonts, $15.00
    Winter Delight / Casual handwritten font Winter Delight it is a casual handwritten font with exquisite accents. The font is very cute and contains a huge number of ligatures. It is perfect for branding, wedding invitations and invitation cards and many more Font includes a full set of gorgeous uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers & large selection of punctuation marks Test it out below to see how it could look for your next project! Includes: Regular Script All latin languages support Uppercase and lowercase Numbers and punctuation Check out my blog: https://www.instagram.com/leopardletters pinterest.com/dmitriychirkov7 Enjoy
  37. The Landike by Canden Meutuah, $15.00
    Serif is a modern serif font packaged in a modern and classy style, complete with access to your OpenType feature to access a large selection of alternative letters and ligatures, the choice of letters you like from various uppercase and lowercase letters for a luxurious impression and elegant appearance. A new elegant serif font that will add a touch of luxury and style to your projects. This is a very versatile font that works well in both large and small sizes. this is equipped with full uppercase, lowercase, numbers and punctuation + Multi-language support
  38. MFC Zulu Monogram by Monogram Fonts Co., $69.00
    The inspiration source for Zulu Monogram is a vintage publication called “Bibliotheque D.M.C: Alphabets et Monogrammes 2nd Series”. This wonderful design is an alternative to the diamond shape monogram that dominated monogram at the time. A Zulu shield-like form, this monogram style is now digitally recreated and revived for modern use in Zulu Monogram, with two letter monograms and a selection of additional frame styles for a final classy touch! Download and view the MFC Zulu Monogram Guidebook if you would like to learn a little more.
  39. Brooklyn Pirates by IKIIKOWRK, $17.00
    Proudly present Brooklyn Pirates - Street Type, created by ikiiko. A hipster typeface using handwriting in street and urban style, with a large selection of swashes that you can wear however you like. This type is very suitable for making a brand logo, poster design, magazine header, sleeve cover, flyer, quotes, or simply as a stylish text overlay to any background image. What's Included? Uppercase & Lowercase Numbers & Punctuation Alternates & Stylistic Multilingual Support Enjoy our font and if you have any questions, you can contact us by email : ikiikowrk@gmail.com
  40. Spark Sans by Primitive Spark, $5.00
    Spark a revolution for a better future with Spark Sans. Super clean and geometric, this display typeface is ideal for tech, transportation, electronic music, revolutionary products or other disruptive ideas that move us beyond the present. Spark Sans has a relatively high x-height and squared off curves that give it a distinctive look while still maintaining a minimalist aesthetic. The design originated with custom lettering for the Primitive Spark identity, which became the foundation for the bold style. With 260 glyphs, Spark Sans is a great choice for many languages with Latin characters.
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