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  1. Koo Koo Puff by astroluxtype, $20.00
    Does the world really need one more vernacular pop culture typeface? We here, at astroluxtype shout a resounding yes! Sure, at myfonts.com, you can find the apex of fine font design that will have your mind and eyes burst with joy at the level of sophistication and craftsmanship they exhibit- Koo Koo Puff Light Condensed and Regular Condensed are not one of those fonts. But if kooky goofy is your thing, we're selling it at the astroluxtype booth. Koo Koo Puff Regular Condensed is the companion font to Koo Koo Puff Light Condensed. Both fonts includes an upper and lowercase glyph set. Regular Condensed has a different upper and lowercase “O” from the original Koo Koo Puff Light Condensed. Spacing metrics are looser, as well. The font is not a match for Light Condensed, it is a separate font. Both are headline display faces, for optimum usage it is recommended to be set at 48 points or larger in size. Look to astroluxtype’s Sugarbang ! as the first in a series of fonts inspired by vintage product packaging, Koo Koo Puff is the second release in the Cerealboxx series. The third font is in the fridge getting cool now, watch for it in the future. Rave on you design genius.
  2. Tablet Gothic by TypeTogether, $35.00
    Graphic designers of any nationality and background know very well that the art of composing titles correctly is not easy, Especially when it comes to periodical publications where there is need for both flexibility and graphic coherence. Tablet Gothic was originally engineered as a titling type family, meant to help designers working on publications that require output as hard copies and a variety of digital platforms at the same time. As such, it is a grotesque sans serif that looks to the future of publishing with a clear understanding of its history, and reminiscences that go back to nineteenth century Britain and Germany. Tablet Gothic delivers the sturdy, straightforward and clean appearance expected from a grotesque, but it allows itself a good measure of personality to make it stand out on the page. Its 84 styles –six series of condensation and seven weights in each series plus obliques– guarantee that, whatever the publication format is, there's a Tablet Gothic font that will do the job and perform well both technically and aesthetically. Furthermore, the rounder styles, Tablet Gothic Wide, Normal and Narrow achieved amazing results at very small sizes, producing  a beautiful texture and highly readable text blocks. Tablet Gothic fonts can be purchased individually, by series or as a complete bundle (best value!)
  3. John Sans by Storm Type Foundry, $49.00
    The idea of a brand-new grotesk is certainly rather foolish – there are already lots of these typefaces in the world and, quite simply, nothing is more beautiful than the original Gill. The sans-serif chapter of typography is now closed by hundreds of technically perfect imitations of Syntax and Frutiger, which are, however, for the most part based on the cool din-aesthetics. The only chance, when looking for inspiration, is to go very far... A grotesk does not afford such a variety as a serif typeface, it is dull and can soon tire the eye. This is why books are not set in sans serif faces. A grotesk is, however, always welcome for expressing different degrees of emphasis, for headings, marginal notes, captions, registers, in short for any service accompaniment of a book, including its titlings. We also often come across a text in which we want to distinguish the individual speaking or writing persons by the use of different typefaces. The condition is that such grotesk should blend in perfectly with the proportions, colour and above all with the expression of the basic, serif typeface. In the area of non-fiction typography, what we appreciate in sans-serif typefaces is that they are clamorous in inscriptions and economic in the setting. John Sans is to be a modest servant and at the same time an original loudspeaker; it wishes to inhabit libraries of educated persons and to shout from billboards. A year ago we completed the transcription of the typefaces of John Baskerville, whose heritage still stands out vividly in our memory. Baskerville cleverly incorporated certain constructional elements in the design of the individual letters of his typeface. These elements include above all the alternation of softand sharp stroke endings. The frequency of these endings in the text and their rhythm produce a balanced impression. The anchoring of the letters on the surface varies and they do not look monotonous when they are read. We attempted to use these tricks also in the creation of a sans-serif typeface. Except that, if we wished to create a genuine “Baroque grotesk”, all the decorativeness of the original would have to be repeated, which would result in a parody. On the contrary, to achieve a mere contrast with the soft Baskerville it is sufficient to choose any other hard grotesk and not to take a great deal of time over designing a new one. Between these two extremes, we chose a path starting with the construction of an almost monolinear skeleton, to which the elements of Baskerville were carefully attached. After many tests of the text, however, some of the flourishes had to be removed again. Anything that is superfluous or ornamental is against the substance of a grotesk typeface. The monolinear character can be impinged upon in those places where any consistency would become a burden. The fine shading and softening is for the benefit of both legibility and aesthetics. The more marked incisions of all crotches are a characteristic feature of this typeface, especially in the bold designs. The colour of the Text, Medium and Bold designs is commensurate with their serif counterparts. The White and X-Black designs already exceed the framework of book graphics and are suitable for use in advertisements and magazines. The original concept of the italics copying faithfully Baskerville’s morphology turned out to be a blind alley. This design would restrict the independent use of the grotesk typeface. We, therefore, began to model the new italics only after the completion of the upright designs. The features which these new italics and Baskerville have in common are the angle of the slope and the softened sloped strokes of the lower case letters. There are also certain reminiscences in the details (K, k). More complicated are the signs & and @, in the case of which regard is paid to distinguishing, in the design, the upright, sloped @ small caps forms. The one-storey lower-case g and the absence of a descender in the lower-case f contributes to the open and simple expression of the design. Also the inclusion of non-aligning figures in the basic designs and of aligning figures in small caps serves the purpose of harmonization of the sans-serif families with the serif families. Non-aligning figures link up better with lower-case letters in the text. If John Sans looks like many other modern typefaces, it is just as well. It certainly is not to the detriment of a Latin typeface as a means of communication, if different typographers in different places of the world arrive in different ways at a similar result.
  4. Semlor by Listener, $12.00
    Semlor is a great display comic advertising big font, coming in regular and italic style. This font has multi-lingual and Cyrillic support. We hope you enjoy using this font.
  5. Episodian by Atlantic Fonts, $26.00
    Episodian is a retro-modern san-serif family with a sci-fi, techno edge and contemporary elegance of its own. Episodian now includes regular and bold with corresponding italic fonts.
  6. Leaner by Kulturrrno, $9.00
    "Leaner" is uppercase sans-serif typeface. It’s clean and universal. Best for logos and heading. Extended latin glyphs Uppercase letters Thin / Regular / Bold weights + Same italics Numbers & punctuation That's it!
  7. Chervonec Uzkj BT by Bitstream, $50.99
    Possessing a distinctive Russian appearance, Chervonec Uzkj, or Chervonec Condensed, is a hybrid semi-serif designed by Russian designer Oleg Karpinsky. The typeface family includes three weights with drawn italics.
  8. Cambridge Round by AVP, $29.00
    Cambridge Round provides a rounded version of Cambridge, useful for headings and more informal texts. The family contains four weights in three widths with matching italic forms for all variants.
  9. EF Franklin Gothic by Elsner+Flake, $35.00
    Franklin Gothic EF is a font family from the Elsner+Flake Library. It had its debut in 2000. In 2016 it was renovated and an additional weight "Italic“ was added.
  10. Gwyner by Typomancer, $24.00
    Gwyner, a strengthened didone with sharp and clean characteristics, comes with thin to bold weights and is suitable in italic for various uses. A condensed family for space-saving design.
  11. Virtus Sans by Andrew Footit, $20.00
    This clean sans-serif typeface brings your designs and layouts together in one great looking typeface, uncomplicated and legible large or small. VIRTUS SANS has 4 weights each with italics.
  12. Zt Sigata by Khaiuns, $15.00
    Zt. Sigata is an experiment where combining the two font styles into one, namely sans serif and serif, maybe this sounds very strange, don't worry this has been designed with very deep consideration with the serif style superti water droplets in the foliage that present coolness in every word and simple style sans serif with softness on each side, So when combined the two will be an extraordinarily beautiful design invention. Zt. Sigata comes with 6 styles (Regular/ italic, Kozi / italic, Rame / italic) that from each style have their own uniqueness, so it further expands your design experiment, and is great for poster design, packaging, logos, films and thanks to the uniqueness of each style may look good either in magazines or kompanye branding effectively. I hope you have a blast using zt.Sigata Thanks for use this font ~ Khaiuns X zelowtype
  13. Astire Klarish by Dora Typefoundry, $20.00
    Introducing, Astire Klarish is a new retro serif with all clean and soft lines, tight curves, a combination of regular and italic versions adding to the appeal and trendy elegant look! This serif typeface that looks amazing in both large and small settings is perfect for your design needs yet still clean and elegant to apply to a variety of other formal forms such as invitations, labels, logos, magazines, books, greeting/wedding cards, packaging. , fashion, make up, stationery, novel, label or any kind of advertising purposes. WHAT YOU GET : Astire Klarish Regular (Open type) Astire Klarish Italic (Open type) Astire Klarish Bold (Open type) Astire Klarish Bold Italic (Open type) This type of family has become the work of true love, making it as easy and fun as possible. I really hope you enjoy it! Thank you.
  14. Vertebrata by Fulvio Bisca, $39.00
    Vertebrata is a serif type family of six fonts, designed by Fulvio Bisca between 2011 and 2014. It embodies features from different ages of writing and history of typography: the solemnity of Capitalis Monumentalis in uppercase and small caps, rhythm of Textura in lowercase, sturdiness of 1800 Slab Serifs in the overall look and feel, and a contemporary modular approach to the construction process. In spite of the geometric genesis of the letterforms, special attention has been paid to optical corrections, in order to obtain a natural and legible design. With more than 500 glyphs per font and carefully designed small capitals, Vertebrata is a complete OpenType family, including multilingual and advanced typographic features. Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic styles are intended for both text and display applications, whereas Black and Black Italic are more suitable for display size settings.
  15. Eirene Sans by Tomtype, $4.90
    Eirene Sans is a sans serif type family inspired by grotesque typefaces with some humanistic characteristics. Simple, modern, and functional are the principal features of this type family; the uppercase glyphs present a sophisticated personality. There are 5 weights available and matching italics. It is a bit more condensed than normal width and the difference between thin and thick stems and the unique terminals make the type family have this humanistic personality. It has rounded forms in some letterforms and special characters (i, j, ., :, etc.), humanistic terminals, and very thin ink traps. Eirene Sans is perfect for digital and non-digital designs; it can be used in magazine titles, logo designs, packaging designs, and web designs. Features: 5 weights and matching italics Opentype features Arrow set Stylistic alternates (ft) Stylistic changes in italics Fractions Subscripts Inferior and superior numbers Language support (Latin extended)
  16. Sauna Pro by Underware, $50.00
    This sauna is as hot as you make it! Sauna Pro family comes for all sizes and ages, containing Regular, Bold and Black weights. Regular and Bold can be used together in various sizes in texts and headlines. Regular weight is supported with Small caps. Three Black styles are individual and specially made for display use (from magazine headlines to billboards). For every weight there are two italics. Basic Italic is formal and stable, Italic Swash is happy and fancy. Dingbats give a little extra next to the typographics. Dingbat fonts include 26 illustrations which can be used as plain black and white illustrations, or as multi-coloured illustrations. This style palette offers a flexible range for a wide variety of text and display typography. Sauna Pro has Underware’s world-dominating Latin Plus character set, supporting a total of 219 languages.
  17. Tahoma by Microsoft Corporation, $49.00
    Tahoma™ Family is one of Microsoft's most popular sans serif typeface families. The original Tahoma™ Family consisted of two Windows TrueType fonts (regular and bold), and was created to address the challenges of on-screen display, particularly at small sizes in dialog boxes and menus. In 2010 Ascender Corporation added italics, so now the Tahoma font family contains 4 fonts in total: Tahoma regular, italic, bold and bold italic. The Latin, Greek and Cyrillic characters were designed by world renowned type designer Matthew Carter, and hand-instructed by leading hinting expert, Tom Rickner. The Tahoma fonts set new standards in system font design. Tahoma is ideal for use in User Interface scenarios and other situations requiring the presentation of information on the screen. Character Set: Latin-1, WGL Pan-European (Eastern Europe, Cyrillic, Greek and Turkish).
  18. Mo' Funky Fresh by ITC, $29.99
    Mo' Funky Fresh is the work of New York designer David Sagorski. It is an all capital typeface which includes a set of alternative capitals, compatible symbols and lively illustrations. Mo' Funky Fresh brings to mind sunny days, tiki bars, surfboards and cool drinks and is a great choice for headlines requiring a vital, energetic look.
  19. Olpal by Bunny Dojo, $16.00
    A Display Serif, a Monoweight Sans, and an Inline form combining the two, Olpal is a versatile companion for your next adventure. With surprising vitality for a workhorse font, Olpal embraces any job – and whistles while it works. Neutral – with a hint of pizzazz – the font's strong legibility and compressed footprint make it a brilliant fit in any environment.
  20. Ignorance by Typogama, $29.00
    Ignorance is a script typeface that mimics traditional handwriting found in America in the 19th century. Full of vitality and personality, this typeface includes a wide range of Opentype ligatures, alternates and swash characters that allow multiple choices for each setting. This design is principally aimed for use in display and titling setting that will reveal it's finer details.
  21. Banja by Typogama, $19.00
    Banja is a single weight, non connecting script typeface filled with vitality. Designed for branding and editorial design, this dynamic style is filled with a selection of swash letters and ligatures to add even more variety and choice for layouts. Banja includes a full extended latin character set that covers most european languages including Turkish, Icelandic or Polish.
  22. Alethia Next by Pepper Type, $40.00
    Alethia Next is a grotesque sans-serif typeface with high contrast in all weights. It has been designed to serve as a display typeface in various editorial projects, such as magazines or corporate brochures, as a sans-serif pair to serif types of modern style. Alethia Next comes in 7 weights + matching italics and upright italics, each supporting numerous Latin-based languages as well as major Cyrillic languages including Bulgarian local forms. It is packed with OpenType features like ligatures, small caps, and numerous alternatives.
  23. Cicada by Larin Type Co, $15.00
    Cicada is an elegant and modern sans-serif font family. It includes upright and Italic style, each of them has five weights from Extra light to bold. This is a multi-purpose font that is perfect for any project, it is contrasted, modern and easy to read. With it, you can create logos, use in advertising, packaging, book covers and magazines, headings, descriptions and much more. Also use Italic style to add dynamics to your project. This font is easy to use has OpenType features.
  24. Urfa by Ahmet Altun, $19.00
    The Urfa font family comes in nine weights of Normal and Italic. In addition, all weights contain small caps in both italic and normal. With the Urfa font family, you can create beautiful works for the web, including logos, banners, body copy, and presentations. Urfa typeface also works nicely in print formats such as posters, T-shirts, magazines, and affiches. Because of its eye-pleasing style, this font is both effective and versatile. It supports a wide range of languages, including Extended Latin and Cyrillic.
  25. Fermata by Fermata Fonts, $15.00
    Fermata is an original calligraphic textface inspired by humanist serif typefaces from the 16th century, characterized by the translation contrast of a handwritten pen stroke, monumental Roman capitals, and true italics. Fermata has been modernized for 21st century textual requirements, with clean lines, moderated contrast, and a seamless blending of italics and lining characters into the text form, while still retaining the warmth and subtle idiosyncracies of the handwritten origins of old style serifs. The font was developed with invaluable advice and mentorship from Hannes Famira.
  26. Byngve by Linotype, $29.99
    Inspired by calligraphic styles from 15th century Italy, master Swedish typographer Bo Berndal designed the Byngve font family. With four styles-Regular, Italic, Bold, and Bold Italic-Byngve proudly shows its process: Berndal wrote out the entire family by hand before digitizing it and converting its beauty into a typeface. Byngve is most suited for advertising uses, and for greeting cards. The name Byngve comes from Bo Berndal's two Christian names: Bo Yngve. He just put the two names together and it formed Byngve"."
  27. FF Avance by FontFont, $65.99
    Dutch type designer Evert Bloemsma created this serif FontFont in 2000. The family contains 4 weights: Regular, Italic, Bold, and Bold Italic and is ideally suited for book text, editorial and publishing, small text as well as web and screen design. FF Avance provides advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, small capitals, alternate characters, case-sensitive forms, fractions, and super- and subscript characters. It comes with a complete range of figure set options – oldstyle and lining figures, each in tabular and proportional widths.
  28. Grim N Gritty by Comicraft, $49.00
    Thought Balloons. No use for them any more. You can't be taken seriously when your thoughts are floating above your head in cute, puffy clouds. Doesn't look good. When the streets are extended gutters and the gutters are full of blood, a thought bubble just isn't noir enough, is it? It's gotta be GRIM. It's gotta be GRITTY. Let's face it... It's gotta be GRIM'N'GRITTY. In Italic and Bold Italic. Also Regular and Bold. But I've little use for them either. Talk is cheap.
  29. Le Monde Livre Classic Std by Typofonderie, $59.00
    A Renaissance style typeface in 4 series Le Monde Livre Classic works beautifully on text and titling settings. Designed as an extension of Le Monde Livre, this family distinguishes itself by its historical forms and by its numerous stylistic effects. Le Monde Livre Classic’s italics follow the models of the Renaissance and feature italic capital and lowercase swashes. Le Monde Livre Classic works beautifully for book typography, magazine settings from text to display. Le Monde Livre Classic revisited Type Directors Club .44 1998 European Design Awards 1998
  30. Quta Rounded by Fo Da, $15.00
    Quta Rounded "derivative typeface from Quta" is a sans serif typeface produced by FoDa foundry, that meets all the needs of professionals who search a family of clean rounded geometric font, very well suited for headlines, newspaper and many purposes. With a basic character set in Five weights with their italics. Quta Rounded covers many features like: -Five main weights (Light, Regular, Medium, Bold and Extra Bold) -Matching italics for all weights. -language support for many Latin-based scripts -Ligatures and many other OpenType features.
  31. Erbar by URW Type Foundry, $49.99
    Erbar or Erbar Grotesk, designed by Jakob Erbar (Ludwig & Mayer) in the early 1920s, is a truly key design from a historical viewpoint. None other than Paul Renner studied Erbar and used this knowledge in the design of his famous Futura. Erbar is a beautiful constructive Grotesk perfectly mirroring the Zeitgeist of the 1920s. The newly expanded Erbar family of URW++ comes in nine styles, of which seven have been digitally remastered recently in URW's design studio (light, book, medium, bold, italic, bold italic).
  32. TAN The Laundry Room by TANTypeCo., $19.00
    TAN - THE LAUNDRY ROOM is a fun display serif. Wonky yet composed and retains the legibility. *the italic font used in the display is TAN - ANGLETON (italic) — Our fonts are supported by most design software, please make sure it can read the OpenType fonts to be able to access all ligatures. Please be informed that while our font works well in Canva, but Canva itself doesn’t support advance opentype features such as special characters. For support, please don’t hesitate to contact us at tantypeco@gmail.com.
  33. Puanto by Larin Type Co, $15.00
    Puanto is a elegant serif font that includes two styles: regular and true Italic. This font has a lightweight and looks amazing in logos, branding, arranging wedding invitations, business cards, packaging, titles and much more, it is very readable and recognizable. This font includes alternates and ligatures for Uppercase and Lowercase, with them you can make your project more elegant and unique and italic style will add dynamics to your design, it also includes alternates and ligatures This font is easy to use has OpenType features.
  34. Dear And Fans by Anaya Studio, $8.00
    Dear and Fans is all class. A stylish modern font that is a mix of serif and sans serif. It's soft curves mixed with high contrast glyphs lend it self to both feminine and masculine qualities. With a contrasting light italic, Dear and Fans works great in layout design for quotes or body copy. The Elegant curves also make for a unique logo or masthead. Dear and Fans comes with multilingual support also. Full upper/lower case, numbers, punctuation and multilingual support. Full italic style included also.
  35. Calendula by ParaType, $30.00
    Calendula is a humanistic font with low contrast and one-sided serifs. There are eight styles: four regular of different weights from Light to Bold and corresponding italics. The main set of regular styles is close to upright italics, so the font is percieved as informal and friendly. However, Calendula allows you to combine business with pleasure by switching the stylistic set, and turns into a calm text font with traditional upright forms. The font was designed by Natalia Vasilyeva and released by Paratype in 2017.
  36. Gildersleeve by Greater Albion Typefounders, $7.95
    Gildersleeve evokes the spirit of the Arts and Crafts movement of the 1920s. Think of a hand-cut Roman display face, with loving care lavished over each serif and letterform. Gildersleeve is offerered in the classic combination of a regular face, a bold face, an italic and an italic bold. Any of them are ideal for poster or cover work, as well as for chapter and section headings in a longer document, in combination with a text face such as Vertrina or Clementhorpe Text.
  37. Rozelle by Asenbayu, $12.00
    Rozelle Fonts are serif fonts with rounded edges. These fonts are formed as a unique multipurpose font, you can use them in vintage, retro, and modern designs. These fonts are perfect for a variety of projects, such as branding, poster displays, logo designs, magazine covers, and more. These fonts are perfect for you who need unique serif fonts! Rozelle fonts feature opentype, kerning, and alternates packed in 4 fonts: Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold-italic. Rozelle fonts include uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numeral, punctuation and multilingual support.
  38. Shallot by Eko Bimantara, $24.00
    Shallot is a serif font family with sharp and exquisite characteristic. The initial letterforms are made not completely based on calligraphic strokes, which make it more likely close to transitional serif style. The letterforms have high contrast strokes and sharp serif with curved brackets. The upright styles have a fairly wide proportion. The italic styles have 12 degree angle and redrawn lowercase letters. Shallot consist of 4 styles from regular to extrabold with each matching italics. It contains 462 glyphs that support broad latin languages.
  39. Gistra by Zane Studio, $18.00
    Gistra - Modern Beauty Elegant Aesthetic Sans Serif - Expressive Feminine Branding Logo Font Gistra Sans Serif comes with several styles, Regular, Italic, Outline, Outline Italic, so you can use it to create the perfect typography design. It's perfect for your upcoming project. Such as luxury logos and branding, classy editorial designs, women's magazines, cosmetic brands, fashion promotions, art gallery branding, museums, architectural history, boutique branding, stationery design, blog design, modern advertising design, invitation cards, art quotes, home decoration , book titles/samples, special events, and more.
  40. Saracen by Hoefler & Co., $51.99
    Saracen is the Latin (wedge serif) member of The Proteus Project, a collection of four interchangeable type families designed in different nineteenth century styles. The Saracen typeface was designed by Jonathan Hoefler in 1992. Saracen is a design in the ‘latin’ style, characterized by wedge-shaped serifs, a genus of type that emerged in the mid-nineteenth century. A part of The Proteus Project, the typographic theme-and-variations based on related Regency styles, Saracen was created for Rolling Stone, in whose pages the typeface first appeared in 1993 . From the desk of the designer: Though the wedge serif printing type is a nineteenth century innovation, Saracen does not resemble any font from this era. It’s mysterious that typefounders of the Victorian age who sought the extreme and fanciful in their work — exploring all manner of serif treatments, and creating extra-condensed and super-expanded designs — never made a latin font of this straightforward proportion. <
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