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  1. 6th Aniversario by deFharo, $21.00
    6th Aniversario is a rounded condensed typography, handwritten and elegant, perfect for writing good advertising titles in graphic design of posters, flyers or publications in general where space saving and readability is required. Includes the Bitcoin symbol (ligatures): b# The Commercial version includes: - 492 glyphs. Latin Extended-A • OTF & TTF - OpenType Functions: Fractions, Alternate Annotation Forms, All Alternates, Superscript, Superiors, Slashed Zero, Superior letters, Localized Forms, Numbers Small Caps, Inferiors, Scientific Inferiors, Discretionary Ligatures, Numerators, Standard Ligatures, Subscript, Extended Fractions, Ordinals, Denominators, Oldstyle Figures, Historical Forms.
  2. Radish by Twinletter, $12.00
    Radish is relaxed, elegant, and dainty handwriting and looks that features sweet and subtle strokes. This original look will appeal to a variety of craft ideas, from letterheads and titles to fun, natural handwriting. This font is designed with a natural touch of handwriting refined to create portions and compositions that suit your needs. So this font is perfect for crafts, kids writing, adventure posters, banner titles, wedding invitations, product packaging logos, quotes, social media page covers, furniture banner titles, book covers, and more.
  3. Photography Script by Almarkha Type, $25.00
    Photography Script - a handwritten script font with a signature style. This classy font is great for your creative projects such as watermark on photography, and perfect for logos & branding, photography, invitation, advertisements, product designs, stationery, wedding designs, labels, product packaging, special events or anything that need hand-writing touch. Photography Script is here to elevate your work to the highest level. Photography Script comes in 2 styles: Regular and Slant with uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, punctuation, ligature, alternative letters and Multi-Lingual support.
  4. Qojarun by Twinletter, $15.00
    Introducing our newest font called Qojarun. With Arabic Style display fonts, you can easily give your designs a genuine Middle Eastern feel. This font features characters in an Arabic style, and goes well with a wide variety of design projects, from posters to logos and beyond. Elegant calligraphy Arabic letters are easy to read, just like writing in general. This download pack contains all the characters needed to translate your project into an Arabic theme, complete with the full character set, punctuation marks, and numbers.
  5. Absolute by Supersemarletter, $10.00
    Absolute is a handwritten font which feels incredibly elegant and flowing. It looks stunning on wedding invitations, thank you cards, quotes, greeting cards, logos, business cards and every other design which needs a handwritten touch. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease! Provide Ligatures and alternates with special character make the design letters looks incredible. Honestly it works perfectly for headlines, logos, posters, packaging, T-shirt and much more. Font Features : Regular Version Character set A-Z in Uppercase and Lowercase Ligatures in lowercase and special Aternates option Numerals and Punctuation Accented Characters Multiple Languange Supported Recomended to use in Adobe Illustrator or Adobe Photoshop with opentype feature. If you have any questions, just send me a message and I'm glad to help.
  6. National First Font Dotted - Unknown license
  7. Koobler by Zang-O-Fonts, $25.00
    Named in homage of Toronto writer and spoken word performer Monica S. Kuebler, Koobler is an interesting interpretation of the classic roman font.
  8. Sugarloaf by Hanoded, $15.00
    A sugarloaf was a conical lump in which refined sugar was sold until the late 19th century. In Fryslân you can buy sûkerbôle - a yeasty white bread containing large chunks of sugar. I must have been dreaming about the latter when I named this font! Sugarloaf is a versatile, happy, handmade display font. It comes in an inline and a black style.
  9. Cíclope by Andinistas, $19.95
    Cíclope is a typeface family designed by Carlos Fabián Camargo in 2012 and used to write the headlines. Its idea is based on an army of stone soldiers that with their size and strength cause earthquakes. Under this concept he obtained stencil and sans serif letters with monstrous shapes and torn counterforms. Its usefulness as well as readability consists in imitate rocks with scars and cracks. For that reason, Cíclope family has three sizes, each with their respective italics distributed at different levels of corrosion. In addition, each file contains 260 glyphs useful for designing words and phrases with systematically eroded treatments for advertisement material. Thus Cíclope works as a raw material in the exploration of new graphic design. Finally, Cíclope concept has grotesque, geometric and humanistics letters roots that seem disastrous but each and every detail has been planned with high definition drawing. Most importantly, it expresses a big amount of grunge style with cracked edges and medium contrast between thin and thick strokes. In that sense, the writing seems impaired and special for design of logos, posters, flyers, brochures and worn, crusty or demolished graphic design.
  10. HiTone by Scholtz Fonts, $19.00
    HiTone emulates a natural hand-lettered typeface that provides exceptional legibility with a quirky style. It comes in three widths, the narrowest of which enables text to be placed compactly within a limited space. The widest, on the other hand, increases readability while maintaining the same stroke weight. In addition, each width comes in two weights, regular and black, enabling the user to provide emphasis or headline display without changing the essential style of writing. The font is most useful as a stylish text font. The font has all the features of a fully professional typeface. Language support includes all European character sets.
  11. Shyest by Twinletter, $12.00
    Shyest is a handwritten typeface that has a dramatic, natural feel to it. This typeface is ideal for your unique projects, particularly those that demand a human touch; of course, this font is the answer to all of your amazing projects! This font is designed with a natural touch of handwriting which is refined to create a portion and composition that suits your needs. So this font is suitable for craft, children’s writing, adventure posters, food banner titles, wedding invitations, product packaging logos, quotes, social media page covers, furniture banner headlines, book covers, and much more.
  12. Raqilla Kids by Zamjump, $15.00
    Introducing Raqilla Kids - Playful Display Font Raqilla Kids is a display font with a cute character. This is a kids themed font look, inspired by children's writing in general, with a shape that looks irregular but is very distinctive, these characters will add a warm touch to any look. Add this beautiful display font to your every creative idea and see how it makes them stand out! FEATURES - Uppercase - Lowercase - Numbering - Punctuations - Ligature - Alternate - Swash - Multilingual Support - Works on PC or Mac - Simple Installation - Support Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Corel Draw, also works on Microsoft Word Thanks
  13. More Than Life by Ronny Studio, $19.00
    The More Than Life Bubble graffiti tag font is a typography style commonly used in street art and graffiti culture. It features rounded and inflated letters that create a three-dimensional, bubble-like effect. This style is often used for tagging, a form of graffiti in which an artist writes their name or a stylized chosen word to mark their territory or establish their presence. This font is perfect for your design needs with a graffiti theme. Features : - All Caps - numbers and punctuation - multilingual - PUA encoded Please contact us if you have any questions. Enjoy Crafting and thanks for supporting us! :) Thank you
  14. Kahfee by Nathatype, $29.00
    Introducing Kahfee, a mesmerizing display font that invites you into a world where artistry and elegance merge seamlessly. Kahfee takes its inspiration from the captivating aesthetics of Arabic script. In this font, you'll find that every letter is thoughtfully connected, creating a captivating rhythm that mimics the graceful dance of Arabic writing. The strokes and curves are a tribute to the centuries-old tradition of Arabic calligraphy. Kahfee fits in headlines, logos, posters, flyers, branding materials, print media, editorial layouts, and many more designs. Find out more ways to use this font by taking a look at the font preview.
  15. Armando by eyetype, $20.00
    Armando and Armando Rough Armando a work that is purely a result of handwriting and writing by using a liquid ink pen, has a natural characteristic. this is perfect for invitations, signatures, blogs, social media, business cards, product brands. Armando a work that is purely handwritten, has its own characteristics with the style of monoline It is perfect for invitations, signatures, blogs, social media, business cards, product brands. OpenType features can be accessed by using OpenType smart programs such as Adobe Photo Shop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Indesign, Corel Draw and Microsoft Office. can also be accessed through the character map.
  16. HGB Santo by HGB fonts, $16.00
    Must a letter always have a symmetrical basic form? What happens when the shape of the letters stretch like an arc in the reading direction? When writing with a broad nib, this is easily achieved. The HGB Santo examines the effect of this formal principle on the readability of a text. First attempts have shown a warm and reader-friendly typeface. Six shades from Light to Black, each with an italic should be sufficient for most applications. Small caps and old-style figures are available via OpenType features as well as some ornamental forms in the italics.
  17. Indalo by Eurotypo, $32.00
    The “indalo” means messenger of the Gods in the Iberian language about 2500 BC. It was discovered in the Almeria, south of Spain, Indalo was a ghost that bring luck having a rainbow in his hands. Indalo font is an informal, condensed hand-drawn font with a vintage touch. Its features give it a nice appearance that refer to traditional fluent writing. This font is equipped with a large set of ligatures, as well as different alternatives on some letters, to create more authentic and varied connections between letters. Contain Central European language support to fit your design.
  18. Beloved Turtle by Rastype Studio, $18.00
    Beloved turtle are beautiful and romantic writing fonts. Looks amazing on wedding invitations, thank you cards, quotes, greeting cards, logos, business cards and any other design. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all glyphs and swashes with ease! The font includes OpenType features with alternative styles, ligatures, and multiple language support.
  19. M Comic 2 HK by Monotype HK, $523.99
    Stripy strokes with more open to curves, designed for Young Urban Professionals! HK series fonts are in Unicode encoding and consists of BIG 5 character set and HKSCS characters. The character glyphs are based on the regular Traditional Chinese writing form and style. It is generally used in Taiwan ROC, Hong Kong and Macau.
  20. Vermicello by ParaType, $30.00
    An original display typeface was designed for ParaType in 2007 by Isabella Chaeva. Informal handwriting shapes of letters are formed by several separate elements — traces of monoline writing tool like broad felt-tipped pen. The name of the font reveals the fact that curvy strokes resemble worms. For use in advertising and display typography.
  21. Hanglish by Designsuh, $12.00
    Hanglish transformed Korean character elements into an English font. Korean characters are the only characters in the world whose creator is known. It was created and announced on October 29, 1446 by King Sejong the Great so that the people could easily write and read the letters. It was created by arranging oriental calligraphic fonts.
  22. Show Card Pen JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The 1920 edition of “How to Paint Signs and Sho’ Cards” by E. C. Matthews offered a number of examples of then-modern lettering styles for sign painters and show card writers. A bold display alphabet made with a round lettering nib is now available as Show Card Pen JNL, in both regular and oblique versions.
  23. Rolling Pen by Sudtipos, $79.00
    After doing this for so many years, one would think my fascination with the old history of writing would have mellowed out by now. The truth is that alongside being a calligraphy history buff, I'm a pop technology freak. Maybe even keener on the tech thing, since I just can't seem to get enough new gadgets. And after working with type technologies for so many years, I'm starting to think that writing and design technologies as we now know them, being about 2.5 post-computer generations, keep becoming more and more detached from what the very old humanity arts/tasks they essentially want to facilitate. In a world where command-z is a frequently used key combination, it’s difficult to justify expecting a Morris-made book or a Zaner-drawn sentence, but accidental artistic “mutations” become welcome, marketable features. When fluid pens were introduced, their liquid saturation influenced type design to a great extent almost overnight an influence professional designers tend to play down. Now round stroke endings are a common sight, and the saturation is so clean and measured, unlike any liquid-paper relationship possible in reality. Some designers even illustrate their work by overlaying perfect circles at stroke ends, in order to illustrate how “geometric” their work was. Because if it’s measured with precise geometry, it’s got to be meaningful design. And once in a while, by a total freak accident, the now-cherished mutations prove to have existed long before the technology that caused them. Rolling Pen was cued by just such a thing: A rounded, circular, roll-flowing calligraphy from the late nineteenth century seemingly one of those experimental takes on what inspired Business Penmanship, another font of mine. Looking at it now it certainly seems to be friendlier, more legible, and maybe even more practical and easier to execute than the standard business penmanship of those days, but I guess friendliness and simplicity were at odds with the stiff manner business liked to present itself back then, so that kind of thing remained buried in the professional penman’s oddities drawer. It would be quite a few years before all this curviness and rounding were thought of as symbolic of graceful movement, which brought such a flow closer to the idea of fine art. Even though in this case the accidental mutation just happens to not be a mutation after all, the whole technology-transforms-application argument still applies here. I'm almost sure “business” will be the last thing on people’s minds when they use this font today. One extreme example of that level of disconnect between origin and current application is shown here, with the so-called business penmanship strutting around in gloss and neon. Rolling Pen is another cup of mine that runneth over with alternates, swashes, ligatures, and other techy perks. To explore its full potential, please use it in a program that supports OpenType features for advanced typography. Enjoy the new Rolling Pen designed by Ale Paul with Neon’s visual poetry by Tomás García.
  24. ITC Cali by ITC, $29.99
    There are a few professions in which being left-handed confers an advantage-think of the great southpaw pitchers in major league baseball, like Sandy Koufax. Now, think of all the great left-handed calligraphers. Not so easy, right? Here's a hint: Luis Siquot. Far from being an advantage, Siquot's lefty orientation proved a hurdle to overcome. When I was young, I had serious problems writing," he recalls. "If there was a lot of text, I almost always soiled the paper with wet ink as my hand followed the pen." Then, a friend told Siquot about a special store in London that catered to left-handed people. It was there that he found an Osmiroid pen specially designed for left-handed calligraphers. ITC Cali is based on Siquot's use of this pen. "Electronic scans of my calligraphy were the foundation of the design," he says. "I was careful to leave in some imperfections to avoid an excessively mechanical look, and added the little notches in the strokes to imitate the texture of writing on a rough cotton paper." ITC Cali works equally well in text and display sizes, but it is a calligraphic script, Siquot warns, "and shouldn't be set in all capitals." That said, ITC Cali is a remarkably versatile design, well-suited to a variety of communication projects."
  25. Budskab by Bogstav, $17.00
    This is the kind of font which is up to trouble. Not trouble in a bad way, but trouble like when you are in no way prepared what is going to happen. The font is handmade and playful - and to help that playfullness come to live, the 5 different versions of each letter helps! Watch your words change while you write with Budskab! And, by the way..."budskab" is message in danish...just thought you should know!
  26. ITC Edwardian Script by ITC, $40.99
    In 1994, Edward Benguiat designed ITC Edwardian Script, an emotional, lyrical, even passionate calligraphic typeface. Its appearance was influenced by the look of writing with a steel pointed pen, an instrument which can be pushed as well as pulled, and which produces stroke contrast when pressure upon it is varied. The delicate, sophisticated letterforms of ITC Edwardian Script font were drawn and redrawn until the connective elements of the letters were perfected to create the look of true handwriting.
  27. SF Hussein by Sultan Fonts, $19.99
    SF Hussein font is designed to be used in broad writing and short sentences. It is an ornate heading font with minimal details. Its domain is stationery, logos, branding, ad design, and posters, and it can be paired with a range of other font styles to create different moods. This font is an improvement of the Hussein font that was presented by designer Sultan Al-Maqtari in 2013 The Hussain font supports Arabic, Latin, Persian, and Urdu.
  28. Bighat by Grontype, $14.00
    Bighat is a unique hand-written semi-bold typeface. Comes with extra ligatures and alternates that makes your writing have more alternate typing pairs. This font is perfect for your designs that want unique style, modern vintage and elegant such as logotype, cards, posters, quotes, social media posts and so much more! Features: Basic Latin Glyphs Uppercase and Lowercase Letters Alternates & Ligatures Numeral and Punctuation Multilingual Support Thankyou for picking up this font, hope you enjoy it.: Regard. Grontype
  29. Neonoir by phospho, $25.00
    Neonoir is an homage to neon lettering craftsmanship of the mid 20th century. The beautiful futuristic grace of wall-sized bent-glass hand-writing is distilled into a three-weight connected script that’s on the button for headlines, logo­type and branding designs. Its Slim and Bold weights are formal monoline scripts, while the medium weight mimics the rough edges of ink on paper. Neonoir is available as an Open Type font that features alternate endings and lots of ligatures.
  30. Romello by Ardyanatypes, $13.00
    Romello is a pretty typeface that was made to make your designs look more funny and pretty. Romello is also accompanied by Alternative characters that embellish every form of writing, Romello is the perfect choice to use for poster designs, signatures, logos, quotes, album covers, business cards, product designs, and many other design projects. Romello has its own charm when used. We make this font look elegant, classy, easy to read, stylish, easy to remember, and easy to use.
  31. Core Gungseo by S-Core, $59.00
    CoreGungseo is a Korean calligraphy font. We considered the change of stroke thickness and the power & speed of brushes when designing this calligraphy font. This font has the beauty of spaces by proper balance among individual letter forms. Both horizontal and vertical writing are acceptable to use. Supported codepages are MS Windows 1252 Latin1 and MS Windows 949 Korean consisting of 11,172 Korean letters and Symbols except Chinese. We suggest to use for books, cards, displays and so on.
  32. Bonrich by GuseType, $12.00
    Bonrich is a display font that is characterized by thick lines with rounded edges which makes Bonrich look playful. This font suitable for any design style such as retro, vintage, pop culture and many more. Bonrich has features such as uppercase, lowercase, numbers, punctuation, and multilingual support. Bonrich also has alternate and ligature features to make your writing more stylish and unique for various designs such as posters, headlines, magazines, logotypes, book covers and many more.
  33. Megattor by Letterhend, $14.00
    Introducing: Megattor typeface! This font is beautifully made to look like natural hand writing. As you can see, the flow of the bold and thin lines creates a realistic hand lettering just by typing on your keyboard! It has many OpenType features like ligatures, stylistic alternate, and lots of Stylistic Set, also support many languages. This typeface is based on handwriting which is very suitable for any design needs you have especially for script logotype project.
  34. Cuttie Beary by Good Java Studio, $18.00
    Introducing Cuttie Beary - Fun Handwritten Font Cuttie Beary is the perfect font for all your fun designs. The main font file is equipped with ordinary characters. Everything is made with a funny brush so you can be sure all leters will work well together! It is suitable for you to use in making t-shirt design, quote, labels, packaging, logo types, or long writing because we have compiled kerning and matrices that are tailored to your needs.
  35. Stack Braille by Echopraxium, $5.00
    This is a monospace font for the Braille alphabet. The idea came while exploring new ways to display the regular braille glyph ( 3 rows of 2 dots ). The glyph design is inspired by "stackable multiple board" games like the famous Vulcan chess (from Star Trek series) and the Qubic (3D tic-tac-toe). The stack is made from 3 levels, each level is a 3x3 grid with 2 "playable" cells (South-West and North-East). Each cell can be either empty, filled by a white square token or a black square token. The 3D effect is obtained by means of the classic isometric perspective. Lowercase letters use black tokens, while uppercase letters use white tokens. Most special characters (e.g. digits, *$#@, []{}() etc.. ) are also provided for special usages like program source code (see poster 5).
  36. Monologous by Comicraft, $49.00
    From A to B, or not to Z: that is the question mark: whether 'tis nobler in the mind to kern with the left and right arrows of outrageous keyboards, or to take arms against a sea of ' thought bubbles,' and by opposing, burst them? To sigh, with those little fireflies: to sleep; No more; and by sleep that is to say we end each line of dialogue with 'zzzzz;' The heart-shapes and the thousand drops of sweat popping off my forehead that sight of flesh is sure to produce, 'tis a consummation devoutly to be letter'd. To die with still at least five balloons of dialogue, to sleep; perchance to flashback to a scene in a previous issue while a picture of my head floats in the corner of each panel: ay, there's the rub; 'Nuff Said.
  37. UXB by astroluxtype, $30.00
    UXB Stencil and its companion UXB Spray contain both the stencil and the sprayed letters in two fonts. The font is a headline display uppercase only character set, which is duplicated in the lowercase keys, identical in form (except for an alternate “Z”). No need to remember to hit the caps lock, the font will work with lowercase key strokes. UXB Spray is also a headline display uppercase only character set but, includes a few “drip” characters (find them in the lowercase key positions) these apply when you have held the spraycan over the stencil too long and made a mess. Use separately or together for a maximum design explosion. The fonts used together with color can create many nice design effects- by offsetting characters and putting one font in front of the other for a second effect. UXB it’s an emergency.
  38. Police JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Police JNL was modeled from one of the many fonts created by the late Alf Becker exclusively for Signs of the Times magazine during the 1930s through the 1950s. This was a bit of a difficult design to translate into a digital font file, because the individual characters did not follow a formal structure as to the width and length of the cast shadows or the letter shapes—such is the way of the hand-lettered alphabet. Special thanks to Tod Swormstedt of ST Publications (and curator of the American Sign Museum in Cincinnati) for providing the archival material to work from in creating this font. Police JNL has a limited character set. The basic A-Z character is on the upper and lower case keys, along with numbers, some punctuation and the dollar and cents signs.
  39. Sassoon Handwriting Starter by Sassoon-Williams, $45.99
    Sassoon fonts package for handwriting starters The three upright "infant" fonts developed to meet the demand for letters to produce pupil material for handwriting as well as for reading. Letters have extended ascenders and descenders ideal on screen and print. They facilitate word recognition. The exit strokes link words together visually, also crucially, they space the letters for improved legibility. The "joined" font puts the skills gained into practice producing joined-up handwriting. Together these typefaces provide a valuable resource for Teachers to create consistent material across the curriculum. Sassoon Infant Tracker B font: This font with its direction arrows helps pupils to start in the correct place. Motor movements can be refined by keeping inside the line. When starting and direction is no problem, the arrow font can be dropped and the Dotted font used. Sassoon Infant Dotted B font: Writing over the dots of this font refines motor skills. The aim here is to give confidence by reinforcing starting points, exits and to now encourage fluidity. Sassoon Infant font: With some words in this font and a baseline beneath to copy onto, pupils can use their learned starting points and exit strokes to write freely along the baseline - still unjoined. Once learned, this leads to spontaneous joins along the baseline leading logically to a joined-up hand. Sassoon Joined font: Having learned to write letters with correct starts and exits, this is when the joined font for teaching handwriting can be used. With some words in this font and a baseline beneath to copy onto, pupils can use their learned starting points and simply extend their exit strokes to make joined-up writing. The default joins the font provides are recommended, however there are alternative letterforms that are so important for some Teachers which can be accessed. Create ‘pen lifts’ anytime too! NOTE: Fonts display unjoined by default on this website and are delivered that way - joining is controlled by your text editing application such as Word or TextEdit, read more for instructions… Free to download PDF resources: Stylistic Sets and how to access the alternative letters feature in these OpenType fonts. Using the separate letter fonts Using the joined font Teachers copybooks using these fonts: How to teach pre-cursive Copybook How to teach cursive handwriting Copybook
  40. Show Card Elite JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    One example in the 1919 instructional book “One Hundred Alphabets for the Show Card Writer” was for an elegant sans serif with a subtle Art Nouveau style to the letter forms. This is now available digitally as Show Card Elite JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
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