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  1. Utusi Star - 100% free
  2. Graffiti - Unknown license
  3. 13_Fletcher - Personal use only
  4. !Basket of Hammers - Unknown license
  5. CrazyZoo - Unknown license
  6. Electric Hermes AOE - Unknown license
  7. Altea - Unknown license
  8. Paramount - Unknown license
  9. Naxalite - Unknown license
  10. Spike - Unknown license
  11. Brushed - Unknown license
  12. Blok - 100% free
  13. American Participants - Unknown license
  14. Zitcream - 100% free
  15. Copasetic - 100% free
  16. Olympus - Unknown license
  17. Shredded - Unknown license
  18. Angryblue - Unknown license
  19. Anderson Supercar - Unknown license
  20. CrawfishPopsicle - Unknown license
  21. Bamf Italic - Unknown license
  22. ATROX - Unknown license
  23. teen spirit - Unknown license
  24. Aswell - Unknown license
  25. Boulder - Unknown license
  26. BON ViVER - Unknown license
  27. Uno Estado - Personal use only
  28. Hulkbusters 3D - Personal use only
  29. !Futurelic - Unknown license
  30. Talvez assim - Personal use only
  31. Antiquary by DimitriAna, $22.00
    The Antiquary font collection was designed and illustrated, to reanimate the art of vintage advertising design. The fonts are inspired by the old ad posters and product labels, as well as the art of sign-making. The 4 typographic styles are combined with shapes and ornaments to create a variety of designs. They are ideal for logos, packaging, branding and all kinds of advertisements. Typographic styles: Antiquary: Old fashioned, serif, with 2 styles (Regular and Outline), stylistic alternates and ligatures. Antiquary Wide: All caps, bold, serif, vintage, with 3 styles: Regular, Inline and Outline. Antiquary Script: Modern brush calligraphy with terminal forms, contextual alternates, stylistic alternates and ligatures. Antiquary Thin: All caps, minimal, old fashioned. Antiquary Elements: 52 symbols, ribbons, frames and ornaments. The font collection supports Western, Central, Eastern, European, Baltic, Turkish and Greek languages.
  32. Opa-locka JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Opa-locka JNL is named for a city in Miami-Dade County, Florida and is based on an Art Nouveau-era bit of hand lettering found on vintage sheet music. Legendary aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss (who successfully developed the city of Miami Springs and the city of Hialeah with James Bright) began the development of Opa-locka around 1925 as a planned community with a "1001 Arabian Nights" theme. Plans for this exclusive community included a country club and a small private airfield, but the hurricane of 1926 derailed Curtiss' original vision of the city. Opa-locka gradually took shape as a residential area for middle-class families, but the closing of a long-established Marine base, changing demographics and a reputation for being a hot-spot for crime, drug abuse and corruption tarnished this once-grand community (which boasts the largest collection of Moorish Revival architecture in the Western hemisphere). Old-time Miamians bristle when the city's name (an abbreviation of a Seminole place name, spelled Opa-tisha-wocka-locka) is mis-spelled as "Opa-Locka", "Opa Locka" or "Opalocka". The correct name is hyphenated, and the second part is in lower case.
  33. Leopoldo Sans by Tiposureño, $25.00
    Leopoldo Sans is a modern sans serif typeface. He has a small family and its members are: light, regular and bold. Each weight includes small caps, ligatures, and tabular numbers. It could work perfectly in your design, web, editorial and corporate works.
  34. Crayon Hand by Letters&Numbers, $28.00
    In absence of oil pastels, charcoal, crayons or time, Crayon Hand is a quick fix to happy type setting. It comes in regular and bold. Enjoy! Crayon Hand is extended, containing West European diacritics making it suitable for multilingual environments and publications.
  35. Roslyn Gothic LP by LetterPerfect, $39.00
    LetterPerfect's version of this distinctive sans serif design is both legible and approachable, and about as bold as a display font can be. Its friendly persona makes it an ideal choice for greeting cards and invitations, or for use with children's reading material.
  36. Brab by VSF, $30.00
    A bold grotesque typeface in the best traditions of the Star Wars logo. It has clean geometric lines, a humnaist character, it combines a tech feeling with a friendly organic feeling. Will work excellently as a white text on a busy background.
  37. Madela by Letterena Studios, $10.00
    Madela is a bold and thick lettered serif font. It is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease! Add it confidently to your favorite creations and let yourself be amazed by the outcome generated.
  38. FM Kaantaa by FontMeister, $19.95
    Kaantaa is a bold typeface that draws inspiration from stencil and technical typfaces. It has been thought as a display typeface. You can use it to create posters, greeting cards, scrapbooks, CD labels, T-shirts, coffee mugs, digital videos websites and banners.
  39. Harlem Text by Solotype, $19.95
    This bold blackletter is rather wide, which enhances its readability. In Victorian job printing it was not unusual to find one line of blackletter in a card or handbill, just for contrast. This one came on the scene sometime in the 1880s.
  40. PhrackSle by Ingrimayne Type, $11.95
    PhrackSle is a a Fraktur face with a difference: it has a uniform stroke rather than a calligraphic-pen stroke. It comes in four weights: thin, plain, bold, and extrabold. (For a version of the design done with a calligraphic stroke, see PhederFrack.)
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