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  1. Royalbrick by Bake me a font, $20.00
    Royalbrick is a contemporary display unicase typeface. It is a part of upcoming type family — light and condensed style. The font was inspired by factory stamps’ typography on bricks made in 19-20 century on Russian manufactures — this kind of bricks was also called “royal bricks”. It has a unique image with “squashed” stems and dynamic expanding strokes, and there are also some kind of ancient Cyrillic’s vibes in it’s letterforms. It is an excellent example of combining national character with modern trends and expressive graphics. Royalbrick consist of extended Latin and Cyrillic, figures, two sets of punctuation (normal and "thin" with ss01), few ligatures and stylistic alternatives and a special set for letters with accents — ss02 named "Downstairs Accents". The font has 292 glyphs.
  2. Wagner Round by Canada Type, $24.95
    This is the rounded, softer version of Canada Type's popular Wagner Grotesk. Originally done in 2011 for a global publisher, this font has already seen plenty of magazine and book cover action, perhaps even more than the sharp condensed face that spawned it. And like Wagner Grotesk, Wagner Round comes with small caps and biform/unicase forms, in addition to the main upper/lowercase set. The extended language support covers a wide range, including Greek and Cyrillic, Turkish, Baltic, Central and Eastern European languages, Celtic/Welsh and Esperanto. The Pro version combines all three TrueType fonts into one OpenType-programmed font, taking advantage of class-based kerning, the small caps feature, and the stylistic alternates feature for the biform shapes.
  3. Teip by Alex Jacque, $15.00
    Teip, designed by Alex Jacque in 2014, is a layerable geometric typeface system. Teip developed as a typographic exploration of overlapping tape where a over/under, foreground/background interplay would be a stylistic motif throughout. For the most part, the uppercase characters have a vertical stress in the foreground, while lowercase have the horizontal stressed in the foreground. Because this is a unicase typeface, upper and lower case glyphs can be mixed for a more random feel in the shape of individual words and the flow of sentences. In Teip, glyph widths and kerning are the same across all styles and weights. This opens up the ability to easily layer one style on top of another to create a large number of color and stylistic combinations.
  4. Passiflora by Compañía Tipográfica de Chile, $30.00
    Passiflora is a unicase display font with elegant shapes and swashes, imitating the handraw in a friendly and llamative aesthetic. This font inspires the facade inscriptions and rotulations of the buildings in the XX century of Santiago, as the fresh features of rounded brushes. Passiflora counts with 7 variants: Regular, Shadows, Outline, and Decorative version. Every variable contains more than 800 glyphs and a wide support of languages from Occidental, Central and Oriental Europe and Vietnamitese. This font is perfect to decorate book covers, showcases, packagings, posters, titles , among other uses. Passiflora counts with OpenType Alternates, Swashes, Titling alternatives, Stylistic sets, Discretionary Ligatures, Ornament sets and modern numbers, denominators and numerators, customized and become unique, allowing dinamism to the design.
  5. Bechamel Roman by Andinistas, $39.00
    BECHAMEL ROMAN was born interpreting unicase letterings of the movie "Willy Wonka and the chocolate factory". Later these ideas matured with flexible tip nib and paper mixing their naive proportions with some classic ingredients of Baskerville, Bodoni, Didot, Round Hand Script, Graffiti and labels found in Venezuela and Colombia. BECHAMEL ROMAN designed to be combined with Bechamel. BECHAMEL Script, Vein, Words & Ornaments were hand drawn to design words and phrases in logos, packaging, posters, envelopes and greeting cards. BECHAMEL ROMAN 1,2,3 & 4 is an experimental font family designed by #carlosfabiancg. It includes an irregular look to communicate craftsmanship. Its multiple upper cases with condensed width and naive lines are notable for their expressive drawing with a high amount of contrast between thick and thin strokes.
  6. Yacimiento - Personal use only
  7. BonvenoCF - 100% free
  8. The "Octin College Free" font, designed by the prolific type designer Ray Larabie, is part of the Octin series of fonts, which includes various styles catering to different themes and requirements. T...
  9. The font "Negotiate Free" by Ray Larabie is a distinctive typeface that embodies the unique fusion of modernity and functionality, intrinsic to Larabie's design philosophy. Known for his prolific out...
  10. Quinoa by Catharsis Fonts, $29.00
    Quinoa is display typeface by Catharsis Fonts that unites the seemingly opposed concepts of clean geometric architecture and organic humanist warmth. While it is designed for display and editorial purposes, its accessible forms make for comfortable reading even at small text sizes. Its exuberant adaptive "f", "j", "Q" and refreshing titling alternates bring display text to life. Quinoa covers multilingual Latin, Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, and Armenian. The Quinoa family spans four stylistic cuts (Quinoa, Quinoa Titling, Quinoa Round, and Quinoa Text) with matching hand-slanted obliques, each of which comes in nine weights. The Titling cut offers a number of alternate capital letter designs with lowercase-inspired forms for a refreshing unicase look, and the Round cut additionally removes the spurs from arched letters like n. The text cut introduces true diagonals and a two-storey "a" for a more sober, reading-friendly look. A host of other OpenType features including ligatures, contextual alternates, small caps, figure sets, and character variants are built into all cuts. Furthermore, the small caps of Quinoa, Quinoa Titling, and Quinoa Text are available as dedicated font files under the names "Quinoa SC", "Quinoa Unicase" and "Quinoa Text SC" for ease of use. Acknowledgements: I am thankful to the TypeDrawers and the Typografie.info communities for great feedback and support. In particular, Thorsten Daum has been tremendously helpful with suggestions and quality control. Thanks to Craig Eliason and Jan Willem Wennekes for their help with the Latin, Alexander L. Stetsiuk for Cyrillic, Ofir Shavit and Jonathan N. Washington for Hebrew, Khaled Hosny for Arabic, and Hrant H. Papazian for Armenian.
  11. LFT Iro Sans by TypeTogether, $49.00
    Milan-based Leftloft studio developed LFT Iro Sans, an expansive family that solves the significant, wide-ranging challenges of branding, wayfinding, pictographic language, and complex editorial use. LFT Iro Sans began as the clear and welcoming wayfinding project of San Siro stadium in Milan. Over time many other styles and weights have been added. LFT Iro Sans never finds itself outmatched by the task at hand. The primary aim was to design a technical typeface that was readable in any low visibility condition, for instance in a poorly lit area with awkward wall shapes and overhangs. This worked well for stadium and large lettering use, but other problems also needed to be addressed, such as complementary iconography. A location developer was left mixing — clashing, really — one type family with a different family of icons, resulting in a cobbled-together look which diluted the brand and the experience. They set out to radically simplify and clarify each shape and its meaning, accepting uniqueness as part of the final visual language. LFT Iro Sans pictograms answers the need for having a consistent and large group of icons, perfectly suited to the text typeface. As it concerns public spaces, this didn’t exist before. LFT Iro Sans incorporated a branding project too, so they decided to let LFT Iro Sans go out on a limb and created a unicase style that demands attention. Each unicase letter is a combination of the lowercase and capital form, quite noticeable in the ‘i’, ‘m’, ‘t’, and unique ‘d’ and ‘b’, balanced by more restrained forms of ‘a’, ‘s’, ‘c’, and ‘e’. LFT Iro Sans is not only a technical typeface, but, thanks to letters’ proportions, can also be used for editorial purposes. Assertive and economical in stature, the text weights are clear and assured. And a display version for headlines in Ultralight and Heavy (with italics) was developed for stunning headlines. For enthusiasts of every stripe, LFT Iro Sans can be a brand’s rallying cry with its arresting unicase, be a developer’s go-to pictogram choice, or set the most demanding editorial text in digital or print. With its many OpenType features, simplified pictogram commands (even available in Apple’s Pages and Microsoft Word), and a total of 30 targeted family members, LFT Iro Sans is a brilliant, easy choice. As with the rest of the TypeTogether catalogue, the complete LFT Iro Sans family, designed by Lefloft and developed by Octavio Pardo, has been optimised for today’s varied screen uses.
  12. Kodama Forest by Hanoded, $15.00
    Kodama are spirits in Japanese folklore that inhabit trees. The term is also used for trees in which a kodama houses. Kodama Forest is a rough, spikey and inky font, in the style of the great Ralph Steadman. Kodama Forest comes with a bunch of alternates, some interesting ligatures and a lot of splatter. And, of course, all the diacritics you can throw a tree spirit at.
  13. Chewatext by Jipatype, $17.00
    Chewatext is a sans serif typeface that minimalism, geometric, and technological look. This versatile font family offers a staggering 18 styles, support Latin-1 and Thai Unicode for character. Making it the ultimate choice for contemporary design projects. Whether it is various printed works, both online and offline.
  14. Vrinda by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Vrinda™ is an OpenType font for the Indic script Bengali. It is based on Unicode™, contains TrueType outlines and was designed by Raghunath Joshi (Type Director) Vinay Saynekar for use as a UI font. Copyright ™ 2004 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved. Character Set: Latin-1, Bengali
  15. Chewatext Rounded by Jipatype, $17.00
    Chewatext Rounded, developed from Chewatext, is a rounded sans-serif typeface that exudes minimalism and a geometric look. This versatile font family offers 18 styles, supporting Latin-1 and Thai Unicode characters. It is suitable for contemporary design projects, whether for various printed works or online and offline
  16. Tunga by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Tunga™ is an OpenType font for the Indic script Kannada. It is based on Unicode, contains TrueType outlines and was designed by Raghunath Joshi (Type Director) and Vinay Saynekar for use as a UI font. Copyright ™ 2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Character Set: Latin-1, Kannada
  17. Uppsala LP by LetterPerfect, $39.00
    Uppsala is a new and original uncial typeface designed by Paul Shaw in collaboration with Garrett Boge in 1998. Its strongly chiseled shapes were inspired by historical northern European manuscript lettering. The face is appropriate for short text or display settings. Uppsala is part of the LetterPerfect Swedish Set
  18. Binghamton NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    This typeface gets its inspiration from a face designed by Vincent Pacella for PLINC named Bingham, and is evocative of steam locomotives and the Old West. Both versions of this font include the Unicode Latin 1252 and 1250 Central European character sets, with localization for Moldovan and Romanian.
  19. Ysleta NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Here's a faithful rendering of an old face from the James Conner's Sons specimen catalog of 1888, alternately known as Aetna or Painter's Gothic. Its compact descenders allow for tightly-spaced headlines. Both versions of the font contain the complete Unicode Latin 1252 and Central European 1250 character sets.
  20. Shruti by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Shruti™ is an OpenType font for the Indic script Gujarati. It is based on Unicode, contains TrueType outlines and was designed by Raghunath Joshi (Type Director) Santosh Kshirsagar for use as a UI font. Copyright ™ 2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Character Set: Latin-1, Gujarati
  21. Freethinker by My Creative Land, $20.00
    Freethinker is an irregular brush script with a hipster look and feel. This brush font benefits from OpenType features such as ligatures (and their alternates), stylistic alternates, design elements. The font can be used in branding, greeting cards design, packaging design, webdesign and publishing. It is fully unicode mapped.
  22. Shopie by Hendra Pratama, $19.00
    Shopie is a handmade script made with a marker pen. It is useful for a variety projects such as quotes, book covers, t-shirt designs, magazine titles and much more. Features: 370 Glyphs Uppercase Lowercase Symbols & Punctuation Support more than 62 Languages Support OpenType Features Support PUA Unicode
  23. Ponte Vecchio NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    An elegant typeface from the turn of the last century named "Venezia", issued by Karl Brendler and Son of Vienna, provided the inspiration for this little gem, with hints of the exotic. Both versions of this font include the complete Unicode Latin 1252 and Central European 1250 character sets.
  24. Cimero Pro - 100% free
  25. Ventography Personal Use Only - Personal use only
  26. Walt Disney Script - Personal use only
  27. Unity Dances - Personal use only
  28. Tasmin Reference - Unknown license
  29. Bohemia - Personal use only
  30. Belta Bold - Personal use only
  31. Shelter Me - Personal use only
  32. Savia Filled Shadow - Personal use only
  33. Clink Outlined - Personal use only
  34. Culita - Personal use only
  35. Tasmin Ref - Unknown license
  36. La Belle Aurore - Personal use only
  37. Ten Million Fireflies - Personal use only
  38. Sunshine In My Soul - Personal use only
  39. Written on His Hands - Personal use only
  40. Fontocide - Unknown license
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