10,000 search results (0.058 seconds)
  1. DwarfSpirits BB - Personal use only
  2. SF RetroSplice - Unknown license
  3. SuperBefok - Unknown license
  4. Amanda's Script - Unknown license
  5. Ellie Grace Color Guard - Unknown license
  6. RNS Bobo Dylan - 100% free
  7. Surface - 100% free
  8. Phosphorus Hydride - Unknown license
  9. PXL8R - Unknown license
  10. SF Piezolectric - Unknown license
  11. spearbox - Unknown license
  12. FATTIP - Unknown license
  13. Phosphorus Sulphide - Unknown license
  14. Al Seg33 by Nihar Mazumdar, $1.00
    Al Seg 33 is a moderately dense alphanumeric display. The 33 segments are made up of eight outer segments, and twenty-four inside segments, and a center dot. It has five diagonals in each corner.
  15. Pure And Simple Everytime by Weknow, $25.00
    Give a simple rounded fun groovy, fancy, to any text project, also cool for a logotype. I created this font while listening to a lightning seed song, pure and simple, and having fun with it.
  16. JH Oleph var by JH Fonts, $200.00
    JH Oleph is a modern neo sans humanist Typeface. It includes eight weights and five widths, total of forty weights and another forty italics. JH Oleph may be used as screen display and text type.
  17. JH Oleph by JH Fonts, $9.00
    JH Oleph is a modern neo sans humanist Typeface. It includes eight weights and five widths, total of forty weights and another forty italics. JH Oleph may be used as screen display and text type.
  18. Bucks by Stereo Type Haus, $20.00
    The idea was to create a legible font based on graffiti (wide tip marker) hand styles. Special attention to tight spacing, stylish caps & alternate drips bring an authentic street aesthetic into any layout or signage.
  19. EyeEye Mate by Dingbatcave, $15.00
    The ultimate "Eye-conic" dingbat with over 40 pairs of eyeballs (either left-right or up-down facing. Great for web design, some pairs even come with a third eye for that special "in" site.
  20. Chip by Holland Fonts, $30.00
    Chip 01 was originally designed for a high tech transparent anniversary telephone card, to give this card its own identity with a slight technological reference. Chip 02 is an adapted version with slightly increased legibility.
  21. Barry by Juraj Chrastina, $29.00
    The Barry family combines two opposite weights. This display face has a great effect if the two fonts are used together. If you want to make your design ordinary, Barry is not the right choice.
  22. Sanderling by Atlantic Fonts, $26.00
    Sanderling is irrepressibly cheerful. Turn on discretionary ligatures to access double-letter ligatures for both cases, plus more chirpy ligatures designed to give flight to Sanderling’s lively character. Sanderling has the legs to make waves!
  23. Artiste by ITC, $29.00
    A casual, open brush script style designed with a shadow effect for a three-dimensional impression by British designer Martin Wait. This typeface looks best with tight letter and word spacing in large display settings.
  24. ANGELES PERSONAL USE - Personal use only
  25. Scarlett Busiat_Demo - Personal use only
  26. Fujita Ray - Personal use only
  27. Cronus - Personal use only
  28. Cowboys 2.0 - Personal use only
  29. Alright, picture this: Budmo Jiggler is like the life of a design party, a font that truly knows how to have a good time. Crafted by the talented Ray Larabie, a name synonymous with typeface innovati...
  30. LT Oksana - Personal use only
  31. Source Code Pro - 100% free
  32. Miama - 100% free
  33. DIVERGENT - Personal use only
  34. Nameplate JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Two attractive cast metal door signs reading "Men" and "Ladies" from back in the Art Deco era inspired the idea for Nameplate JNL. The left parenthesis key starts the border decoration, and the right parenthesis key closes it off. Nameplate JNL has just a basic A-Z and numeral set; the letters "floating" within the parallel lines of the border to form complete nameplates, apartment numbers or any similarly encased words. A period, comma, apostrophe and dash are on their respective keys. A small blank space is on the left bracket key, a medium space is on the right bracket key and a large space is on the left brace key. There is a small, complete frame on the right brace key. For names such as "MacDonald" or "McIntyre", the small "ac" is on the colon key and the small "c" is on the semicolon key. No kerning has been applied in order to give the type more of an antique, "mechanically assembled" look.
  35. Picture it: a font that stalks the night, looming from the shadowy corners of design like the legendary vampire it's named after. "Nosferatu," conjured into being by the creative blood magicians at K...
  36. FS Untitled Variable by Fontsmith, $319.99
    Developer-friendly The studio has developed a wide array of weights for FS Untitled – 12 in all, in roman and italic – with the intention of meeting every on-screen need. All recognisably part of a family, each weight brings a different edge or personality to headline or body copy. There’s more. Type on screen has a tendency to fill in or blow so for each weight, there’s the choice of two marginally different versions, allowing designers and developers to go up or down a touch in weight. They’re free to use the font at any size on any background colour without fear of causing optical obstacles. And to make life even easier for developers, the 12 weight pairs have each been designated with a number from 100 (Thin) to 750 (Bold), corresponding to the system used to denote font weight in CSS code. Selecting a weight is always light work. Easy on the pixels ‘It’s a digital-first world,’ says Jason Smith, ‘and I wanted to make something that was really functional for digital brands’. FS Untitled was made for modern screens. Its shapes and proportions, x-height and cap height were modelled around the pixel grids of even low-resolution displays. So there are no angles in the A, V and W, just gently curving strokes that fit, not fight, with the pixels, and reduce the dependency on font hinting. Forms are simplified and modular – there are no spurs on the r or d, for example – and the space between the dot of the i and its stem is larger than usual. The result is a clearer, more legible typeface – functional but with bags of character. Screen beginnings FS Untitled got its start on the box. Its roots lie in Fontsmith’s creation of the typeface for Channel 4’s rebrand in 2005: the classic, quirky, edgy C4 headline font, with its rounded square shapes (inspired by the classic cartoon TV shape of a squidgy rectangle), and a toned-down version for use in text, captions and content graphics. The studio has built on the characteristics that made the original face so pixel-friendly: its blend of almost-flat horizontals and verticals with just enough openness and curve at the corners to keep the font looking friendly. The curves of the o, c and e are classic Fontsmith – typical of the dedication its designers puts into sculpting letterforms. Look out for… FS Untitled wouldn’t be a Fontsmith typeface if it didn’t have its quirks, some warranted, some wanton. There’s the rounded junction at the base of the E, for example, and the strong, solid contours of the punctuation marks and numerals. Notice, too, the distinctive, open shape of the A, V, W, X and Y, created by strokes that start off straight before curving into their diagonal path. Some would call the look bow-legged; we’d call it big-hearted.
  37. FS Untitled by Fontsmith, $80.00
    Developer-friendly The studio has developed a wide array of weights for FS Untitled – 12 in all, in roman and italic – with the intention of meeting every on-screen need. All recognisably part of a family, each weight brings a different edge or personality to headline or body copy. There’s more. Type on screen has a tendency to fill in or blow so for each weight, there’s the choice of two marginally different versions, allowing designers and developers to go up or down a touch in weight. They’re free to use the font at any size on any background colour without fear of causing optical obstacles. And to make life even easier for developers, the 12 weight pairs have each been designated with a number from 100 (Thin) to 750 (Bold), corresponding to the system used to denote font weight in CSS code. Selecting a weight is always light work. Easy on the pixels ‘It’s a digital-first world,’ says Jason Smith, ‘and I wanted to make something that was really functional for digital brands’. FS Untitled was made for modern screens. Its shapes and proportions, x-height and cap height were modelled around the pixel grids of even low-resolution displays. So there are no angles in the A, V and W, just gently curving strokes that fit, not fight, with the pixels, and reduce the dependency on font hinting. Forms are simplified and modular – there are no spurs on the r or d, for example – and the space between the dot of the i and its stem is larger than usual. The result is a clearer, more legible typeface – functional but with bags of character. Screen beginnings FS Untitled got its start on the box. Its roots lie in Fontsmith’s creation of the typeface for Channel 4’s rebrand in 2005: the classic, quirky, edgy C4 headline font, with its rounded square shapes (inspired by the classic cartoon TV shape of a squidgy rectangle), and a toned-down version for use in text, captions and content graphics. The studio has built on the characteristics that made the original face so pixel-friendly: its blend of almost-flat horizontals and verticals with just enough openness and curve at the corners to keep the font looking friendly. The curves of the o, c and e are classic Fontsmith – typical of the dedication its designers puts into sculpting letterforms. Look out for… FS Untitled wouldn’t be a Fontsmith typeface if it didn’t have its quirks, some warranted, some wanton. There’s the rounded junction at the base of the E, for example, and the strong, solid contours of the punctuation marks and numerals. Notice, too, the distinctive, open shape of the A, V, W, X and Y, created by strokes that start off straight before curving into their diagonal path. Some would call the look bow-legged; we’d call it big-hearted.
  38. Certainly! Let's dive into the whimsically titled "Arrobatherapy" - a font that might just be what the doctor ordered for those craving a dose of typographic relief. Created by the prolific Harold Lo...
  39. Pretendo - Personal use only
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