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  1. Fox Love by Fox7, $16.00
    Fox Love is a cute and fun color font. This font is your go-to for crafting cute greeting cards that express affection and warmth. Whether you’re a designer, a social media influencer, or someone with a penchant for creative expression. Fall in love with its authentic feel and use it to create gorgeous invitations, beautiful stationary art, eye-catching social media posts, and cute greeting cards. 🌺🌺 Learn more about color font support on third-party apps here: https://www.colorfonts.wtf/ 🌺🌺 🌺🌺 Please note that the Canva do not support color fonts! 🌺🌺
  2. Rhiffiral by Dora Typefoundry, $19.00
    Introducing - Modern elegant serif font branding. Rhiffiral is a modern serif font to apply to many graphic design projects or a classy editorial, a unique high contrast and light binding style for your upcoming projects. for feminine logo signs, fashion & editorial design heads, branding projects, Apparel Branding, packaging, titles magazines, advertisements, T-shirts, postcards and other special occasions. Here's what's included: · Alternates & Ligatures · Numbers & punctuation · Characters with accents · Supports Multiple Languages · PUA Encoded 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.
  3. Moonluck by Keristyper Studio, $14.00
    Moonluck is a playful and whimsical font with a cute and cartoonish feel. It features bold and rounded letters with a playful bounce, making it a perfect choice for designs aimed at children or anyone looking to add a touch of fun and playfulness to their projects. Featured: Standard, Uppercase & Lowercase Numeral & Punctuation Multilingual : ä ö ü Ä Ö Ü ß ¿ ¡ Alternate & Ligature PUA encoded We recommend programs that support the OpenType feature and the Glyphs panel such as Adobe applications or Corel Draw, so you can use all the variations of the glyphs. Hope you enjoy our fonts!
  4. Breakfast Pastry by Missy Meyer, $12.00
    I’d been thinking for a while about making a serif font with ball terminals: big fun round ends to the letters anywhere I can squeeze them in. So I made Breakfast Pastry! I started with a hand-drawn set of basic letters, then went hog-wild making alternates and ligatures galore with fun swirls, curls, and even more balls! I’ve cleaned the letters up significantly to make them smooth and easy for any cutting or printing you may want to do, but I’ve also left in some of the hand-drawn character so that the letters are warmer and not too formal. Then I took the first font, and made a second solid version without the cutouts. After that I thought: I tend to make plumper fonts ... why not make an even thinner version? So I did! All three versions have the same character set (over 700 glyphs total), which means they all have the same extras and alternates. All three fonts have over 300 extended Latin characters for language support, as well as over 200 bonus items: alternate letters, letters with swashes, two-letter ligatures, small caps, catchwords, and even some bonus ornaments and elements to make the fonts even more flexible. (After all, if one swash on a letter is good, two or three might be great!)
  5. Sunny Sumo by Mix Fonts, $13.00
    Meet the MIX SUNNY SUMO, the perfect blend of playful and bold that’s sure to make your designs stand out. This three-piece font family includes SUNNY SUMO, SUNNY SUMO LINE, and SUNNY SUMO XOs, each with their own unique style. SUNNY SUMO and SUNNY SUMO LINE are layering fonts, which means you can use them separately or stack them to create dynamic designs. And for those fun finishing touches, SUNNY SUMO XOs offers a variety of doodles including X marks, circles, erase marks, and cross-offs that can be used alongside any graphic work. Designed as a bold handwritten sans serif, SUNNY SUMO is ideal for display fonts and headlines that require attention. This versatile font can be used by designers for logos, book covers, greeting cards, posters, packaging, and so much more. As a multilingual font, SUNNY SUMO supports multiple languages, including all the characters, glyphs, and accent marks needed for specific languages. With SUNNY SUMO, you can strike the perfect balance between relatable and professional, making it a great choice for anyone seeking a playful, bold, and fun layering font. MIX SUNNY SUMO and MIX SUNNY SUMO LINE come with the following glyphs: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 0123456789 !@#$%^&*()`~♥✿•· .,:;'”\|/?{}[]<>“”‘’-–—_÷×+−±≈=≠≥≤ …‚„©®™‹›«»°¹²³¡¿₱¢€£¥½¼¾¶§№† ÁÀÂÃÄȦÅĂĀĄÆĆĈČĊÇÐĐĎÉÈÊĚËĖĒĘḞǴĜǦĠḠĤȞḦḢIÍÌÎÏĪĮĴḰǨĹĽŁḾṀŃŇÑ ÓÒÔÕÖŌŐØŒṔṖŔŘṘŚŜŠŞȘŤṪŢȚÚÙÛŨÜŮŬŪŰŲẂẀŴẄẆÝŶŸŹẐŽŻƵ áàâãäȧåăāąæćĉčċçðđďéèêěëėēęḟǵĝǧġḡĥȟḧḣıíìîïīįĵḱǩĺľłḿṁńňñ óòôõöōőøœṕṗŕřṙśŝšşșťṫţțúùûũüůŭūűųẃẁŵẅẇýŷÿźẑžżƶ MIX SUNNY SUMO XOs comes with the following glyphs: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
  6. Slight by Up Up Creative, $29.00
    Introducing Slight, an elegant, full-featured script font with tons of alternate characters and OpenType features. Hand-lettered with a heavy right slant, Slight is particularly well-suited for invitations, branding, and editorial design. Slight comes with more than 1000 glyphs! Specific OpenType features include contextual alternates, stylistic alternates, initial and final forms, multiple alternate glyphs for many letters (accessed through the glyphs panel), multilingual support (including multiple currency symbols), ligatures, standard numbers, and six ampersand styles. Perhaps the most fun thing about Slight is that it includes multiple versions of all ascending and descending letters, making it lots of fun to play with in your layouts and compositions. The OpenType features can be very easily accessed by using OpenType-savvy programs such as Adobe Illustrator and Adobe InDesign. (To access these awesome features in Microsoft Word, you'll need to get comfortable with the advanced tab of Word's font menu. If you need help with this, ask me!) Files included: Slight-Regular.otf Mail support : julie@upupcreative.com --- Find inspiration (and sneak peeks at my next font-in-progress) on - Instagram: http://instagram.com/julieatupupcreative - Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/upupcreative - Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/upupcreative - My website: http://upupcreative.com --- PLEASE ENJOY! I can't wait to see what you make with Slight! Feel free to use the #upupcreative and #slightscriptfont tags to show me what you've been up to!
  7. Cabrito Contrast by insigne, $29.99
    The Cabrito family is back again to make a statement. Released as a complement to the children's book, The Clothes Letters Wear, the original Cabrito is light-hearted, fun, and easy to read. Now, balancing this friendliness with a new elegance, Cabrito Contrast steps forward--a handsome typeface with an extra-sophisticated sensibility injected into the design. Still bright and playful in its Cabrito ancestry, this new Cabrito member approaches the field with a cleaner, more reductionist form, ensuring that its polished look retains the readability. Regular features and Italic forms of the 54 fonts include upright alternates, ligatures, and old figures. A range of weights include extended and condensed variants. To preview any of these interactive features, see the PDF manual. The family also includes language support for 72 Latin-based languages, and there are over 600 glyphs for further refining your work. Cabrito Contrast is best used for logos and packaging as well as flyers and websites, though its readability makes it a great option across a wide variety of works. In short, it’s well-designed just for you. Take a stroll with Cabrito Contrast, and see how much fun refinement can be. Along the way, take a look at a few other members of Cabrito, too and see how well the likes of Original, Inverto or Didone can pair with the new Contrast.
  8. Kadigan by Missy Meyer, $12.00
    Kadigan: (noun) A placeholder word. A kadigan can be used to substitute for any other noun: persons (John Doe, Acme Company), places (Anytown, 123 Main Street) or things (whatchamacallit, thingamajig). Just like kadigans can be used in nearly any situation, the members of the Kadigan font family can be used in nearly any design! These sans-serif beauties are clear and easy to use, but they also have a little bit of wiggle in their strokes and weights, for a fun hand-lettered look! The three members of the family: - Kadigan Light: An all-purpose lightweight stroke, with sharp corners. - Kadigan: A nice mid-weight stroke, with slightly rounded corners. - Kadigan Heavy: A thick, chonky stroke with pillowy rounded corners. And each member of the family is packed with features, including: - All of the basic stuff you expect from every font; - 340+ extended Latin characters; - Cyrillic character set; - Greek character set; - Those character sets? Support over 110 languages! - 52 double-letter ligatures for variety (That's right, EVERY letter. I'm looking at you, savvy revved trekkers!); - A full set of small caps (including Cyrillic & Greek); - And more! (Seriously, it was hard to stop.) So whether your work is in English, Español, български, ελληνικά, Türkçe, or over a hundred other languages, this cute and fun sans-serif may be just what you've been looking for!
  9. Limes by Piñata, $9.90
    The idea of Limes emerged at the seashore last year in late summer. Getting ready in advance for a dark winter, we've decided to design a special fontfamily which would bring a bit of vitamins and summer sun into the rough everyday routine and help us survive the cold winter. Limes is both a dream of the sun while it’s gone and a refreshing breeze for the time when it finally gets warm! Limes is a completely handwritten fontfamily and consists of 23 typefaces. To create Limes Sans and Limes Slab families, we've used regular watercolor brushes, and to create monolinear Limes Script, as well as for Catchwords and Dingbats, we've used a felt-tip pen with circular section. Limes Sans and Limes Slabs fonts work perfectly together with Limes Script due to the general handwritten idea, as well as due to the widths contrast – despite its width, Limes Script mixes well with narrower opponents and adds a bit of human spontaneity into the general handwritten concept. The Limes collection includes: Limes Sans (Thin, Light, Regular, Bold, Black & italics), Limes Slab (Thin, Light, Regular, Bold, Black & italics), Limes Script, Catchwords and Dingbats. Limes Sans and Limes Slab widely support OT features: tnum, ordn, frac, case, numr, dnom, subs, sups, and Limes Script uses a large number of context alternatives.
  10. Maffa Latte by Yumna Type, $15.00
    Sometimes it is a boring, tiring process to find a proper font for your project, and what is worse is that the font type you find has no specific character preventing you from delivering messages effectively. For that reason, we have the best solution to your problems. Maffa Latte is a perfect display font for delivering your messages on every design you are working on. Such a display font generally shows you a unique, funny, fun impression for any necessities, increases the nuances of professionalism and attractiveness to the product or brand promoted. The right use of this font makes the design more interesting and fun to cheer up customers. This font, with a clipart as an extra bonus, is legible due to its simple forms and proportions along with high contrasts. You can enjoy the available features here as well. Features: Multilingual Supports PUA Encoded Numerals and Punctuations Maffa Latte fits best for various design projects, such as brandings, posters, banners, headings, magazine covers, quotes, invitations, name cards, printed products, merchandise, social media, etc. Find out more ways to use this font by taking a look at the font preview. Thanks for purchasing our fonts. Hopefully, you have a great time using our font. Feel free to contact us anytime for further information or when you have trouble with the font. Thanks a lot and happy designing.
  11. Range Sans by Eclectotype, $36.00
    This is Range Sans, the sans-serif counterpart to Range Serif . It can be categorized as a grotesque, with the idiosyncratic angular details from the serif family making themselves known in the arches and bowls of the lower case. The range of weights is larger than Range Serif, with two more weights at the lighter end of the spectrum. The weights from light to black correspond to their seriffed sisters, so can be interchanged with them freely while maintaining a similar text color and vertical metrics. This is useful for adding emphasis; Range Sans is deliberately lacking an italic, but the italics from Range Serif work better than you might expect in running text, particularly for the light and regular weights. Range Sans has a contemporary, somewhat geometric look that lends itself to uses such as corporate identities, minimalist graphic design, and logos. The middle weights do work well in running text, however, with the angled details being less noticeable at small sizes. Designed for demanding typography, supporting most Latin-based languages, Range Sans is equipped with true small caps for all weights, an array of numeral styles (proportional- and tabular- lining and oldstyle figures, small cap figures, numerators, denominators, superscripts and subscripts/scientific inferiors), automatic fractions, a set of useful arrows, case-sensitive forms, and a range of currency symbols including recent additions: Turkish Lira, Indian Rupee and Russian Ruble.
  12. Nefertiti by JAB, $12.00
    As you can see, Nefertiti is a font based on ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs and could be classified as a fun-font. I've always been really interested in Egyptology and a couple of years ago I thought it would be great to be able to write in hieroglyphs. I started to study them but soon realized it would take me a long time to be able to do this. Still, I was determined to find a way around this problem. At some point I came up with the idea of rearranging and reforming the hieroglyphs so as to resemble the English alphabet. During this process I tried as much as possible to preserve their ethos and appearance. However, since they are designed to write in English with, it's obvious that they are not always going to look like the real thing. Despite this, I'm really happy with the final result and I think many Pharaohphiles who just want to have some fun will be also. The only difference in this font between lower and upper case characters, is that the latter are set between two parallel, horizontal lines. These are for use with brackets (motif ends) to form cartouches - elongated ovals for names and/or titles. Try typing the following using the upper case in the sample text box. e.g. (JOHN} The zigzagged vertical lines at each end, separate the motifs from the hieroglyphs. Note the three types of ends/brackets. These lines are also used to separated words from one another and to give a more authentic appearance. So pressing the space bar gives a zigzagged line - not a space. They can also be used at any point within a cartouche to separate first and last names or titles. e.g. ; (JOHN;BROWN} walked straight home after work. Notice the eye glyph (period/full stop) at the end of the sentence. This is the only punctuation mark which can be used within a cartouche, e.g. after Mr. or to add a more Egyptian appearance to a name or title. e.g. (MR>;JOHN;BROWN} Parallel lines dividing hieroglyphical inscriptions and writing into rows or columns are very common. To incorporate these in a body of text, simple use the underline U. e.g. (OSIRUS) and {ISIS} were important gods of the ancient Egyptians. (HORUS) {HATHOR} and [RA],the sun god, were also highly revered deities. The punctuation marks available are shown below. . , " " ' ! ? "where is the king?" The font also includes the numbers 0-9, the following mathematical symbols and the hash sign(Scarab beetle). Once again, I've tried to make them look as Egyptian as possible; whether I've succeeded or not is open to debate. e.g. + - x / = # This font is named after Akhenaten's beautiful wife, Nefertiti, who's image can be seen in the graphic on this page.
  13. Centennial Script by Canada Type, $24.95
    Centennial Script was designed and cut by Hermann Ihlenburg in 1876 (the centennial of American independence, hence the typeface's name) for the MacKellar, Smiths & Jordan foundry in Philadelphia. Ihlenburg was then only 33 years old, and these beautiful forms put him on his way to become the most prolific and innovative deco, ornamental and script typeface designer and punch cutter of the nineteenth century. In trying to be a true homage to the history of the new world, Centennial Script transcends its then-contemporary deco fashion to embrace script elements historically similar to lettering found on maps or political documents of the 18th century. Letters like the p and s extend themselves high and mighty to accentuate words and lines of text in a fancy hand-drawn manner. The dots on the i and j are those of a careful scribe who acknowledges the importance of the document being lettered. The lowercase letters connect with two slight angular motions of the hand, also very carefully and elegantly. Even the ligatures and ending swashes Ihlenburg made for this face were reminiscent of a mapmaker's patient hand, though Ihlenburg's elegant touch in them cannot be mistaken. Although Centennial Script was one of the few Ihlenburg faces to make it to film type technology, the transition was neither credited nor faultless. The film type version was a bit sloppy in the way the connectors were made, so the lowercase needed a lot of manual work to typeset properly. To alleviate such waste of time for the user of this digital version, the connectors were redrawn according to the original metal ones made by Ihlenburg himself, and tested thoroughly in print to ensure the quality of the typeface's flowing cursive nature. This wasn't an easy task, and very time-consuming, since the changing angles on both ends of the connection made it impossible to escape from having to build every lowercase letter with both left and right connectors that would fit with the rest of the letters. This is one typeface that couldn't be revived in any other manner than the way it was originally made, regardless of more than 130 years of technological advances since the face was designed. Centennial Script comes in all popular font formats, and supports most Latin-based languages. Also included is an Alts fonts that contains alternates, ligatures, snap-on swash endings, some ornaments, as well as a complete set of the lowercase without left side connectors, for a more natural combination when following a majuscule, or just in case the user finds it fit to set the copy in a non-connecting script instead of the face's original connected flow. Centennial Script Pro, the OpenType version, combines the main font with the Alts font in a feature-packed single font. Use the ligature feature to set wordmarks like Mr, Ms, Mrs, Dr, and &Co, the stylistic alternates feature to replace some letters with their alternative forms, the contextual alternates feature for better uppercase-lowercase sequences, and the titling feature to set your text in a disconnected script. Centennial Script is the only script we currently know of that can be set connected or disconnected simultaneously, either using the titling feature in the OpenType Pro version, or manually in the other formats.
  14. Oh, diving into the whimsical world of fonts, are we? Let me tell you about Wiggly – it's quite the charmer. Imagine a font that decided to throw caution to the wind and dance to its own rhythm. That...
  15. Pretendo - Personal use only
  16. Oh, strap in, because we're about to ride the waves and catch the wind with the "Surfing & Kiteboarding" font by Cataleya Butcher. Picture this: You're at the beach, the sun is setting, painting the ...
  17. Ah, Kitsu XD, the font that decided it wasn't enough just to carry letters; it had to bring a dash of mischief and a bucketful of personality along for the ride too. Imagine a font that got up one mo...
  18. Kynges X NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    This luscious, loopy Lombardic face was inspired by an offering in the 1938 classic, Letters and Lettering by Paul Carlyle and Gus Oring. Suitable for formal or informal occasions. Both versions of this font contain the Unicode 1252 (Latin) and Unicode 1250 (Central European) character sets, with localization for Romanian and Moldovan.
  19. Mowaq by Ixipcalli, $27.00
    Mowaq es una tipografía limpia, abstracta, moderna, minimalista y de trazos sencillos pero elegantes. Sus cuatro pesos hacen un juego visual de degradados muy marcados. La tipografía Mowaq fue inspirada a partir de los estilos mayúsculas sans-serif, como uso de encabezados y subtítulos en dos libros donde se necesitaba mostrar un aspecto limpio, moderno y minimalista. Los tipos minúsculas fueron adaptados posteriormente a la familia Mowaq. Mowaq is a clean, abstract, modern, minimalist typeface with simple but elegant lines. Its four weights make a visual game of very marked gradients. The Mowaq typeface was inspired by sans-serif uppercase styles, used for headings and subheadings in two books where a clean, modern and minimalist look was needed. The lowercase types were later adapted to the Mowaq family.
  20. Ethnocentric - Unknown license
  21. Good Times - Unknown license
  22. Street Cred - Unknown license
  23. Vademecum - Unknown license
  24. Baltar - Unknown license
  25. Degrassi - 100% free
  26. Astron Boy - Unknown license
  27. Contour Generator - Unknown license
  28. Mexcellent 3D - Unknown license
  29. Libel Suit - 100% free
  30. Zorque - Unknown license
  31. Walshes - Unknown license
  32. Metal Lord - Unknown license
  33. Graffiti Treat - Unknown license
  34. Interplanetary Crap - Unknown license
  35. ParaAminobenzoic - Unknown license
  36. Let's Eat - Unknown license
  37. Motorcade - Unknown license
  38. Zeroes Three - Unknown license
  39. Crystal Radio Kit - Unknown license
  40. Saved By Zero - Unknown license
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