1,647 search results (0.016 seconds)
  1. Superstar DJ - Personal use only
  2. BoogieNightsNF - 100% free
  3. Snag Mag - Unknown license
  4. KidzOnlyTooSSK - Unknown license
  5. KR Holiday Frames 1 - Unknown license
  6. SERIESB - Unknown license
  7. KR On The Farm - Unknown license
  8. KR Pick A Holiday - Unknown license
  9. KR Christmas Time 2 - Unknown license
  10. KR Lots Of Hearts - Unknown license
  11. Crushed Out Girl - Unknown license
  12. Jabbie Junior - Personal use only
  13. Stonecross - Unknown license
  14. KR Pick A Pumpkin - Unknown license
  15. RabbitEars - Unknown license
  16. KR America Under Attack - Unknown license
  17. Print Clearly - Unknown license
  18. MyGalSwoopyNF - 100% free
  19. FeltMark - Unknown license
  20. Panier de Paques - Unknown license
  21. Jenkins v2.0 - Personal use only
  22. Cabaletta - Unknown license
  23. MoultiPass2 - Unknown license
  24. FangsSCapsSSK - Unknown license
  25. KR Oh Christmas Tree - Unknown license
  26. The Kids - Personal use only
  27. KR Lots Of Holly - Unknown license
  28. KR Christmas Color Me - Unknown license
  29. Influcts - Unknown license
  30. Chronicles of a Hero - Personal use only
  31. Poltergiest - Unknown license
  32. Wavy - Unknown license
  33. Geek Speek - Unknown license
  34. Narrow Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Narrow Stencil JNL is based on a set of 12 inch tall letter and number stencils, generally used for marking and identification.
  35. Able by T-26, $39.00
    The history of Able’s connection with the Harry Potter phenomenon is really up in the air. It’s a catch-22 in this business - you either promote your own work and negotiate expensive exclusive licenses, or you work with a promoter and sell your designs to anyone and everyone. It could have been an in-house designer at Rowling’s publisher, Scholastic, or a freelancer who proposed Able for the headings and such. The responsible party licensed it from T26, and JK Rowling’s storytelling made it a star. (I suppose it’s ironic that there’s a whole lot of unwritten history in the typography business.) Able’s rise to fame really is a classic love story between reading and type design. If the books weren’t so popular, Able might still be waiting for some Mexican fast food chain to pick it up for packaging design. The movie deal certainly made the font all the more recognizable, what with its merchandising campaign. Popularity can also cripple a great decorative face. It’s always being recognized as “The Harry Potter Font.” It might just have to wait a few decades for the Potter phenomenon to subside to be freed from the “Chamber of Pigeonholed Fonts.” In the meantime, I’m sure that a lot of fledgling graphic design apprentices are reading their new Potter books, being charmed by the idea of type design when they’re not turning the pages too fast to notice.
  36. ITC Chivalry by ITC, $29.99
    ITC Chivalry is a calligraphic hybrid that honors the tradition of combining Roman capitals with italic lowercase letters. Drawn by Missouri lettering artist Rob Leuschke, who used a flat-nib pen on textured watercolor stock and then converted the drawings into a digital font, the design combines an old world" feel with "new world" legibility. A companion set of black letter caps completes the suite of characters. "I've loved drawing letters for as long as I can remember," says Leuschke. "Even in kindergarten, I tried to draw letters like my teacher." After graduating from college, Leuschke worked for a short time at a sign company in St. Louis, and in the early 1980s began working at Hallmark Cards in Kansas City. His talent as a calligrapher and lettering artist eventually brought him back to St. Louis to begin a freelance career. Since then Leuschke has created over 250 fonts, primarily for the greeting card industry, that are now being used on work for his clients all over the world. Leuschke first conceived of the face as just the black letter caps; he later added the Roman letters to give the design more versatility. The Roman caps of ITC Chivalry combined with the lowercase are well suited to blocks of copy, while the more decorative black letter caps are ideal for showcasing short text of just a few words. Both sets of capitals also make great initial letters."
  37. Barlos-Random - 100% free
  38. ACID LABEL___ - Personal use only
  39. Carmen - Unknown license
  40. Sun n Moon - Unknown license
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