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  1. Freehand Brush by Zetafonts, $39.00
    Freehand is a type system designed by Debora Manetti and Francesco Canovaro to emulate the natural appearance of handmade brush writing. Open type ligature substitutions are used to randomly alternate between different versions of each character to give the final output a realistic, uneven look. The main typeface of the system is a wide freestyle brush cursive, featuring over four hundreds of alternate version for characters and double letter ligatures. A "brush easy" version is included without the substitutions if you need more consistent look in your design and better control over letter variation through the glyph panel. The two freehand brush weights are complemented by two sets of icons of matching style, one for ui design with navigation icons and one with food icons. The system also includes a blockletter family in two weights, to be used together with the other fonts to create variation and contrast in your design. Freehand covers over 40 languages that use the Latin alphabet, with a full range of accents and diacritics.
  2. Between by Monotype, $40.99
    Akira Kobayashi’s Between™ typeface comes in three main states. While different from each other, they all offer human-centered design to ensure that copy set in them is affable and approachable. An added benefit is the ability to transition “between” font designs, choosing different styles – or even individual characters – to create hierarchy, contrast or emphasis. Kobayashi designed the Between typeface in response to the current popularity of rounded, humanist sans serif designs over the cool grotesques of the 20th century. Between 1 melds industrial and humanist sans ethics. Between 2 represents a sans version of Kobayashi’s Cosmiqua® typeface, striking a balance between crisp and legible, organic and friendly. Between 3 is a freestyle sans with an uplifting sprightly mien. Between has 48 styles; each has eight weights of roman with its own italic counterpart. The family offers a large set of alternative glyphs and OpenType® features. A full interactive type specimen can be viewed here: http://www.monotype.com/fonts/between/ Featured in: Best Fonts for Logos
  3. AT Move Strano by André Toet Design, $39.95
    STRANO Like the name indicates it’s a strange typeface. Just capitals (including punctuation marks and numbers), composed from early sketches for a corporate identity in 2005 by André Toet. The complete font was restyled and translated to a Monospaced version. It’s a quite versatile font: it can be used in a lot of different cases, not only in print but also in architecture and street furniture. Think about lettering on benches, bridges, buildings. Concept/Art Direction/Design: André Toet © 2017
  4. Macarons by Latinotype, $35.00
    The Macarons font family consists of a monoline version, regular and bold weights, and a set of gestural catchwords, which reflects the use of the ruling pen as a freestyle tool. Ornaments and dingbats are also included. Macarons is a display type based on the classic Garamond typeface. It’s inspired by the foodie culture and the slow food movement, which began as a rebellion against fast food and has now grown to a global scale. Every day, thousands of people around the world take pictures of their food, look for new recipes to try and recover old ones, enjoy wine-pairing, and value locally produced food. Macarons is a fresh and spontaneous looking typeface that has been designed by Coto Mendoza, who also has developed a hand-made product line (Ride my Bike, Ride my Bike Serif, Four Seasons, D.I.Y. Time, Dans le Cuisine and In a Jar). This font is not constructed out of modules: each character is drawn by hand. Macarons is ideal for cookbooks, menus, liquor bottle labels, food packaging, wedding invitations, greeting cards, tea boxes, food blogs, small shops, cupcake bakeries and so on. Try! A freshly-baked homemade macaron!
  5. Sweet Blues by Zamjump, $17.00
    Sweet Blues Monoline Script is a signature font that you can use to make a design for Photography logo, logo branding, poster headline, magazines, advertisements, product designs, wedding invitation, signature or handwritten quote, business cards, fashion, . Sweet Blues Monoline Script font including alternates, 15 ligatures and includes textured swashes. Enable the OpenType Stylistic alternates, you need a program that supports OpenType features such as Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Indesign, Adobe Photoshop, CorelDraw & Microsoft Office. a font that made the hand by having the character up and down like a dancer. Freestyle has a very unique style of signature, it is very suitable for use in the work of modern design. Alternative ending character you can use character + underscore ( a_ ) = ending a with swash to open ligature just tap double character [ l l = ll (ligature)] Features: Basic Latin A -Z and a – z Number International Symbol International glyphs Alternate Ligature Languages supported: Breton, Catalan, Czech, Danish, Estonian,French, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Romanian, Scottish Gaelic, Slovak, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, English, Finnish, Polish, Portuguese, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, Welsh. Basically, all european languages that are based on latin alphabet.
  6. Banjax Notched by Monotype, $25.99
    Banjax Notched is a dynamically restyled version of the original Banjax humanist sans serif typeface. Banjax Notched is intended for use in titles, headlines, branding and logo designs, whether that be for a book cover, film poster, advertising campaign or sporting events, these fonts will add an extra dimension to your designs. Naturally, Banjax Notched perfectly complements the original Banjax fonts so that you can launch a fully integrated campaign. Key features: • 7 weights in Roman and Italic • Small Caps, Petite Caps and 3 Alternates • Latin Extended and Basic Greek glyphs • 1100 glyphs per font. See more detailed examples at the Banjax Notched microsite.
  7. Virna by FSD, $60.00
    In September, 2003 I was contacted by MTV for the restyling of mtv.it I started from the beginning to work on a radical simplification of its visual elements, to achieve a better usability. It didn't take me so much to realize the basic design I attempted would have called for a notable reduction of the rich imagery distinguishing MTV's visual identity. As a visual aid to help me in this process I designed Virna, a headline "op-art" inspired face with the ability to create both vertical and horizontal ligatures between single words among two text lines, with the same ease of linking letters in handwriting or a linked script typeface.
  8. FarHat-Quintas - Unknown license
  9. FarHat-Acordes - Unknown license
  10. FarHat-Acordes b y # - Unknown license
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