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  1. West Byanetta Cyrillic by Ira Dvilyuk, $20.00
    I'm happy to present to you luxurious handwritten script font West Byanetta Cyrillic. It's the best option for your branding, logo designs, invitation designs wedding stationery, social media, product packaging and other projects that require an elegant touch. West Byanetta Cyrillic is an elegant, graceful handwritten script font, as well as a West Byanetta Symbols font with 36 lovely hand-drawn flourishes and illustrations. West Byanetta script font contains the Cyrillic glyphs too. West Byanetta script Latin part contains a full set of uppercase letters and 3 full sets of lowercase letters, (standard, initial and final forms). To make a needed form just type a letter with a number such as a1, b1, c1...after that selecting the word and apply the Open Type Features in programmes such as Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, and others) And 40 ligatures - which can be used to create a handwritten look. The Cyrillic part of the font contains the uppercase letters and 3 full sets of lowercase letters, (standard, initial and final form. To make a needed form just type a letter with a number such as a1, б1 в1... After that select the word and apply the Open Type Features in programmes such as Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, and others) Also Cyrillic part of the font contains 31 handwritten Cyrillic ligatures. West Byanetta Symbols is a font with over 36 hand-drawn elements, floral illustrations, and swashes and can help to make your design unique and matchless. Combine and merge swashes and illustrations to create your own designs and make borders, frames, dividers, logos, and more (just use A-Z or a-z and 0-9 keys in the included West Byanetta Symbols font). A different symbol is assigned to each uppercase or lowercase standard character, so you do not need graphics software, just type the letter you need. Language Support for 32 languages: Latin glyphs for Afrikaans, Albanian, Basque, Bosnian, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Filipino, Finnish, French, Galician, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Malay, Norwegian Bokmål, Portuguese, Slovenian, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Turkish, Welsh, Zulu. And Cyrillic glyphs support for Russian, Belorussian, Bulgarian, Ukrainian and Kazakh languages. Works perfectly on the Canva platform. For Cricut & Silhouette recommended.
  2. Comic Sans by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    The Comic Sans® typeface, one of Microsoft's most popular designs, has received a makeover courtesy of Monotype Imaging. The company has introduced the four-font Comic Sans Pro family of typefaces. Featuring elements such as speech bubbles and cartoon dingbats, Comic Sans Pro extends the versatility of the original Comic Sans, designed by Vincent Connare for Microsoft in 1994. Hats off to Monotype Imaging for enlivening Comic Sans and getting it back to its roots as a comic book lettering face. Now everyone can write with more panache - and look even more like a pro using swashes, small caps and other typographic embellishments," said Connare. "Every day, millions of people rely on Comic Sans for countless applications ranging from scrapbooking to school projects," said Allan Haley, director of words and letters at Monotype Imaging. "Comic Sans is also a favorite in professional environments, used in medical information, instructions, ambulance signage, college exams, corporate mission statements and executive reprimands - even public letters from sports team owners to their fans. Breaking up with your spouse? Why not write a letter in Comic Sans Pro, embellished with a typographic whack!, pow! or bam! Comic Sans is everywhere, and now it's even better." The Comic Sans Pro family includes regular and bold fonts, in addition to two new italic and bold italic fonts drawn by Monotype Imaging's Terrance Weinzierl. "Our aim is to put the 'fun' back in 'functional.' We can't wait to see Comic Sans Pro used in everything from second wedding announcements to warning labels," said Weinzierl. "Long live Comic Sans!" Comic Sans Pro contains a versatile range of typographic features including swashes, small caps, ornaments, old style figures and stylistic alternates - all supported by the OpenType® font format. OpenType-savvy applications, such as Adobe® Creative Suite®, QuarkXPress® or Mellel™ software are required to access these features. Comic Sans Pro can also be used in new versions of Microsoft® Office including Microsoft Word 2010 and Microsoft Publisher 2010. In addition, Comic Sans Pro includes a set of ornaments and symbols, including speech bubbles, onomatopoeia and dingbats, pre-sized to work well as bullets."
  3. Chinese Rocks by Typodermic, $11.95
    In the bustling world of rough, grungy typography, there’s one typeface that stands out among the rest—Chinese Rocks. This iconic typeface draws inspiration from the hand-cut rubber-stamp writing found on Chinese export crates from the twentieth century. It’s a typeface that captures the raw, unpolished energy of the streets and infuses it into your messaging. What sets Chinese Rocks apart is its artisanal, handcrafted quality. Each letter is carefully carved to give your words a unique, personal touch that cannot be replicated by any other font. With Chinese Rocks, your text takes on a casual, laid-back vibe that speaks to the rawness and authenticity of modern culture. This versatile font comes in sixteen different styles, including Fat, Condensed, and Shaded. Each variation offers a different take on the classic Chinese Rocks style, allowing you to tailor your messaging to fit any occasion or application. Whether you’re looking to make a bold statement or add a touch of personality to your branding, Chinese Rocks has you covered. So why settle for a generic font that doesn’t capture your essence? Chinese Rocks is the typeface that captures your personality and turns your words into art. Try it out today and discover the power of authentic, handcrafted typography. Most Latin-based European writing systems are supported, including the following languages. Afaan Oromo, Afar, Afrikaans, Albanian, Alsatian, Aromanian, Aymara, Bashkir (Latin), Basque, Belarusian (Latin), Bemba, Bikol, Bosnian, Breton, Cape Verdean, Creole, Catalan, Cebuano, Chamorro, Chavacano, Chichewa, Crimean Tatar (Latin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dawan, Dholuo, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Filipino, Finnish, French, Frisian, Friulian, Gagauz (Latin), Galician, Ganda, Genoese, German, Greenlandic, Guadeloupean Creole, Haitian Creole, Hawaiian, Hiligaynon, Hungarian, Icelandic, Ilocano, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Jamaican, Kaqchikel, Karakalpak (Latin), Kashubian, Kikongo, Kinyarwanda, Kirundi, Kurdish (Latin), Latvian, Lithuanian, Lombard, Low Saxon, Luxembourgish, Maasai, Makhuwa, Malay, Maltese, Māori, Moldovan, Montenegrin, Ndebele, Neapolitan, Norwegian, Novial, Occitan, Ossetian (Latin), Papiamento, Piedmontese, Polish, Portuguese, Quechua, Rarotongan, Romanian, Romansh, Sami, Sango, Saramaccan, Sardinian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian (Latin), Shona, Sicilian, Silesian, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Sorbian, Sotho, Spanish, Swahili, Swazi, Swedish, Tagalog, Tahitian, Tetum, Tongan, Tshiluba, Tsonga, Tswana, Tumbuka, Turkish, Turkmen (Latin), Tuvaluan, Uzbek (Latin), Venetian, Vepsian, Võro, Walloon, Waray-Waray, Wayuu, Welsh, Wolof, Xhosa, Yapese, Zapotec Zulu and Zuni.
  4. Makeup by Andinistas, $28.00
    Andinistas.net presents Makeup Script. Expressive hand-made typography to design sentences with high textured impact; has 4 creative tools. Our priorities are continually updated and we prefer to use the elevator since taking the stairs is a very long process. If you see a long text, you close it and look for something shorter. For quick calligraphy you need to consume hours and hours of learning, discomfort and effort. Think of calligraphic words or phrases to write about a photo no matter how expressive it may be. Try to write quickly with signature style for logos, labels or packaging for clothes, suitcases, shops, malls, department stores, etc. Do you want to be able to calligraphy well? STUDY. Do you want to be a calligrapher? PRACTICE. Want to produce good ideas? PUSH YOURSELF. If you practice for hours every day, those hours will turn into years, but for many, to think in years of study and practice is too long, since most want everything instantaneous and few want to cultivate skills related to calligraphic patience. Makeup was born in the midst of this type of reflections about countless themes about art, beauty and calligraphy. All the ideas that revolve around makeup parade through its insightful and solitary design, lover of instant and fast writing for graphic design related to food, household goods, fashion, etc. CFCG. teamwork by Carolina Suarez & Illustrations by Eder Salas. In that order of ideas Makeup offers the following tools: • Makeup Script (238 glyphs): It is a script with vibrant fleeting strokes that form capital letters, lowercase letters, numbers and character sets and extended punctuation for Central, Eastern and Western Europe. • Makeup Alternates (238 glyphs): Offers new script possibilities, different from uppercase, lowercase, numbers that work at the beginning or end of words, in a way that your design will look more real and calligraphic. • Makeup Swashes (238 glyphs): These are tiny script letters that reinforce the idea of fast binding between handwritten letters that will fill your design or concepts with power and expressiveness through multiple textured contours. • Makeup Extras (80 glyphs): Here you'll find over 70 exciting, hand-crafted decorations that are ideal for underlining your ideas written in Makeup.
  5. Nori by Positype, $49.00
    First, the important information…Nori is a hand-lettered typeface that contains over 1100 glyphs, 250 ligatures, 487 alternate characters, 125+ swash and titling alternates, lining and old style numerals. To make sure it is perfectly clear—Nori is the result of brush and ink on paper. The textures produced in each glyph are real and the imperfections are intentional and add to the sincerity of the letters. I say this to be as blunt as possible in order to avoid confusion and to frame what this typeface represents—calligraphic, handwritten letters captured digitally for their warmth and poetic variation for print and screen. Like my handwritten, calligraphic or brush-driven faces before it (the Baka series and the TDC2 2010 winning typeface, Fugu), Nori is a product of my analog and digital hand. To view the words and sentences formed by this typeface is to look at how my hands, yes hands, make letters. The fluidity, as well as the irregularity, is human, honest and intentional—to do so lets the brush I am holding breathe life into each letter. Once digital, any number of points and repetitive processes can’t mask its influences—and I like that. The brush, a simple instrument, my tool, my friend designed to emulate traditional Japanese sumi-e brushes... the Pilot Japan Kanji Fude brush pen. Each letter, each variation was written over and over again until I found the right combination. From there, each was scanned, digitized and optimized. Points were removed in order to ‘clean’ the glyphs up some but I did not want to compromise the integrity of the actual brush stroke. Once this base set of characters (about 350) were completed, the thoughtful manipulation of the glyphs, their gestures and forms were further expanded to solidify the embellishments used within the ligatures, alternates, swashes and additional features. This process was admittedly self-indulgent to an extent. I wanted the words created with this typeface to have the flexibility of variation and cohesiveness of movement that someone fluidly producing these letters by hand might have.  I hope you enjoy this typeface as much as I did during the six months working on it. A specimen and style guide is included with the purchased of Nori.
  6. IRONGATE - Unknown license
  7. Pixelade - Unknown license
  8. Klander - Unknown license
  9. Oberon by ITC, $29.99
    Oberon is the work of British designer Phill Grimshaw. It has a touch of the 1970s about it and includes a number of alternative lowercase letters and ligatures. Oberon is a free-flowing, elegantly casual typeface.
  10. FG Elias by YOFF, $14.95
    FG Elias is an all caps font from handwriting which looks a bit angry I think. It has a size variation between the caps and lowercase. Works great for headers or text you want to emphasize.
  11. HV Cedarwood by Harmonais Visual, $18.00
    Cedarwood is a classic serif with a regal, elegant touch. Inspired by the work of the old masters, Cedarwood is perfectly suitable for creating classy yet still elegant designs such as logos, packaging, editorial, and more.
  12. Marguerita by ITC, $29.00
    Marguerita is the work of designer David Quay, a pseudo-Latin, 1950s concept based on a copperplate script. The capitals are meant as initials only. Marguerita is idea when a cheerful, light-hearted effect is desired.
  13. Shorthalt by Brittney Murphy Design, $8.00
    Shorthalt is a dashingly handsome upright script- all dressed up, but not too stuffy, with lots of ligatures and contextual alternates. Shorthalt works great for headlines or bylines paired with a nice simple sans or serif.
  14. Spring#7 by Joey Maul, $12.00
    Spring#7 is a 1900s-style font based on text on postcards found after the turn of the century. Italic in nature, it works nicely for text and graphics that need a humble old-timey look.
  15. Starge by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Starge is a professional hand-drawn typeface. It works perfectly for a crafty project where a functional font is required. The font supports all Latin-based European languages, contains numbers and all symbols you'll ever need.
  16. Control spirit by Sulthan Studio, $12.00
    Introducing Control spirit - Bold typeface handwritten font It is suitable for all types of work that you do with various purposes such as logos, wedding invitations, titles, t-shirts, letterheads , signboards, labels, news, posters, badges, etc.
  17. Brounde by Ahmet Altun, $17.00
    Brounde font comes in four weights from extra light to medium. Legible texts can be created with its rounded slab serif configuration. Also it can be used in posters and every kind of graphic design works.
  18. British Cinema JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered titles and credits from the 1945 British film “The Way to the Stars” were the working model for the aptly-titled British Cinema JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  19. LUELLA by Cultivated Mind, $29.00
    Luella is an elegant, hand drawn vintage inspired font by Cultivated Mind. Luella has been carefully crafted and comes in three weights (Regular/Bold/Black). This font works perfectly with the Luella frames and ornaments sets.
  20. Festany by FHFont, $19.00
    Festany is script font with handlettering brush style, this is handmade ink, and with dry ink for finished the texture font. Suitable for design, element design, wedding, event, t-shirt, logo, badges, sticker, and awesome work.
  21. Mortal Claws by Krakenbox Studio, $27.00
    Corogh Gorge is a Blackletter Font. It has gothic, mysterious, brave, classic. It’s a great font for fashion, apparel projects, signature, album cover, logo, branding, magazine, social media, & advertisements, but also works great for other projects.
  22. Corogh Gorge by Krakenbox Studio, $17.00
    Corogh Gorge is a Blackletter Font. It has gothic, mysterious, brave, classic. It’s a great font for fashion, apparel projects, signature, album cover, logo, branding, magazine, social media, & advertisements, but also works great for other projects.
  23. SF Hypocrisy by ShyFoundry, $19.95
    SF Hypocrisy is a simplistic san serif with an x-height that goes all the way up and curves in all the right places. This baby works great for all your sexy headlining needs and more...
  24. Bluntz by ITC, $29.00
    Bluntz is the work of American designer David Sagorski, an all capital font which was influenced by the crisp, energetic look of graffiti. The angular, confident nature of the letterforms reflect a visual power and spontaneity.
  25. Antown by Nurf Designs, $12.00
    Antown is a modern & formal sans family and has 4 variants (Regular, Italic, Bold & Bold Italic). It comes with uppercase, lowercase, numerals, punctuations, some alternate characters, and multilingual support. We hope you will enjoy our work.
  26. Eterea LC by Corradine Fonts, $60.00
    Eterea LC (Lower Case) is based in Eterea using the same Capitals but changing the lower case set. You can use this version of Eterea to give a more readable and soft aspect to your work.
  27. Aspektogram by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    A slim, crunchy and slightly worn-looking font. Comes with unique accented letters, ligatures for double letters and numbers along with OpenType alternate letters. You will need to use OpenType supporting applications to use the autoligatures.
  28. Advertisers Gothic by SoftMaker, $8.99
    With Advertisers Gothic, SoftMaker revives a 1917 design by Robert Wiebking. Inspired by Art Nouveau (Jugendstil) lettering, this typeface is as fresh as it was back then and is well-suited for advertising and display work.
  29. Mentari by Surotype, $35.00
    Mentari a brush script typeface, bold and elegant, with several alternate characters in each letter to give you ease in accomplishing the work of typographic such as logotype, poster, headline, T-shirt and other creative projects.
  30. Square Squads by Krakenbox Studio, $17.00
    Square Squads is playful display font. It has fancy, playful, and Cool. It’s a suitable font for fashion, apparel projects, signature, album cover, logo, branding, magazine, social media, & advertisements, but also works great for other projects.
  31. Iron Lake by Alphabet Agency, $15.00
    Iron Lake is inspired by the pioneer era. The font has a decorative slab serif that really gives the font its vintage western look. The font works great for vintage, western, country, outdoors and rural themes.
  32. Salting by Goodigital13, $20.00
    Suitable for design, element design, wedding, event, t-shirt, logo, badges, sticker, and awesome work, etc…This font is suitable for use on business cards, weddings, t-shirt designs, logos, magazines, quotes, fashion, watermarks, invitations, signatures.
  33. PL Behemoth by Monotype, $29.99
    Dave West released the Behemoth Semi-Condensed font in 1960. With nineteenth-century wood-cut influence PL Behemoth Semi-Condensed is an example of the revival of slab serif styles, popular in the sixties and seventies.
  34. Campland by Magpie Paper Works, $20.00
    Campland from Magpie Paper Works is a rustic, hand-lettered, sans-serif font chock full of summer-camp fun. This Opentype font features decorative glyphs and interlocking borders, as well as a complete uppercase & lowercase alphabet.
  35. Flamenco Inline by ITC, $29.99
    Flamenco is the work of British artist Tony Geddes. Its versatile display style has an inline contour decoration and a controlled yet casual appearance. Flamenco will guarantee visual excitement across a vast range of advertising applications.
  36. Vtg Stencil UK No. 2 by astype, $29.00
    The Vtg Stencil series of fonts by astype are based on real world stencils. The UK No. 2 design was derived from authentic one inch A2 Roman stencil plates from Great Britain, manufactured around the 1950s.
  37. Beard Canye by Fype Co, $16.00
    Beard Canye is perfect for delivering any message with confidence and style. This hand-lettered script is inspired by baseball. Beard Canye works well for logos, stationery, social media, branding, packaging, header, and so much more.
  38. Under Weak by Trustha, $16.00
    Under Weak is an amazing and bold script, suitable for a large number of designs. This font has two styles, clean and rough. With two styles, you can choose according to the project you're working on.
  39. Dreamelly by Good Java Studio, $20.00
    Dreamelly was born from hand writing style fonts. It is versatile and useful for design posters, logos, branding, labels, quotes, headline profiles, banners, t-shirt design, packaging, magazines, brochures, and much more in your amazing work.
  40. Compasso by Plau, $30.00
    The idea that mathematical precision and the supposed "purity" of geometric forms are part of the discourse of us graphic designers is not new. Studying typography for some time now and learning about all the small alterations and adjustments that this geometry undergoes to better adapt to the imperfect human eye, I found myself with a new way of seeing things. Compasso is, in a way, a result of my growth as a designer. Established and recognized fonts like Futura, Avenir, and their predecessors (including Tempo - published by the Ludlow foundry in the early 20th century) informed the result of Compasso at some level. Others opened my mind to possibilities. Mallory, Azo Sans, the font designed for Audi by Bold Monday, and many other contemporary sans-serif fonts that left me speechless are also responsible for details present in this font. From the first sketch, the family grew on both sides, gaining condensed and extended counterparts. From there - and from a brilliant insight from designer Nicole Rauen - I learned that Compasso was not about geometry. Compasso is about rhythm. It's about the rhythmic movement that provides a foundation, supports, and also makes you dance and swing. My musical taste is too eclectic, I can go from classical to funk in less than two songs on Spotify. Compasso is also eclectic. It's a font to take your project anywhere, a record to listen to on any occasion.
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