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  1. The New Metropolitan - Personal use only
  2. Sui Generis Free - Unknown license
  3. Elliott - Unknown license
  4. Smartfair - Unknown license
  5. COM4t Sans Medium - Unknown license
  6. PKP - Unknown license
  7. ALPHA - Unknown license
  8. RussianQuality - Unknown license
  9. Lein Bold - Unknown license
  10. Eclipse - Unknown license
  11. Switzerland - Unknown license
  12. CODE3X - Unknown license
  13. Fh_Perception - Personal use only
  14. Baumarkt - Unknown license
  15. Kalenderblatt Grotesk - Personal use only
  16. Two Tones - Unknown license
  17. Tasmin Ref - Unknown license
  18. winob - Unknown license
  19. Quark Outline - 100% free
  20. GAU_font_modern - Unknown license
  21. Induction - Unknown license
  22. Hackers - Unknown license
  23. CARMEN - Unknown license
  24. Quadaptor - Unknown license
  25. Moby - Unknown license
  26. Ben Brown - Unknown license
  27. Masterforce Solid - Unknown license
  28. XPED Bold - Unknown license
  29. Alphabeta - Unknown license
  30. Big Blocko - Unknown license
  31. 11.20 - Unknown license
  32. Perolet - Unknown license
  33. Clearblock circular - Unknown license
  34. SF Willamette - Unknown license
  35. Ubahn - 100% free
  36. SF Diego Sans - Unknown license
  37. Venus Rising - Unknown license
  38. Walkway Condensed SemiBold - Unknown license
  39. Sonrisa by CastleType, $59.00
    Sonrisa is a design that evolved from my sketches of the skeletal structure of Jakob Erbar’s Koloss, trying to discover its underlying essence without all the contrast and bulkiness of the original design. Sonrisa Thin was the resulting font, from which the other weights of the family were developed. Gentle curves, open counters, generous x-height, and sleekly tapered terminals give Sonrisa a very legible, modern, elegant appearance. When she saw the first draft of this typeface, the smile on my friend Jennifer’s face gave me the idea to call it “Sonrisa” (Spanish for “smile”). Jennifer, a clinical psychologist, described Sonrisa’s personality as: "happy, clean, clear, open, joyful, spacious, playful, calm. I can see it being used for body product lines such as oils and lotions. Can see it being used in home/travel magazines or even Architectural Digest. Yoga magazine, definitely." Sonrisa is what some foundries call a “Pro” typeface family with all the bells and whistles that provide typographic versatility: true small caps, oldstyle numerals, arbitrary fractions, discretionary ligatures, and other powerful OpenType features. All fonts in the family, except Sonrisa Titling, support most European languages, including modern Greek and languages that use the Cyrillic Alphabet. (Cyrillic glyphs designed in consultation with Ukrainian type designer, Sergiy S. Tkachenko.) Sonrisa is available in the original Thin, monoline version as well as six weights (Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Extra Bold, Black), and a Titling font that is essentially a display font construction kit. If you enjoy using Sonrisa even half as much as I enjoyed creating it, then I know you will have a “sonrisa” (smile) on your face!
  40. P22 Albion by IHOF, $24.95
    An open, lightweight font of classical Roman proportions, designed for text or display setting. The serifs are slightly hooked, giving the face a liveliness on the baseline.
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