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  1. Doodolonomy Fred - Unknown license
  2. DT 104 - Unknown license
  3. trop flou - Unknown license
  4. The Buns - Unknown license
  5. Teacher's Pet - Unknown license
  6. Blunted - Unknown license
  7. Tingle Institute - Unknown license
  8. Turtle Club - Unknown license
  9. Kandide Unicase - Unknown license
  10. Independant - Alternates - Unknown license
  11. Funkygraphy - Personal use only
  12. WC_AquaBlues_Bta - Unknown license
  13. Half Cut - Unknown license
  14. Courtney Dorkling - Personal use only
  15. Honey Bunches - Unknown license
  16. maran - Unknown license
  17. Dearest Friend lite - Unknown license
  18. Fancy Footwork - Unknown license
  19. Gentle Redhead - Unknown license
  20. Socially Awkward - Unknown license
  21. Glutton man - Unknown license
  22. Parigee Initials Simple - Unknown license
  23. Krome - Unknown license
  24. BoyzRGross - 100% free
  25. Hau Ruck - Unknown license
  26. MicroMieps Phat - Unknown license
  27. eko - Unknown license
  28. Future Imperfect by K-Type, $20.00
    In the 1970s I was anxious and distressed about the future. I was right. In 1975 Future Imperfect was submitted to, and rejected by, Letraset. I wish I’d kept the rejection slip.
  29. Burger Royale JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Burger Royale JNL by Jeff Levine is a bold, sans serif font with a slight Deco feel, inspired by the logo of a former Florida chain of hamburger shops called Royal Castle.
  30. Basic Pixel by Mandarin, $12.00
    Basic Pixel is the right font to have fun with. With 15 different styles you can combine styles and color like building blocks to create endless new combinations and intriguing visual outputs.
  31. S6 Sans by S6 Foundry, $29.00
    S6 sans is a contemporary neo-grotesque sans serif typeface with strong stylistic geometric contrasts. Its distinctive wide-open stance was designed to give the right visual consistency for branding and communications.
  32. LT Edge Sans - 100% free
  33. Gineso by insigne, $-
    Michaelangelo. da Vinci. Bellini. Rafael. Masters of Italian art whose names have dwarfed those of many other great Italian artists. Yet relics from these other artists remain, though often unnoticed because of their practical nature. These unknowns are the Italian Masters of vernacular sign painting, and insigne now gives a nod to their work with its new sans serif, Gineso. Based on its inspiration, Gineso was created for posters, headlines and logotypes. (It does well in apps, too, though the sign painters probably weren’t thinking about that at the time.) Aesthetically remedied, yet still with an uncut charm, Gineso’s condensed qualities make it especially nice for signs and titling where horizontal space is at a premium. The tight, narrow forms of its geometric design leave you with a robust flavor that will remind you of mamma’s spaghetti. But don’t worry; the font’s ample counters ensure your audience won’t be reading through a bowl of pasta. These condensed forms look great on their own or when their seven different weights and matching italics are utilized together. With the included OpenType features, fractions and superior/inferior positions are also available to broaden your palette. Even more, this font is ready for complex, professional typography with OpenType features like alternate letters and a large character set including Central and Eastern European Languages. So when you find yourself (or your project) in a tight space, stir in Gineso to get the right taste for your copy. It may just make all the difference.
  34. Cocomat Pro by Zetafonts, $39.00
    Cocomat has been designed by Francesco Canovaro and Debora Manetti as a development of the Coco Gothic typeface system created by Cosimo Lorenzo Pancini. It shares with all the other subfamilies in the Coco Gothic system a geometric skeleton with open, more humanistic proportions, a sans serif design with slightly rounded corners and low contrast proportions, without optical compensation on the horizontal lines, resulting in a quasi-inverted contrast look in the boldest weights. What differentiates Cocomat from the other subfamilies in Coco Gothic are some slight design touches in the uppercase letters, with a vertical unbalancing reminiscent of art deco design, notably evident in uppercase "E", "A","F","P" and "R" - while lowercase letters have been given some optical compensation on the stems, like in "n","m", "p" and "q". These design choices, evoking the second and third decade of the last century (Cocomat is also referred as Coco 1920 in the Coco Gothic Family) all give Cocomat a slight vintage feeling, making it a perfect choice every time you need to add a period vibe or an historical flair to your design, like in food or luxury branding. The typeface, first published in 2014, has been completely redesigned by the original authors in 2019 as Cocomat PRO to include eight extra weights (thin, medium, black and heavy in both roman and italic form), extra open type features (including alternate forms, positional numerals), and extra glyphs making Cocomat cover over two hundred languages using latin, cyrillic and greek alphabets.
  35. PGY - Personal use only
  36. Pabellona (B) Dúplex - Personal use only
  37. Pabellona (A) Símplex - Personal use only
  38. SPARKS MADE US - Personal use only
  39. Pabellona (C) Tríplex - Personal use only
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