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  1. MKBritishWriting - 100% free
  2. Ardour GM - Personal use only
  3. Gorilla Milkshake - Personal use only
  4. DigitalStrip - Personal use only
  5. Josselyn - Unknown license
  6. Kindergarten - Unknown license
  7. Tanline - Unknown license
  8. Spirit Medium - Personal use only
  9. Spacesuit - Unknown license
  10. CreativeBlock BB - Personal use only
  11. 1920 - Unknown license
  12. TORN - Unknown license
  13. ArcadeAmerica - Unknown license
  14. Du Bellay - Unknown license
  15. Gender - Unknown license
  16. DigitalStrip - Personal use only
  17. swallow - Unknown license
  18. Hearts - Unknown license
  19. CAPconstruct - Unknown license
  20. Patches - Unknown license
  21. Edition - Unknown license
  22. Ardour 3D GM - Personal use only
  23. Antroposofia - 100% free
  24. GraffitiThree - Unknown license
  25. Tuffy - 100% free
  26. Tuffy - 100% free
  27. Figgins Antique by HiH, $12.00
    “Hey, look at me!” cried the new advertising typefaces. With the nineteenth century and the industrial revolution came an esthetic revolution in type design. Brash, loud, fat display faces elbowed their way into the crowd of book faces, demanding attention. Those who admired traditional book types harumphed and complained. Robert Thorne had fired the opening round with his Fatface. With the cutting of Figgins Antique, the battle was well and truly joined. Job printing came into its own and it seemed like everything changed. The world of printing had been turned upside down and the gentile book-type aficionados recoiled in horror much as the rural landed gentry recoiled at the upstart middle class shopkeepers and manufacturers. William Savage, approvingly quoted by Daniel Berkeley Updike over a hundred years later, described the new display faces as “a barbarous extreme.” These were exciting times. According to Geoffrey Dowding in his An Introduction To The History Of Printing Types, “The types which we know by the name of Egyptian were first shown by Vincent Figgins in his specimen book of 1815, under the name Antique.” Of course, dating the design is not quite as simple as that. Nicolete Gray points out that Figgins used the same “1815” title page on his specimen books from 1815 to 1821, adding pages as needed without regard to archival issues. As a result, there are different versions of the 1815 specimen book. In those copies that include the new Antique, that specific specimen is printed on paper with an 1817 watermark. The design is dated by the 1817 watermark rather than the 1815 title page. Figgins Antique ML is an all-cap font. This typeface is for bold statements. Don't waste it on wimpy whispers of hesitant whimsies. And please don't use it for extended text -- it will only give someone a headache. Think boldly. Use it boldly. Set it tight. Go ahead and run the serifs together. Solid and stolid, this face is very, very English. FIGGINS ANTIQIE ML represents a major extension of the original release, with the following changes: 1. Added glyphs for the 1250 Central Europe, the 1252 Turkish and the 1257 Baltic Code Pages. Added glyphs to complete standard 1252 Western Europe Code Page. Special glyphs relocated and assigned Unicode codepoints, some in Private Use area. Total of 331 glyphs. 2. Added OpenType GSUB layout features: liga and pnum. 3. Added 86 kerning pairs. 4. Revised vertical metrics for improved cross-platform line spacing. 5. Redesigned mathamatical operators. 6. Included of both tabular (standard) & proportional numbers (optional). 7. Refined various glyph outlines.
  28. PreludeFLF is a typeface that strikes a fine balance between the traditional and the modern, encapsulating a unique blend of legibility and elegance. This font is part of the FLF (Free License Fonts)...
  29. Janda Apple Cobbler - Personal use only
  30. Janda Siesta Sunrise - Personal use only
  31. Talking to the Moon - Personal use only
  32. Janda Siesta Sunset - Personal use only
  33. the girl next door - Personal use only
  34. Throw My Hands Up in the Air - Personal use only
  35. KG June Bug Reverse - Personal use only
  36. KG Luck of the Irish - Personal use only
  37. you found me - Personal use only
  38. KG Legacy of Virtue - Personal use only
  39. Pen Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Pen Nouveau JNL is a perfect example of the fluid, free-form pen lettering popularized during the Art Nouveau era of the early 1900s. The type face was modeled from the lettering on the cover of a piece of sheet music from 1911 entitled "If You Talk in Your Sleep, Don't Mention My Name".
  40. Tiranti Solid by ITC, $39.00
    Tiranti Solid is based on the original textured Tiranti created by English designer Tony Forster. This typeface lends itself more easily for use in digital formats while still maintaining the free-flowing calligraphy of the earlier design. Tiranti Solid consists of initial swash capitals complemented by a more reserved lowercase with many alternate letters.
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