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  1. Schools Out by Comicraft, $39.00
    Originally created for Sound Effects in Marvel's GHOST RIDER 2099, our spraycan stylish HOOKY font has just the right Scrawl of the Wild for graph-iti enthusiasts everywhere -- and they wash right off with just a little splash of 'delete'. Spray it, don't Say it!
  2. La Bisane by Differentialtype, $10.00
    La Bisane is a sans serif family with eight weights, and eight italics. It is suitable for your word documents, editorial design, packaging, web text, and many other projects. La Bisane is also equipped with alternates that are easily accessible with the PUA code.
  3. Hooky by Comicraft, $29.00
    Originally created for Sound Effects in Marvel's GHOST RIDER 2099, our spraycan stylish HOOKY font has just the right Scrawl of the Wild for graph-iti enthusiasts everywhere -- and they wash right off with just a little splash of 'delete'. Spray it, don't Say it!
  4. Ekamai by Eclectotype, $40.00
    This is Ekamai, named after the district of Bangkok I lived in. It is based on Quinella, and was supposed to be a quick and easy reworking of that font into a "tight-not-touching" (rather than overlapping) version. As is often the case with quick and easy things, it turned out to be neither, and the vast majority of glyphs needed to be completely overhauled to fit the new system. This face is deliciously plump face, with lovingly rendered curves and just the right amount of cuteness; perfect for food packaging (of the sweeter variety probably!), logos, magazine headlines and the like. It performs admirably in all caps settings. The numerals are expressive hybrid figures (somewhere between lining and oldstyle). The overall feel is friendly and soft, without being overtly saccharine. Ekamai is equipped with subtle contextual alternates (which I'd recommend leaving on) to help with the tight fit, a handful of discretionary ligatures if that's your thing, and a case feature for all caps settings. The stylistic alternates and stylistic set 1 features simply change the # glyph to an attractive numero. Automatic fractions are included along with wide-ranging language support.
  5. Diamond Braille by Echopraxium, $5.00
    Here is a "Decorative Braille font". The initial design was indeed drawn on a K.I.S.S digital sketchpad, the Windows default drawing tool (Microsoft Paint, classic version). A. Glyph Concept The Braille 2x3 dot matrix is weaved around a diamond-shape. a.1. Each "dot" is represented by a "right-angle isocel triangle". a.2. Braille dots in Diamond Braille a.2.I. "Dots" are outside the diamond for first Braille row (Braille dots 1, 4) and third Braille row (Braille dots 3, 6). a.2.II. "Dots" are inside the diamond for second Braillle row (Braille dots 2, 5). a.3. Diamond lattice Glyphs are connected horizontally (to/bottom diamond's corners) and vertically (left/right corners) to each other (see poster 5). a.4. Special Glyphs - Space: its is either empty ("Empty cell") or a "non Braille shape" { _, ° } depending on your display needs (as explained in b.3.II) - 6 dots: { £, =, û } - 6 empty dots: { ç, ¥ } B. Font user guide b.1. Lowercase glyphs { A..Z } In these glyphs the "dots" are represented as a white right-angle isocel triangle filled with a smaller black triangle. b.2. Uppercase glyphs { a..z } In these glyphs, the "dots" are represented as an empty triangle (this is an "empty dot"). b.3. 'Space' vs 'Empty Cell' b.3.I. 'Space' - 'Space' glyph is an empty shape - '¶' glyph (at the end of each line in Microsoft Word) is also an empty shape b.3.II. 'Empty cell' glyphs: _ (underscore), ° (degree). In these glyphs there are 2 "empty dots" at top and bottom corners of the diamond, which differentiates them from regular Braille glyphs (which dont have a "dot in the middle"). b.4. Diamond Lattice To display text as a 'diamond lattice', replace each 'Space' by an 'Empty cell' (as explained in b.3.II, see poster 5) b.5. Connectors The connector glyphs allow the creation of "circuit like" designs (see poster 1). Here are the connector glyphs: { µ, à, â, ä, ã, è, é, ê, ë, î, ï } b.6. Domino feature Some Glyphs represent numbers 1..6 in a way which is similar than on dominos (see poster 6) C. Posters Poster 1: the "Font Logo", it displays "Diamond Braille" text together with the Connectors feature. Poster 2: a pangram which is published on pangra.me ( "Adept quick jog over frozen blue whisky mix" ). Poster 3: an illustration of the Domino feature. Poster 4: a DiamondBraille version of the Periodic table. Poster 5: illustration of the Diamond lattice using only 6 dots ( û ) and 6 empty dots ( ç ) glyphs.
  6. Steiner - Unknown license
  7. Alright, picture this: Smiley Font isn't just a font; it's like a burst of happiness captured in typographic form. Imagine every letter you type infusing a little sprinkle of joy into your text, embo...
  8. The Sony logo, recognized globally, is a masterclass in branding through simplicity and elegance. Its typographic representation is iconic, embodying the essence of the brand's identity—innovation, r...
  9. GoudyThirty-DemiBold - Personal use only
  10. BodoniXT - 100% free
  11. Cabal - 100% free
  12. Nymph - Unknown license
  13. Blackout - Unknown license
  14. Overwork - Unknown license
  15. BEER02-A CROSS - Unknown license
  16. Inked - Unknown license
  17. D3 Littlebitmapism Suquare - Unknown license
  18. Jurassic - Unknown license
  19. Howdy - Unknown license
  20. Superstar - Unknown license
  21. D3 Egoistism outline extra - Unknown license
  22. Solea - Unknown license
  23. XperimentypoStripes - Unknown license
  24. SpeedballNo2SW - Unknown license
  25. LambadaDexter - Unknown license
  26. Furioso - Unknown license
  27. D3 Cubism - Unknown license
  28. Moderne Fraktur - Personal use only
  29. D3 Littlebitmapism Round - Unknown license
  30. Strima by Nicolas Deslé, $24.90
    Strima is a geometric sans serif typeface that stands for minimalism and legibility. With over 1000 glyphs and extensive language support Strima offers full professional typographic features. The Strima family consists of 4 weights: light, book, medium and bold.
  31. Boomtown by PleasureFonts, $22.00
    Boomtown is a bold, slightly cursive font for advertising, headlines, packaging design, signposts or posters. Although it is highly constructed, it has some handwriting attributes, too. An italic font is in my planning and maybe a light style, too.
  32. Deco Bevel by Open Window, $-
    Deco Bevel is a filter font based on Deco, an original Open Window classic. It came about while I was experimenting with light and shadows using 3D rendering software and Photoshop. Its ideal use is as a display font.
  33. Toscography by Misprinted Type, $25.00
    Toscography is inspired by vernacular and naive hand-painted walls and signs from Brazil. It feels organic, spontaneous and fresh and it has a light texture on its characters that makes it feel like it is starting to decay.
  34. GHEA Ayb by Edik Ghabuzyan, $40.00
    This light weight Display font includes Basic Latin, Latin 1 Supplement, Latin extended A, Cyrillic + Bulgarian Cyrillic + Ukrainian Cyrillic, Armenian. May be used in titles, posters, labels, etc. Publisher: GHEA Fonts Designer: Edik Ghabuzyan, Yerevan, Armenia. Creation year 2020.
  35. Creion by Horea Grindean, $32.00
    Creion is a minimal round font, perfect for 2.0 logos and contemporary headlines. Creion fonts is an exclusive type fonts inspired by design elements. It includes a light version, a regular version and a bold version for strong type.
  36. Phosphorus Selenide - Unknown license
  37. Gilgongo - Unknown license
  38. Avondale - Unknown license
  39. Covington - Unknown license
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