10,000 search results (0.043 seconds)
  1. Glare - 100% free
  2. PC.DE - 100% free
  3. Bree - Personal use only
  4. Typograff - Personal use only
  5. Kill your darlings AC - Unknown license
  6. COWABUNGA - Personal use only
  7. QuillPerpendicularCondensed - Unknown license
  8. Gear Proportion - Unknown license
  9. Gerd - Personal use only
  10. Fillmore kk - Personal use only
  11. Gobbledegook - 100% free
  12. VTC SubwaySlamSC - Unknown license
  13. Lucid Type A (BRK) - Unknown license
  14. Niner - Unknown license
  15. Jealousy - Unknown license
  16. Konspiracy Theory - Unknown license
  17. Meyne Textur - 100% free
  18. VTC SubwaySlam - Unknown license
  19. Triac 71 - Unknown license
  20. High speed - Unknown license
  21. Rez - Unknown license
  22. VTCSuperMarketSaleTall - Unknown license
  23. Wide awake Black - Unknown license
  24. BubbleBoy2 - Unknown license
  25. PinballWhizNF - 100% free
  26. Yaroslav - Unknown license
  27. AgencyGothic - Unknown license
  28. Hall Fetica Narrow - Unknown license
  29. Xray Ted [skew] - Unknown license
  30. The Doorman - Unknown license
  31. Monsterchild - Unknown license
  32. Blockbusted - Unknown license
  33. HappyCampersNF - Unknown license
  34. Winter in Gotham - Unknown license
  35. Discrdive 3D - 100% free
  36. Mr. Quincy - Personal use only
  37. Hennigar - Personal use only
  38. Malden Sans by Monotype, $49.00
    Malden Sans is a mischievous grotesque sans serif with charming details that gives designers a solid typographic voice. It was created by Michele Patanè with regular and condensed widths, as a utilitarian typeface family for print and digital environments. It was originally designed as part of a type system for cinema magazines, and embodies the devil-may care attitude of the silver screen. Designer Michele Patanè looked back to an earlier era of typography to create the typeface, embracing unusual details, rather than ironing them out. “There is a very naive way of using typography in the 30s and 40s, something not as clean as how it’s used in the late 50s and 60s when everything passed through a rationalisation of the typographic palette,” he explains. “In film magazines you can still see a bit of roughness, and I like that.” This is a design that’s desperate to be used in editorial environments, and has been created to stand up to lower quality paper. It would be equally at home on posters, packaging, and even in digital environments where designers are looking for something more expressive than another geometric sans serif. Malden Sans includes a Normal and Condensed range, with 7 weights in the normal and 6 in the Condensed, both including italics.
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