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  1. Marita by profonts, $51.99
    Marita combines sternness with swing and, from this, develops its own, unique elegance. This makes Marita quite versatile, also and especially for headline settings. Apart from numerous ligatures, the font also includes old style figures. Marita is based on brush writing with drop-shaped serifs. The idea was to try to apply a given design criteria (also see Volker Schnebel's Manuel and Martin fonts) to every single character. In other words, start with a character and develop all of the others from it. This is quite easy for some characters but extremely difficult for others. This process generates creativity and the characters move away from the initial constructed sketch. Together in a typeface, the individual characters are now all of a piece and character.
  2. Big by Walking Fearless, $20.00
    BIG is an elegant condensed display font created for strong and impactful headlines. It comes from a series of hand printed specimens taken from wood type found in Andrew Howard’s Studio in Porto (Portugal). A wooden type that reassembles the industrial victorian style which has now been expanded to 20 cuts, ranging from ExtraLight to Bold, with Italics and a stencil version, covering all your needs for a striking visual effect just with plain type with distinctive features and personality, standing out from the crowded world of display sans serif. The font was engineered with essential OpenType features, that allows the user to compose the headlines in two different heights, with case-sensitive punctuation, symbols and special ligatures such as “the”, “of” and “le”.
  3. Auberge Script by Sudtipos, $79.00
    It took me a long time, but I think I now understand why people of my generation and older feel the need to frame current events in an historical context or precedents, while most of the young couldn't care less about what happened ten years ago, let alone centuries back. After living for a few decades, you get to a point when time seems to be moving quite fast, and it’s humbling to see that your entire existence so far can be summed up in a paragraph or two which may or may not be useful to whoever ends up reading the stuff anyhow. I suppose one way to cope with the serenity of aging is trying to convince yourself that your life and work are really an extension of millenia of a species striving to accept, adapt to, and improve the human condition through advancing the many facets of civilization -- basically making things more understandable and comfortable for ourselves and each other while we go about doing whatever it is we are trying to do. And when you do finally convince yourself of that, history becomes a source of much solace and even a little premonition, so you end up spending more time there. Going far back into the history of what I do, one can easily see that for the most part it was ruled by the quill. Western civilization’s writing was done with quill pens for more than thirteen centuries and with newer instruments for about two. By the mid-18th century, the height of the quill experience, various calligraphy techniques could be discerned and writing styles were arranged in distinct categories. There are many old books that showcase the history of it all. I recommend looking at some whenever the urge comes calling and you have to get away from backlit worlds. Multiple sources usually help me get a better perspective on the range of a specific script genre, so many books served as reference to this quill font of mine. Late 17th century French and Spanish professional calligraphy guides were great aides in understanding the ornamental scope of what the scribes were doing back then. The French books, with their showings of the Ronde, Bâtarde and Coulée alphabets, were the ones I referenced the most. So I decided to name the font Auberge, a French word for hotel or inn, because I really felt like a guest in different French locales (and times) when I going through all that stuff. Because it is multi-sourced, Auberge does not strictly fit in a distinct quill pen category. Instead, it shows strong hints of both Bâtarde and Coulée alphabets. And like most of my fonts, it is an exercise in going overboard with alternates, swashes, and ornamental devices. Having worked with it for a while, I find it most suitable for display calligraphic setting in general, but it works especially well for things like wine labels and event invitations. It also shines in the original quill pen application purpose, which of course was stationery. Also, as it just occurred to me, if you find yourself in a situation where you have to describe your entire life in 50 words or less, you may as well make it look good and swashy, so Auberge would probably be a good fit there as well. This is one quill script that no large bird had to die for. A few technical notes The Auberge Script Pro version includes 1800 glyphs, everything is included there. Also latin language support. We recommend you to use the latest design application to have full access to alternates, swashes, small caps, ornaments, etc. The images from the gallery uses this version. For better results use the fonts with “liga” feature on. Awards During 2014 the early develop of Auberge Script was chosen to be part of Tipos Latinos, the most important type exhibition in South America.
  4. Hancock - Unknown license
  5. Improvisation - Unknown license
  6. Opal - Unknown license
  7. Augustus - Unknown license
  8. Cottonwood-Thin - Unknown license
  9. Nordic - Unknown license
  10. Polo - Unknown license
  11. Gismonda - Unknown license
  12. Amelia - Unknown license
  13. Caligula - Unknown license
  14. SchwarzWald - Unknown license
  15. Camberic - Unknown license
  16. Bradley Dingies by Intellecta Design, $27.90
    Digitization of some of classic William H Bradley's characters, from America vintage heritage
  17. Nouveau Never Dies by Intellecta Design, $13.90
    Nouveau Never Dies is a compreensive family of ornaments from Art Nouveau era.
  18. Deveren by Corien’s Handwritingfonts, $19.00
    Deveren is a font based on goosefeather writings from the late 1600's.
  19. Janda Spring Doodles by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Doodles ranging from cute animals to Easter eggs to flowers of various types.
  20. Tasci Kursiv by Abdullah Tasci, $30.00
    Tasci Kursiv is a typeface which is transformed from the designer’s own calligraphy.
  21. Maze by Oporto Design, $79.90
    Maze is a modern font created from a single line with no interruption.
  22. Le Be MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Revival of typographer and punch cutter Guillaume LeBe’s Hebrew typeface from the 1580.
  23. Capa by Oporto Design, $19.90
    A distinguished new font from Oporto Design, Capa is clean, modern and urban.
  24. I know a ghost by Dismantle Destroy, $19.00
    This font was inspired by music from the band The Devil Wears Prada.
  25. North Arrow Assortment by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    North Arrow Assortment contains 47 north arrow designs ranging from simple to intricate.
  26. Altemus Arabesques by Altemus Creative, $11.00
    A collection of 174 calligraphic designs derived from early 20th Century European arabesques.
  27. Madrid by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    Based on Nacional by Carlos Winkow from the Spanish foundry, Nacional, circa 1941.
  28. Estanica by Ixipcalli, $30.00
    Typography inspired by ancient medieval writings from texts and wordings of Spanish scriptures.
  29. Cow-Spots - Unknown license
  30. Lord Mayor by Solotype, $19.95
    We know very little about this font. A printer in Lisbon had it, but said it came from England. Nicolette Gray shows it in her Nineteenth Century Ornamented Type Faces as Lord Mayor from the British Typefoundry. We never got the complete font, but drawing the missing letters was not difficult.
  31. Broadsheet by Three Islands Press, $29.00
    A full-featured typeface that simulates old newspaper text from the 1700s, Broadsheet gives you all the “long s” ligatures you could ever dream of. Wonderfully authentic in either display type or long blocks of body copy. Includes a couple of printer’s flourishes. (Based on antique publications from 1728 and 1776.)
  32. Dreamy JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Dreamy JNL was modeled from the hand-lettered title on the sheet music cover for "If I'm Dreaming" and features an Art Deco type design with engraved lines in both regular and oblique versions. The Jerome Kern song was from the 1929 First National/Vitaphone picture "Sally" starring Marilyn Miller.
  33. Earthpig by Scriptorium, $12.00
    Earthpig is based on samples of poster lettering from classic club posters of the 1960s, from venues like the Fillmore in San Francisco and the Armadillo in Austin. It combines elements of several different styles to recreate the unique look of poster lettering of the psychedelic era. It's far out, man.
  34. Amsi Pro AKS by Stawix, $79.00
    Amsi has been designed to equipped with three different widths; Normal, Narrow and Condensed, addition to expanding weights to support various usabilities ranging from Thin, XLight, Light, Regular, SemiBold, Bold, Black and Heavy. Which makes Amsi along with a numerous features support the creativities of the designer from the Font Menu.
  35. Blond by Tour De Force, $25.00
    Blond is modern sans serif family with 22 members - 11 weights from Thin to Heavy with matching Italics. Distinctive, recognizable and uniform, Blonde family is well balanced typeface that will find appliance in any situation - from editorial design to web design. Contains extended Latin character map and small Stylistic set.
  36. ChainLetter by Ingrimayne Type, $9.95
    In the two ChainLetter fonts all characters are made from chains links. ChainLetter uses smaller chain links than ChainLetterAlt and as a result is easier to read. Both are caps-only typefaces, but some of the letters on the lower-case keys differ from those on the upper-case keys.
  37. Print Shop Relics JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Pointing hands, floral embellishments, a World War II "Victory" emblem and an old telephone are but a few of the classic images redrawn from vintage source material for Print Shop Relics JNL. Lovers of pre-digital clip art from the letterpress era will find these embellishments useful, charming and helpful.
  38. Bohemaz by Malgorzata Bartosik, $29.00
    Bohemaz is a typeface inspired by the Art Deco typography from the 1930s. It contains 4 styles - Thin, Light, Regular and Bold - Latin, Greek and Cyrillic alphabet, diacritics from Western, Central and South Eastern Europe and many decorative ligatures. Bohemaz is both classic and modern, so it can be widely used.
  39. Amsi Pro by Stawix, $40.00
    Amsi has been designed to equipped with three different widths; Normal, Narrow and Condensed, addition to expanding weights to support various usabilities ranging from Thin, XLight, Light, Regular, SemiBold, Bold, Black and Heavy. Which makes Amsi along with a numerous features support the creativities of the designer from the Font Menu.
  40. Dastardly Deeds SRF by Stella Roberts Fonts, $25.00
    This design from Ray Larabie (and adapted by Jeff Levine) is so unusual. The lettering lends itself to messages of sinister intent or horror movie titles. The net profits from my font sales help defer medical expenses for my siblings, who both suffer with Cystic Fibrosis and diabetes. Thank you.
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