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  1. Wouldkat by Joachim Frank, $11.00
    Inspired by an old house font of an anthroposophical hospital in Germany, this font was created: coarse, irregular, with corners and edges. In nature there are no right angles, no symmetries, no evenness: and so is this font. Tis is not a fine font, Like a woodcut this font roars: Look at me, I am here! Ideal for posters, leaflets, posters, billboards. Designed by Joachim Frank (Germany) in 2021
  2. Cerulean Blue by Hanoded, $15.00
    Cerulean comes from the Latin word caeruleus, meaning dark blue. I have always liked this color, so I decided to name a font after it. Cerulean Blue is a handmade brush font family, consisting of a nice handwritten font and a caps font. Both fonts come with their Italics. Cerulean Blue can be used for just about any design, but product packaging and book covers come to mind.
  3. Rubinetto by FallenGraphic, $15.00
    Say Hello to Rubinetto Script Font! Rubinetto is an modern handwritten script font. Very easy to access alternate . which is perfect for flyer, invitations, advertisements, banners, books, business cards, signatures, and others who want a bold script font font type. What’s Included ? -Rubinetto Font.OTF The Features of this fonts is : -Standart ligatures -Stylistic Alternate -Stylistic Set SS01-SS04 -Swash -Multilingual Support If you want something please contact me to : vavaaryanto666@gmail.com
  4. Bentley Floyd by Differentialtype, $10.00
    Bentley Floyd is a display font family designed to enhance the appearance of any document or presentation you create. This font can also be used for logo fonts, brochures, pamphlets, billboards, book covers, magazine covers, or product promotions. This font will support the appearance of every product promotion that you make. This font consists of 18 styles from thin to black, which will add more options to your mix.
  5. Cellien by Lemonthe, $15.00
    Cellien Font Duo is a combination of script and sans-serif fonts, offering a perfect blend of elegance and modernity. With over 140 ligatures, the script font features natural and flowing letterforms, while the sans-serif font adds a clean and polished aesthetic. These fonts are designed to harmoniously pair together and are suitable for various design projects such as logos, branding, posters, labels, product packaging, invitation designs, and more.
  6. Ferguson Hunter by Balpirick, $15.00
    Ferguson Hunter is a Modern Calligraphy Font. Ferguson Hunter is a lovely script font featuring charming, playful characters that seem to dance along the baseline. Whatever the topic, this font will be a wonderful asset to your font library, as it has the potential to enhance any creation. Ferguson Hunter also multilingual support. Enjoy the font, feel free to comment or feedback, send me PM or email. Thank you!
  7. Party Lover by Sinfa, $12.00
    Party lover is a charming script font with a subtle and coarse signature font style, complemented by alternative fonts to make it look more charming, this font is perfect for completing your collection for logo, invitation, branding, label, trademark, and other needs. This font contains: Uppercase & Lowercase, and lowercase Alternative Symbols & Punctuation Marks OpenType Features attention ... that OpenType Features require software like Photoshop / Illustrator CC. Please try, thank you ...!
  8. Maletha Collection Signature by Yoga Letter, $13.00
    "Maletha Collection" is a font duo that combines elegant serif fonts and beautiful signature fonts. This font is very nice and can be used for all kinds of your work. "Maletha Collection" is perfect for making banners, posters, prints, logos, stickers, social media, weddings, promotions, decorations, portraits, presentations, and others. This font is very complete, because it is equipped with basic characters, uppercase, lowercase, multilingual support, numeral and punctuation.
  9. TC Brixton by Tom Chalky, $19.00
    Meet TC Brixton (The Handmade Version of my Brixton Pro font family!), a family of 16 fonts that blends professionalism and timeless elegance with a touch of authenticity. Not all handmade fonts need to be wild, wacky, or bursting with eccentricity. Classic fonts, like Brixton, can be enhanced by the introduction of those perfectly imperfect elements that only hand-drawn fonts can offer! This combination offers reliability and organic charm.
  10. Brushin by Mandarin, $15.00
    Brushin is an handwritten display font inspired by the straightforward rigidness of Grotesque sans-serif fonts. It features two stylistic sets for every glyphs in font so it gives you the choice to not repeat the same glyph design in big titles and/or small statements. The font was designed on paper with a brush and then scanned, vectorised through Photoshop and finally compiled in Glyphs as and OTF font file.
  11. Cagey by Graphicfresh, $16.00
    Cagey - The Bold Retro Font I named this font cagey. Another picture of the ingenuity of the ancients when they found a masterpiece. Through this font, I want to reminisce and reminisce about the past. This font is synonymous with 70s or 80s style design visuals, Bold and strong. I hope you enjoy using this font and can come up with clever and brilliant ideas in your designs. Thanks Graphicfresh
  12. Ekuhot by Product Type, $18.00
    EKUHOT Racing Font is a font that is designed with a precise shape and has many alternate variations and various ligature styles that make every word beautiful when written, make this font for various titles and text in your special projects so that your project looks beautiful. dignified character, bold and sporty. This font is perfect for headlines as well as others, what are you waiting for, use this font now.
  13. Affair by Sudtipos, $99.00
    Type designers are crazy people. Not crazy in the sense that they think we are Napoleon, but in the sense that the sky can be falling, wars tearing the world apart, disasters splitting the very ground we walk on, plagues circling continents to pick victims randomly, yet we will still perform our ever optimistic task of making some little spot of the world more appealing to the human eye. We ought to be proud of ourselves, I believe. Optimism is hard to come by these days. Regardless of our own personal reasons for doing what we do, the very thing we do is in itself an act of optimism and belief in the inherent beauty that exists within humanity. As recently as ten years ago, I wouldn't have been able to choose the amazing obscure profession I now have, wouldn't have been able to be humbled by the history that falls into my hands and slides in front of my eyes every day, wouldn't have been able to live and work across previously impenetrable cultural lines as I do now, and wouldn't have been able to raise my glass of Malbeck wine to toast every type designer who was before me, is with me, and will be after me. As recently as ten years ago, I wouldn't have been able to mean these words as I wrote them: It’s a small world. Yes, it is a small world, and a wonderfully complex one too. With so much information drowning our senses by the minute, it has become difficult to find clear meaning in almost anything. Something throughout the day is bound to make us feel even smaller in this small world. Most of us find comfort in a routine. Some of us find extended families. But in the end we are all Eleanor Rigbys, lonely on the inside and waiting for a miracle to come. If a miracle can make the world small, another one can perhaps give us meaning. And sometimes a miracle happens for a split second, then gets buried until a crazy type designer finds it. I was on my honeymoon in New York City when I first stumbled upon the letters that eventually started this Affair. A simple, content tourist walking down the streets formerly unknown to me except through pop music and film references. Browsing the shops of the city that made Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, and a thousand other artists. Trying to chase away the tourist mentality, wondering what it would be like to actually live in the city of a billion tiny lights. Tourists don't go to libraries in foreign cities. So I walked into one. Two hours later I wasn't in New York anymore. I wasn't anywhere substantial. I was the crazy type designer at the apex of insanity. La La Land, alphabet heaven, curves and twirls and loops and swashes, ribbons and bows and naked letters. I'm probably not the very first person on this planet to be seduced into starting an Affair while on his honeymoon, but it is something to tease my better half about once in a while. To this day I can't decide if I actually found the worn book, or if the book itself called for me. Its spine was nothing special, sitting on a shelf, tightly flanked by similar spines on either side. Yet it was the only one I picked off that shelf. And I looked at only one page in it before walking to the photocopier and cheating it with an Argentine coin, since I didn't have the American quarter it wanted. That was the beginning. I am now writing this after the Affair is over. And it was an Affair to remember, to pull a phrase. Right now, long after I have drawn and digitized and tested this alphabet, and long after I saw what some of this generation’s type designers saw in it, I have the luxury to speculate on what Affair really is, what made me begin and finish it, what cultural expressions it has, and so on. But in all honesty it wasn't like that. Much like in my Ministry Script experience, I was a driven man, a lover walking the ledge, an infatuated student following the instructions of his teacher while seeing her as a perfect angel. I am not exaggerating when I say that the letters themselves told me how to extend them. I was exploited by an alphabet, and it felt great. Unlike my experience with Ministry Script, where the objective was to push the technology to its limits, this Affair felt like the most natural and casual sequence of processions in the world – my hand following the grid, the grid following what my hand had already done – a circle of creation contained in one square computer cell, then doing it all over again. By contrast, it was the lousiest feeling in the world when I finally reached the conclusion that the Affair was done. What would I do now? Would any commitment I make from now on constitute a betrayal of these past precious months? I'm largely over all that now, of course. I like to think I'm a better man now because of the experience. Affair is an enormous, intricately calligraphic OpenType font based on a 9x9 photocopy of a page from a 1950s lettering book. In any calligraphic font, the global parameters for developing the characters are usually quite volatile and hard to pin down, but in this case it was particularly difficult because the photocopy was too gray and the letters were of different sizes, very intertwined and scan-impossible. So finishing the first few characters in order to establish the global rhythm was quite a long process, after which the work became a unique soothing, numbing routine by which I will always remember this Affair. The result of all the work, at least to the eyes of this crazy designer, is 1950s American lettering with a very Argentine wrapper. My Affair is infused with the spirit of filete, dulce de leche, yerba mate, and Carlos Gardel. Upon finishing the font I was fortunate enough that a few of my colleagues, great type designers and probably much saner than I am, agreed to show me how they envision my Affair in action. The beauty they showed me makes me feel small and yearn for the world to be even smaller now – at least small enough so that my international colleagues and I can meet and exchange stories over a good parrilla. These people, whose kindness is very deserving of my gratitude, and whose beautiful art is very deserving of your appreciation, are in no particular order: Corey Holms, Mariano Lopez Hiriart, Xavier Dupré, Alejandro Ros, Rebecca Alaccari, Laura Meseguer, Neil Summerour, Eduardo Manso, and the Doma group. You can see how they envisioned using Affair in the section of this booklet entitled A Foreign Affair. The rest of this booklet contains all the obligatory technical details that should come with a font this massive. I hope this Affair can bring you as much peace and satisfaction as it brought me, and I hope it can help your imagination soar like mine did when I was doing my duty for beauty.
  14. Pea Shirley - Unknown license
  15. Pea Jordan - Unknown license
  16. Pea Susan - Unknown license
  17. Pea Bethany - Unknown license
  18. Pea Neffer - Unknown license
  19. Pea Carrie - Unknown license
  20. Pea Tammy - Unknown license
  21. Pea Heather - Unknown license
  22. Pea sdflenner - Unknown license
  23. Pea Tana - Unknown license
  24. Pea Jean - Unknown license
  25. Pea Liz - Unknown license
  26. Pea Mimi - Unknown license
  27. Pea Deborah - Unknown license
  28. Pea Jenny - Unknown license
  29. Pea Meli - Unknown license
  30. Pea Tammi - Unknown license
  31. Pea Soniablu - Unknown license
  32. Pea Tracy - Unknown license
  33. Pea Catherine - Unknown license
  34. Pea Randa - Unknown license
  35. Pea Elizabeth - Unknown license
  36. Pea Kari - Unknown license
  37. Pea Kristy - Unknown license
  38. Pea Sara - Unknown license
  39. Pea Alesa - Unknown license
  40. Phrosheen - Unknown license
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