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  1. Upon Request - Unknown license
  2. Erozion - Unknown license
  3. Chizzler Outline - Unknown license
  4. Occoluchi Spread - Unknown license
  5. Occoluchi Outline - Unknown license
  6. Drinks Various - Unknown license
  7. GM Exp Norm - Unknown license
  8. Multicasion - Unknown license
  9. Optimistic Pessimist - Unknown license
  10. Ooky - Unknown license
  11. Woven Brickwork - Unknown license
  12. Darkenstone - Unknown license
  13. Extemplary - Unknown license
  14. Drummon - Unknown license
  15. Boldly Go - Unknown license
  16. Pecot - Unknown license
  17. Ingothical Weird - Unknown license
  18. Heavy Texture - Unknown license
  19. Quaverly G98 - Unknown license
  20. Universal Shatter - Unknown license
  21. Street - Unknown license
  22. Satan Possessed - Unknown license
  23. Chizzler Normal - Unknown license
  24. Trashed - Unknown license
  25. Maranallo High - Unknown license
  26. Bog Standard - Personal use only
  27. Blown Away - Personal use only
  28. Barred Out - Unknown license
  29. TagsXtreme - Unknown license
  30. Maranallo Italic - Unknown license
  31. Seventy Flares - Unknown license
  32. Palsu - Unknown license
  33. Gesso - Unknown license
  34. Appendix3 - Unknown license
  35. Meegoreng - Unknown license
  36. Gato - Personal use only
  37. Rumpled by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    TapedUp, Tinkerer, and Rumpled are based on the template I used for several letterbat fonts—fonts made of wrenches and bolts, hammers, or paper clips. TapedUp can be thought of as a font made from masking tape, and Rumpled is the same design but the tape pieces are wavy. Tinkerer is the same design but with elements that resemble what might happen if one constructed letters from Tinker Toys. All are caps only, but some of the shapes on the lower-case keys differ from the corresponding shapes on the upper-case keys. The Rumpled family has four members, the regular, an oblique, a shadowed, and an oblique shadowed.
  38. Largo EF by Elsner+Flake, $35.00
    The typefaces Largo Mager (Light) and Largo Halbfett (Medium) were cast for the first time in 1937 by Ludwig & Mayer based on the designs by Hans Wagner. One weight Largo Licht (Outline) was added in 1956. All fonts were only configured with capitals. The digital version of Largo has pointed serifs and not the slightly rounded ones seen in the hot metal versions which gives the typeface a more elegant note. Largo is often used for fine printing jobs as business cards or formal invitations, or in the fashion and cosmetics fields. Hans Wagner was born in Munich in 1894 and died in 1977 in Altenburg where he had worked as a painter, graphic designer and book designer. In addition to the Largo typeface, he developed, among others, the Altenburger Gotisch (1928), the Welt-Antiqua (1931-1934) and the Wolfram (1930).
  39. Lunanic by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    Lunanic is a geometric novelty typeface family with a touch of graffiti. The letters are formed from a circle with a notch or nick taken out, a shape that reminds me of a partial lunar eclipse. Half of the family have the nick on the left and half on the right. The faces are monospaced and so tightly spaced that there is no space between most of the letters so the filled styles cannot be used alone without tweaking. There are several ways to tweak them to make them readable: adjacent letters can be colored differently, the characters spacing can be increased, or an outlined style can be layered on top of the filled letters. The family does not have a true lower case. Most of the characters in the lower-case slots are alternates for those on the upper-case keys and they can be mixed in whatever way the user finds best. The family has twelve members: two orientations with three weights each and each of these six has an outline style to go with it. Lunanic is fun, bizarre, weird, and obviously a decorative display font.
  40. Quartz by ITC, $29.99
    The figures of Quartz font are based on those on digital clocks and LCD displays. All strokes are set at right angles to one another to create abstract characters. Fonts created for electronic displays gained in popularity at the same time as the computer became an everyday object. The standard is still around today and is the model for numerous interpretations. Fonts like Quartz have already won a firm position in trend typography. They embody the spirit of the late 20th century. Quartz font is a good choice whenever a marked contrast to everyday alphabets is the goal.
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