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  1. Ethem by Ixipcalli, $32.00
    Ethem is a semi-geometric typeface, ideal for posters and flyers. Provides three weights: light, regular, and bold without leaving out the italics of each. The Ethem font family provides six typefaces. If you need a strong, prominent or dominant typeface in your project, Ethem font is the ideal typeface.
  2. Bravo ND by Neufville Digital, $29.60
    Designed by José María Cerezo, with a geometric style and futuristic touches. A typeface family that offers good results in labeling, posters and big formats. Inspired by art deco with a sci-fi touch, it is a typeface with a strong character and personality. Bravo is a Trademark of BauerTypes SL
  3. Mere by Josh Grzybowski, $19.99
    Loosely based on a Jan Tschichold specimen, Mere is a clean geometric sans-serif with simple lines that are best viewed as larger print but still have an impact at smaller point sizes. In addition to ligatures and fractions, Mere’s other OpenType features include old style numbers and small caps.
  4. Angoli by Mashiu, $12.99
    ANGOLI is characterized by line geometric and simple. This font is ideal for titles and text in large sizes. The font has two uppercase versions. To realize this character I was inspired by angular shapes of the buildings. Each character has the characteristic of being formed by a single continuous line.
  5. Somtam by S6 Foundry, $12.00
    Somtam is a new decorative geometric display typeface, based on the continuation of a single line. It complements the style and personality of the ascetics of the continuum. Somtam is perfectly suited for headlines, large-format prints, brand identities, social media, advertising, editorial design, posters, magazines, logos, headings, and more.
  6. SK Curiosity by Salih Kizilkaya, $9.99
    SK Curiosity is a modern geometric and sans serif font.It was designed by Salih Kızılkaya in 2020, inspired by the circular structures of the planets, blending modern design with a futuristic perspective. It includes all Latin characters. It is available in 40 different fonts and contains 18.200 glyphs in total.
  7. Zona Black by Intelligent Design, $8.00
    Zona Black is a geometric sans–serif display black typeface. It was inspired by typography from 1920's posters featuring clean lines and some quite distinct glyphs such as the uppercase B and the H. Despite being black it's tall x–height makes Zona quite legible even in smaller sizes.
  8. Chubbly by Greater Albion Typefounders, $10.00
    The Chubbly family started life as an alphabet for an illustrated children's book. These big, chubby and friendly letterforms are easy to read and have a sense of fun about them. They're ideal where simple eye-catching geometric letterforms are required, for posters, signs and advertising with a sense of fun.
  9. RBNo3.1 by René Bieder, $25.00
    RBNo3.1 is a sans serif typeface with a technical and geometric appearance. The family includes 9 weights with matching italics. Its large x-height makes it especially legible at small point sizes. RBNo3.1 feels comfortable in technical surroundings with short text passages, in brochures, catalogs, magazines, posters, websites, headlines or logos.
  10. Cornucurlia by Calligraplay, $13.00
    Cornucurlia is a carefully constructed typeface comprising curvaceously connected characters. Designed as a display font, use it for posters, signage, branding and any type-based artwork that needs stylish, standout lettering. Multi-lingual and with a range of symbols, the font includes 368 glyphs that link together with geometric curves.
  11. National Champion by Kyle Wayne Benson, $4.00
    National Champion is an overly confident geometric slab that comes in four weights. He is best suited for those looking for a well colored, balanced and spaced font in the College genre. He's got a 3/4 cap lowercase, lots of language options, opentype fractions and meticulous hinting for web use.
  12. Alpaim by EchadType, $6.00
    Alpaim is a minimalist sans serif font. Uniform characters and sharp geometric features create light modular sensation. Architectural nature of this font is perfectly suited for display use, graphic design, branding and even technical lettering. Originally designed in thin condensed version, now includes weight and width variation, Latin diacritics and Hebrew.
  13. Gatter Sans by Arodora Type, $35.00
    Gatter Sans is a modern family with lots of alternate glyphs with geometric lines. Thanks to the crowd family, it will give you a great advantage in your poster works. You can also benefit from this creative and original family for your digital designs, ui/ux applications, and corporate identities.
  14. Korobok Edgy by FontaZY, $25.00
    Korobok mean "little box" in Russian. Korobok is irregular font with asymmectric serifs and slightly geometric appearance. This font is good for children books, comic books, videogames and package design. Korobok comes in two sub-families - Korobok Soft (with smooth edges) & Korobok Edgy (width straight edges), both includes 4 styles.
  15. Phi Caps by Cas van de Goor, $7.00
    Phi Caps is a geometric all caps typeface designed on the basis of the golden ratio. Its simple monoline letters come together in a solid font. Note: There is a new and improved version of this typeface called Phi. It includes lowercase letters and supports Central, Eastern and Western European languages.
  16. Legasov by AlfaBravo, $25.00
    Legasov is an original font family designed for logos, titles, book covers, and branding identity. You can also use it for small text fragments. Legasov is a modern geometric grotesque inspired by the Ukrainian modernism of the last century. It has a dynamic shape of characters and an avant-garde nature.
  17. Korobok Soft by FontaZY, $25.00
    Korobok mean "little box" in Russian. Korobok is irregular font with asymmectric serifs and slightly geometric appearance. This font is good for children books, comic books, videogames and package design. Korobok comes in two sub-families - Korobok Soft (with smooth edges) & Korobok Edgy (width straight edges), both includes 4 styles.
  18. Korbin by Talbot Type, $19.50
    Inspired by the sans-serifs of the late 19th and early 20th century, Korbin is a legible and versatile text and display face available in five weights. It mixes geometric and humanist traits to achieve a modern, clean, friendly appearance. The italic variations include bespoke characters for a more flowing look.
  19. Institut by Brownfox, $18.99
    Institut is an industrial-strength display face, with a no-nonsense feel of a research lab and audacity of a space mission control. Based on assertive geometric forms, it is suitable for a variety of on-screen and print uses. Designed by Vyacheslav Kirilenko with participation of Gayaneh Bagdasaryan in 2013.
  20. Brunches by Trustha, $18.00
    Brunches is a sans serif font family with five different styles. Basically this font is designed with geometric principles. There are several possibilities of styles to choose from as needed. Suitable for all creative project. Brunches will make each project easier and more colorful because it has several different styles.
  21. Ayr Thrope by Aiyari, $25.00
    Introducing Thrope the irregular retro display font family heavy influence by motter ombra typeface, geometric basic shape, and 60s to 70s pop culture. Thrope typeface includes 3 font family (regular, bold,& heavy) it comes with stylistic alternates 01-04 & ligatures. Thrope font family best used for logotype, headline, header, signage.
  22. Details Details NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Another gem from the Blandford Press Pen and Brush Lettering and Practical Alphabets, this in-your-face typeface features strong geometric elements, delineated in blueprint fashion. A surefire attention-getter. Both versions of the font include the 1252 Latin and 1250 CE character sets (with localization for Romanian and Moldovan).
  23. Blattwerk by Volcano Type, $39.00
    The shapes of "Blattwerk" (german for leafage) are based on an abstract leaf. The geometrical sans serif font has several standard and decorative ligatures and will work best as a display typeface for logos, headlines and short texts. The individual letters can also be used to form symbols or patterns.
  24. ITC Anna by ITC, $29.99
    ITC Anna is a labor of love by Daniel Pelavin. He designed the font for his wedding invitation and reused it on the birth announcement of his first child, Anna, whose namesake it is. The simple geometric forms and their proportions create a unique font appropriate for any special occasion.
  25. Teknik by ITC, $29.99
    Teknik font is the work of British designer David Quay and was inspired by the powerful geometric styles of the 1920s Soviet Constructivist movement. It is typographically categorized as an Egyptian style due to its slab serifs. Teknik is a strong, precise font suitable for a wide variety of headline applications.
  26. Massimo by Borutta Group, $29.00
    Massimo is a semi-serif geometric type family. For as long as I can remember, I've admired the visual style of New York – its architecture, fashion, design, and typography. After spending two weeks in Manhattan this summer, I wanted to prepare a sharp and modern typeface in Big Apple style.
  27. Steagal by insigne, $24.75
    I love geometric sans serifs, their crispness and rationality. Le Havre taps into this style, but for a while, I've wanted to create a font recalling the printed Futura of the 1940s, which seems to have an elusive quality all its own. After seeing an old manual on a World War II ship, I developed a plan for "Le Havre Metal" but chose to shelve the project due to Le Havre's small x-height. That's where Steagal comes in. When Robbie de Villiers and I began the Chatype project in early 2012 (a project which led one publication to label me the Edward Johnston of Chattanooga!), we started closely studying the vernacular lettering of Chattanooga. During that time, I also visited Switzerland, where I saw how designers were using a new, handmade aesthetic with a geometric base. I was motivated to make a new face combining some of these same influences. The primary inspiration for the new design came from the hand-lettering of sign painters in the United States, circa 1930s through 1950s. My Chatype research turned up a poster from the Tennessee Valley Authority in Chattanooga, Tennessee, which exhibited a number of quirks from the unique hand and style of one of these sign artists. Completing the first draft of Steagal, however, I found that the face appeared somewhat European in character. I turned then to the work of Morris Fuller Benton for a distinctly American take and discovered a number of features that would help define Steagal as a "1930s American" vernacular typeface--features I later learned also inspired Morris Fuller Benton's Eagle. The overall development of Steagal was surprisingly difficult, knowing when to deliberately distort optical artifacts and when to keep them in place. Part of type design is correcting optical illusions, and I found myself absentmindedly adjusting the optical effects. In the end, though, I was able to draw inspiration from period signs, inscriptions, period posters, and architecture while retaining just enough of the naive sensibility. Steagal has softened edges, which simulate brush strokes and retain the feeling of the human hand. The standard version has unique quirks that are not too intrusive. Overshoots have almost been eliminated, and joins have minimal corrections. The rounded forms are mathematically perfect, geometric figures without optical corrections. As a variation to the standard, the “Rough” version stands as the "bad signpainter" version with plenty of character. Steagal Regular comes in five weights and is packed with OpenType features. Steagal includes three Art Deco Alternate sets, optically compensated rounded forms, a monospaced variant, and numerous other features. In all, there are over 200 alternate characters. To see these features in action, please see the informative .pdf brochure. OpenType capable applications such as Quark or the Adobe Creative suite can take full advantage of the automatically replacing ligatures and alternates. Steagal also includes support for all Western European languages. Steagal is a great way to subtly draw attention to your work. Its unique quirks grab the eye with a authority that few typefaces possess. Embrace its vernacular, hand-brushed look, and see what this geometric sans serif can do for you.
  28. Clairveaux Demo - Unknown license
  29. Hadrianus Demo - Unknown license
  30. Jerash Demo - Unknown license
  31. Pullman Demo - Unknown license
  32. Zono - Unknown license
  33. Ligeia Demo - Unknown license
  34. greenbeans - 100% free
  35. Honeybomb - Unknown license
  36. Hubbard Demo - Unknown license
  37. Plowright Demo - Unknown license
  38. Miedinger by Canada Type, $24.95
    Helvetica’s 50-year anniversary celebrations in 2007 were overwhelming and contagious. We saw the movie. Twice. We bought the shirts and the buttons. We dug out the homage books and re-read the hate articles. We mourned the fading non-color of an old black shirt proudly exclaiming that “HELVETICA IS NOT AN ADOBE FONT”. We took part in long conversations discussing the merits of the Swiss classic, that most sacred of typographic dreamboats, outlasting its builder and tenants to go on alone and saturate the world with the fundamental truth of its perfect logarithm. We swooned again over its subtleties (“Ah, that mermaid of an R!”). We rehashed decades-old debates about “Hakzidenz,” “improvement in mind” and “less is more.” We dutifully cursed every single one of Helvetica’s knockoffs. We breathed deeply and closed our eyes on perfect Shakti Gawain-style visualizations of David Carson hack'n'slashing Arial — using a Swiss Army knife, no less — with all the infernal post-brutality of his creative disturbance and disturbed creativity. We then sailed without hesitation into the absurdities of analyzing Helvetica’s role in globalization and upcoming world blandness (China beware! Helvetica will invade you as silently and transparently as a sheet of rice paper!). And at the end of a perfect celebratory day, we positively affirmed à la Shakti, and solemnly whispered the energy of our affirmation unto the universal mind: “We appreciate Helvetica for getting us this far. We are now ready for release and await the arrival of the next head snatcher.” The great hype of Swisspalooza '07 prompted a look at Max Miedinger, the designer of Neue Haas Grotesk (later renamed to Helvetica). Surprisingly, what little biographical information available about Miedinger indicates that he was a typography consultant and type sales rep for the Haas foundry until 1956, after which time he was a freelance graphic designer — rather than the full-time type designer most Helvetica enthusiasts presume him to have been. It was under that freelance capacity that he was commissioned to design the regular and bold weights of Neue Haas Grotesk typeface. His role in designing Helvetica was never really trumpeted until long after the typeface attained global popularity. And, again surprisingly, Miedinger designed two more typefaces that seem to have been lost to the dust of film type history. One is called Pro Arte (1954), a very condensed Playbill-like slab serif that is similar to many of its genre. The other, made in 1964, is much more interesting. Its original name was Horizontal. Here it is, lest it becomes a Haas-been, presented to you in digital form by Canada Type under the name of its original designer, Miedinger, the Helvetica King. The original film face was a simple set of bold, panoramically wide caps and figures that give off a first impression of being an ultra wide Gothic incarnation of Microgramma. Upon a second look, they are clearly more than that. This face is a quirky, very non-Akzidental take on the vernacular, mostly an exercise in geometric modularity, but also includes some unconventional solutions to typical problems (like thinning the midline strokes across the board to minimize clogging in three-storey forms). This digital version introduces four new weights, ranging from Thin to Medium, alongside the bold original. The Miedinger package comes in all popular font formats, and supports Western, Central and Eastern European languages, as well as Esperanto, Maltese, Turkish and Celtic/Welsh. A few counter-less alternates are included in the fonts.
  39. Digot 03 by Fontsphere, $16.00
    DIGOT 03 is an innovative two-font family that blends minimalism and geometric precision to create a visually striking and modern design. These fonts are perfect for those seeking a clean and contemporary look for their projects. --- Usage Recommendations DIGOT 03 is a font that thrives in environments where simplicity and clarity are valued. It works exceptionally well in both digital and print formats. Consider using DIGOT 03 in the following situations: Web Design: DIGOT 03 can add a touch of modernity to website designs, providing a clean and contemporary experience for users. Poster Design: Whether creating event posters or advertising material, DIGOT's bold and eye-catching letterforms make it a perfect choice for grabbing attention. Logo Design: This font, despite its very experimental approach, can help establish a strong and memorable brand identity. Its simplicity allows the logo to be easily recognizable and versatile across various marketing channels. Iconography: As DIGOT 03 is built upon geometric principles, it excels in creating visually appealing icons and symbols that follow the same minimalist style. --- DIGOT 03 is the perfect font for designers and creatives who appreciate simplicity and have a keen eye for detail. With its unique minimalist geometric style, DIGOT offers endless possibilities for creating clean and impactful designs.
  40. Core Sans GS by S-Core, $29.00
    The Core Sans GS Family is a rounded version of Core Sans G and a part of the Core Sans Series such as Core Sans N, M, A, E, D. Core Sans GS is constructed of straight, circular or square shapes. These geometric shapes are inspired by classic geometric sans (Futura, Avenir, Avant Garde etc.). Every stem is a rectangle or a straight line and every letter, lowercase or uppercase, seems to be in perfect geometric form and even weighted. The small x-height makes readability clean and clear. Core Sans G can be used equally well in headings or in body copy. The Core Sans GS Family consists of 9 weights (Thin, Extra Light, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Extra Bold, Heavy, Black) with maching Italics. It also includes alternate characters (a,g,t) and a bunch of ligatures. The Core Sans GS provides a wide range of character sets to support (Cyrillic, Central and Eastern European characters) and advanced typographical support with features such as proportional Figures, tabular Figures, numerators, denominators, superscript, scientific Inferiors, subscript, fractions, standard ligatures, discretionary ligatures and stylistic alternates. Core Sans G is an ideal font family for use in magazines, web pages, screens, displays, and so on.
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