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  1. Village by Font Bureau, $40.00
    David Berlow undertook the revival of Frederic W. Goudy’s Village family in the early ’90s as the first real step in the successful redesign of Esquire magazine. Goudy originally cut Village No. 2 in 1932 to bring early ideas up to date, adding the italic a year or two later for his own satisfaction. Font Bureau expanded Village, the model for Goudy’s mature style, into a ten-part series designed for Esquire’s use in text and display; FB 1994
  2. Mountain Expedition by Vozzy, $10.00
    Introducing a vintage label font named Mountain Expedition. It contains capital and small characters. The small letters I created to support main design of the capital letters. Therefore the punctuation characters are designed to be used just with the capitals. Also the capital characters have a lot of ligatures. All available characters you can see on the preview. This strong typeface will be good viewed on vintage style posters, t-shirts, greeting cards, logo and more.
  3. Sportage by Burntilldead, $10.00
    Sportage is a sports font family from thin to extra bold. The Italic styles bring another vibe of speed. This family is built for people who are enthusiasts with racing, workouts, and other athletic activities. Its shape is rooted in the the competitive sports spirit. The Idea is to bring the dynamic shape mixed with weight , elevating athletic performance through progressive innovation of font, so whenever people see the font they think of hard work and sports.
  4. All Smiles by Ingrimayne Type, $14.95
    AllSmiles is a sunny little face in which all the letters smile at you. It can be used in notes and cards of congratulation or in celebrating good-news announcements. In the update of 2011, emoticons were added in the appropriate unicode slots (unicode 1F601 to 1F640 slots). For the sad version, see BringInTheFrowns, and if you only want to proclaim a little joyfulness, you can temper the feelings with a plain version of the typeface, FebDrei.
  5. P22 Kingsclere by IHOF, $29.95
    The Kingsclere font was desigend by Ted Staunton after finding inspiration in the town of Remedios, Cuba on a 17th century Spanish tombstone inscription. These historic letterforms lend themselves to many uses where vernacular lettering from a bygone era is desired.
  6. Forestory by Michael Rafailyk, $9.00
    Forestory is a typeface that was born among the trees. Its natural curly shapes are filled with the magic of a forest full of stories. View PDF Specimen: https://michaelrafailyk.com/typeface/specimen/Forestory.pdf Contextual Alternates: FF GG KK MM OO SS TT ZZ cc dd ee hh jj nn oo pp rr ss ww yy zz ГГ ПП бб λλ. Stylistic Alternates: ABDFGKMNOPRSTZabcdefghjmnopqrswz АБВГЖКЛМОПРТФЬЪЫЯабеёорсьъы ΑΒΓΖΚΜΝΟΠΡΤΦΆβδλορϲφ ÀÁÂÃÄÅĄĂĀẢẠẮẰẲẴẶẤẦẨẪẬÆĎĐÐĞĢŘŔŖàáâãäåąăāảạắằẳẵặấầẩẫậæďđèéêëěęēėẻẽẹếềểễệğģ 269. Stylistic Set: Unclosed (ss01). This set reveals the closed letterforms, making the typeface even more curly. Ligatures: VB VD VE VF VP VR WB WD WE WF WP WR YB YD YE YF YP YR ax cs cx es ex gp gr qp qr ux vr wr (+ their stylistic alternates). These ligatures are designed to connect some characters in a more natural way. The typeface includes Latin, Greek, Cyrillic scripts and supports up to 104 languages. The promo images used photos of Andie Venzl and Sarah Chai from Pexels.
  7. Torio by DSType, $55.00
    Our main purpose while developing this typeface was to reconstruct, in the most precise way, the first ten plates of the “Arte de Escribir”, in a chapter named “Enseñanza de la letra italiana, y sus principales variaciones, autores, sistemas, &c.”, dedicated to the analysis of the Italian Script. We decided by this plates because those are the few that don’t refer, directly or indirectly, to any author in particular. We strongly believe that these plates reflect the freedom of his very own calligraphy and are closely related to the calligraphic style that was a success among the spanish calligraphers: the Spanish Bastarda.
  8. Data Error Vert AOE Pro by Astigmatic, $24.00
    The Data Error Vert AOE Pro family is another spinoff of my Data Error AOE Pro family. Quite simply, it takes on a slightly different feel than the original pin matrix grid by stroking across all vertical glyph lines. The vertical lines break up the readability somewhat of the original grid and lend a more tech vibe to the family. Check out the range of posters created to see the various Capitals, Lowercase, smallcaps and varying styles that the family has to offer and how it both differs from and compliments the original Data Error AOE Pro family.
  9. Diorite by Three Islands Press, $24.00
    Diorite is modern face built on classical letterforms -- but left with a bit of residual roughness. Some might call Diorite forthright, others brutal. (It reminded the designer of the dark, hard igneous rock of the same name, treasured by the ancient Egyptians for statuary.) The typeface has a relatively chunky, four-style family; the italics are true cancellaresca corsiva, also writ heavy. "The cancellaresca is of course a Gothic design," notes the designer. "Just use a broader pen, and you'll see!" Has four styles: regular, bold, cursive, and cursive bold.
  10. Lasting Impression JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Lasting Impression JNL was rendered from scans of a 1930s rubber stamp printing set. At small sizes it has the look of hand-stamped lettering. At larger sizes, the user will see jagged and angular lines giving the font a kind of retro-grunge look. This typeface was the model for the more cleanly-drawn Casual Friday JNL, also by Jeff Levine. There is a limited character set, and both the spacing and kerning have been intentionally omitted so that the results will more closely resemble the uneven letter spacing of rubber stamps on paper.
  11. Al Crushider by Aluyeah Studio, $90.00
    Crushider Brush, inspired by the feeling when we see your crush, and you will see a lot of butterflies and your heart rate goes up. Crush + hider, mixed feelings that are addictive but you also want to get out of the situation. Very suitable for magazine, headline, website, ads, product package and all type of design project you have. Features: OpenType support Multilingual support (15 languages) PUA Encoded
  12. Le Havre Sketch by insigne, $22.00
    Le Havre Rough, a letterpress variant of Le Havre is 72% off for a limited time! Le Havre Sketch is a hand-sketched geometric sans serif. The family contains three weights. All members of the family include Sixty-four OpenType ligatures that add a realistic, natural effect and ensure that no two letters in a word repeat, oldstyle figures and small caps. Please see the sample brochure to see these features in action. Le Havre Sketch is an excellent choice when you need a fun and interesting sans-serif.
  13. Jasan by Storm Type Foundry, $49.00
    Jasan is the Czech expression for ash tree (Fraxinus Excelsior) which provides great wood for tools and furniture. In a landscape it’s a rather inconspicuous tree which forms beautiful alleys. Jasan typeface represents a synthesis of many famous sans-serifs: despite the concept being strictly rational, it’s not at all cold. Simple shapes & human expression will make your projects nicely colored. It brings excellent clarity for printed and web publishing, visual identity & information systems. The 36-font family contains multi-lingual support including Cyrillics, Small Caps & rich palette of OpenType Features.
  14. Waltograph UI - Unknown license
  15. Lonely Girl by Prioritype, $12.00
    Sometimes, just one font style is not too optimal. With this font, I present a unique and cheerful font with three styles for you. Easy and fast to use in design projects such as accessories, book covers, crafts, logos, birthday greetings, backgrounds behind, quotes, unique packaging designs, and much more that you can explore. See some of the previews above for reference. Features: -Uppercase -Lowercase -Numeral -Punctuation -Multilingual -Ligature -Alternate Note: Use a program that supports the Opentype feature and the glyph panel is available, so you can see the various alternative characters available. Examples of programs such as Adobe Illustrator, Corel Draw or Inkscape.
  16. The designer-favorite Blue Goblet series has been extended once again with Blue Goblet Frames and Vignettes. These animated and lively frames and vignettes can be resized easily without any loss of quality, and can easily be converted to outlines and modified. Combining them to form unique compositions or inserting them into chapter headings are just a few ideas for these versatile ornaments. Please see the sample .pdf to see all 96 Frames and Vignettes in action, and be sure to check out the rest of the Blue Goblet series, especially Blue Goblet Frames and Vignettes #2 Blue Goblet Frames and Vignettes is a collaboration between insigne Design and Portland Studios.
  17. Ongunkan Cypriot Linear C Sylla by Runic World Tamgacı, $100.00
    This font is an adaptation of the cyprus syllabic script to a Latin-based font. I tried to assign as many correct letters as possible, but there were too many characters so I had to fit them. Please review the alphabet table of Cypriot syllabic to use the Font. To see all the characters, you can see all the characters and add them to the text by selecting this font from the add character section on the word page. Cypriot syllabary The Cypriot syllabary was used in Cyprus from about 1500 and 300 BC and is thought to have developed from the Linear A. The earliest known inscriptions from between 1500 and 1200 BC are in an unknown language called 'Eteo-Cypriot', or 'True Cypriot', and the script in which they are written is called Cypro-Minoan. From around 1200 BC Cyprus began to be colonised by Mycenaean, Minoan and possibly Cretan Greek settlers, and they probably adapted the existing script to write their own language - the oldest known inscription in Greek dates from the 11th century BC. Cypriot Greek had much in common with Greek dialects of Arcadia and Pamphylia, which corresponds to the province of Antalya in Turkey.
  18. Ratilla Script by Krafted, $10.00
    Be yourself; everyone else is already taken -- Oscar Wilde Being a human being often means fulfilling who you really are. It’s about fulfilling your potential and living to the best of your abilities. And the Ratilla Script will help you show the world who you are! The Ratilla Script paves the way for you to write the information you need to send out to your audience. Make your projects to works of art, conveying your intentions clearly with the font! Maximize your designs with this urban and wavy font. It surely fits anywhere you want them to, giving them a place perfectly tucked in between your designs. Connect with your audience and stand out in the crowd as these fonts will show you that you and your works deserve their attention. Show your boldness as you make the world see of the elegant details put together in your projects! The Ratilla Script will be the perfect addition to aid you in your journey to be who you really are. Let the world see your beauty, bring it out through your handiwork and give your viewers a new perspective!
  19. Riva by ITC, $29.00
    ITC Riva is the work of English designer Martin Wait and appeared with ITC in 1994. Its letters form gently flowing words and sentences and the light stroke contrast makes the font stable yet lively. The contemporary typefaces of the 18th century influenced the forms of ITC Riva and its overall image brings to mind flowing white sundresses, fields of flowers and tea parties. Perfect for invitations and greeting cards, the capitals of ITC Riva can also be used as initials and combined with other alphabets.
  20. Blackthorn by Scriptorium, $24.00
    Blackthorn draws on the tradition of Art Nouveau font design with some elements of western or circus style fonts, but an overall effect which may have more in common with the psychedelic era than anything else. It has a feel somewhat akin to some of the lettering of Alphons Mucha particularly the Abaddon and Gehenna fonts. It's very stylized and kind of wicked looking. You can see where the name comes from if you note the thorn-like spurs on the upper part of each character.
  21. JSL Ancient - Unknown license
  22. JSL Blackletter - Unknown license
  23. Lomidrevo by Juraj Chrastina, $39.00
    Lomidrevo is a grunge stencil family derived from Valibuk. In the free demo version, you can see numbers and lowercase letters without kerning.
  24. MB NEGATIVESPACE by Ben Burford Fonts, $25.00
    MB NEGATIVESPACE was inspired on a trip to Birmingham with my wife, seeing a billboard with the main text and parts of it missing. The idea is to use it sparingly; use a good amount of tracking to fill in the blanks and it works even better. Great for headlines, displays logotypes and short texts.
  25. Illyrian by Solotype, $19.95
    Our font of the original was only ten point, so we had to use our imagination to a great extent. As specialists in Victorian typography, we have found that many people do not like the "center alignment" idea, used on several old time faces, but we have been faithful to the original. So there!
  26. Betula by Hanoded, $10.00
    Betula is the scientific name for Birch - I probably don’t have to explain that birches are my favourite trees! They always look like the ghosts of the forest with their papery white bark and dark blotches. Betula is a rough, crayon-like font. Very legible with a childlike appearance. Comes with a forest of diacritics.
  27. London Doodles by Outside the Line, $19.00
    London is always hip. With William and Kate and the 2012 Summer Olympics it made sense that London Doodles would be second in the City Series following Paris Doodles. 29 illustrations and a script word London. Kate’s ring, the Queen’s carriage, crown, skyline, cityscapes, cars, double-decker bus, castles, bridge, tea items, flag and more.
  28. Aspidistra by Studio K, $45.00
    Aspidistra is a modern vintage typeface; which is to say a Studio K original with a period feel: it has a strong Art Nouveau influence (a distant cousin of Arnold Bocklin). Why Aspidistra? In the first half of the last century an Aspidistra was a must have accessory of the aspiring middle classes (see George Orwell's Keep the Aspidistra Flying), and to my mind this font evokes the chintzy charm of that era.
  29. Christmas A2 uses the following OpenType features to set up to four different color layers. - Superscript/Superior (Trees) - Subscript/Inferior (Stars) - Numerator (Candles) - Denominator (Light, Bells) Note: Due to the complexity of some parts of the font, some printers may have problems of rendering it smoothly. To avoid this problem you should always outline the font data for the final documents. On lower systems turn font antialiasing off for faster screen redrawings.
  30. Rumble Brave Vintage Fonts by Alit Design, $14.00
    Introducing Rumble Brave Vintage Fonts Packages. Lately I've been happy to see the design style with its vintage Victorian classic. Hence from that I launched fonts packages with vintage style. In this package, there are three types of letters: serif, script, and dingbat. The three font combinations are compatible with the Victorian classic design concept. You can also use each font by itself, without combining it with the others in the package.
  31. Altis by Typolar, $72.00
    Altis combines geometric regularity and soulfulness into one font family. It resembles the traditional sanserif from the early 20th century, which communicates friendly and reads extremely well. Bring out its optimistic airiness with light styles or exploit the masculine strength of the bolds. Altis has been developed to fit present-day editorial conditions and publishing models. There are ten optically-balanced weights and practical OpenType features, which make the family versatile and operationally spot-on.
  32. Typograph Pro by Aleksandar Aleksandrov, $19.00
    Note: The 'Pro' in the name of this font should not be interpreted as having OpenType features. It has none. What was the inspiration for designing the font? Inspired from the basic shapes like circle, cube and triangle. Closer to basics means more useful in various projects. What are its main characteristics and features? Clean graphic shapes. Usage recommendations: Graphic design, Motion design, 3D, Posters, Magazine covers, Outdoor. See Typograph Pro in action:http://www.amateurmedia.net/typographpro/
  33. Christmas A uses the following OpenType features to set up to four different color layers. - Superscript/Superior (Trees) - Subscript/Inferior (Stars) - Numerator (Candles) - Denominator (Light, Bells) Note: Due to the complexity of some parts of the font, some printers may have problems of rendering it smoothly. To avoid this problem you should always outline the font data for the final documents. On lower systems turn font antialiasing off for faster screen redrawings.
  34. Antique Unique JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A page from an 1880s type specimen book presented a unique "Barnum"-like design with top horizontal lines much thinner than the bottom ones. Titled "Ten Line Antique Compressed No. 7", the design transcends the years; for it's not only an antique wood type font, but is also reminiscent of the 1960s hippie counterculture movement. Antique Unique JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  35. Ring Eyes by Ochakov, $11.00
    Now you can see... the new direction of the big family called Ring - Ring Eyes! That's a very unique Ring & truly devoted. There are only four styles, but they are all very important. Ring Eyes font like our eyes held a million stories. Ring Eyes font like other of the Ring Family is the perfect choice for headlines, logos, branding, packaging, publications, and much more.
  36. Greissler by Markus Fetz, $21.00
    GREISSLER is a Retro Display Font inspired by old letterings on store fronts and building facades in Vienna. "Greißler" is a term used in the east of Austria and means small grocer. In Vienna you can still see some of the letterings "Lebensmittel", "Feinkost", etc. on the storefronts of mostly abandoned shops. Similar letters can be found on "Gemeindebauten" (council housing) from the 1920s.
  37. Cover Charge JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Although less prevalent today, a cover charge was added to better class night clubs of the 1930s and 1940s to discourage patronage by people of questionable social graces. The general idea was that the lower strata of society (meaning the "average Joe" or "hoi polloi") would balk at paying an extra fee just for entrance to a place of good entertainment and fine dining.
  38. East India Company NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Put the kettle on and break out the biscuits. This no-nonsense stencil face is a faithful recreation of Tea Chest, released by the Stephenson Blake Type Foundry in 1939. Its bold strokes and slender profile retain their freshness, even seventy-plus years on. Both versions include the complete Latin 1252, Central European 1250 and Turkish 1254 character sets, as well as localization for Moldovan and Romanian.
  39. TextFace Type by Forme Type, $9.99
    The idea for this font family, derived from SMS text message faces (Emojis) and found photographs of faces collected over the last ten years. The concept for this project was to a create text-face characters using only the glyphes found in a standard version of a Sans Serif typeface. There are 36 different Textfaces. Available in three weights, Regular, Bold and a Stencil version.
  40. Flashback by ArtyType, $29.00
    All three fonts - Dropout, Rough Diamond and Thorny, evolved from experimenting with a cubic template devised as the basis for a retro display type series titled ‘Flashback’. I experimented with numerous shapes initially to see which forms lent themselves best to the negative spaces forming the characters. Although many interesting variants are possible within this context, these three were resolved best out of the several options tried.
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