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  1. Multiverse by Tamas Greguricz, $24.99
    Multiverse is a display typeface designed to combine retro and futuristic styles into one package. Its geometric characters intertwine in unique ways that can support a high-tech context, but its curves and boldness echo the sci-fi of the 70's and 80's.
  2. Newlook by QUADRAAT, $25.00
    Newlook is a display font drawn with geometric shapes and high contrast. The stylistic set 01 shows capital letters using heights from descenders to ascenders and x height which gives a crazy dancing look. Perfect for display, poster, magazine etc… Support all latin languages.
  3. Sharka by PeGGO Fonts, $10.00
    Sharka is heavy sharp condensed system of 7 display typefaces widths, plus 7 italics and 7 alternative version on each family member, inspired on dangerous personality and aggressive reputation of the great white shark, it was thought to create the feel of high impact, high risk action on extreme situations, polemic public scandals, financial advertisement alert, the italic version specially creates the feel of velocity, powerful mechanical energy and related similar topics. Recommended to use in big headlines, magazine covers, advertisements, robust public visual calls, but also, if it applied with good taste and good typographical skills, could be a good choice not only for prints but also for web and digital media devices.
  4. StudioSans by BrightHead Studio, $20.00
    StudioSans — is a modern representative of the class of sans-serif fonts inspired by the traditional Swiss design and typography of the mid 20th century. This is a minimal, clean and open font family with friendly forms. Focuses on functionality, has a high x-height and short ascender and descender elements. This is combined with soft circles and high legibility of characters contributing to comfortable reading. The family contains six weights from ExtraLight to ExtraBold. Each of them has in its arsenal more than 450 glyphs and knows more than 50 languages. Support for OpenType Features focused on the Oldstyle Figures (including signs of currencies and interest), Case-Sensitive Forms, Standarts and Discretionary Ligatures, Slashed Zero and Etc.
  5. Guitarist by SAMUEL DESIGN, $19.00
    Guitarist, a symbol of freedom and self-confidence. A good font must be enduring and of high quality. This font is simple in shape, and at the same time pays attention to changes in thickness, and strives to be classic and timeless. This font is great for music, fashion, magazines and is very eye-catching. GUITARIST can be matched with various fonts, and the visual effect is very strong. This font is modern and elegant with high-quality details. Designers like listening to jazz very much, looking for freedom, passion, independence, and change in jazz, and integrating these spirits into this font. I hope this font will help your brand be more visible.
  6. Mak Variable by Tkachenko design, $211.00
    Mak is a display font with a Ukrainian feeling inspired by Ukrainian music. Customize weight and contrast to the smallest value to your needs with a variable version of Mak. This is a big update of the first free two styles of Mak (SemiBold High & Black High) that were created in 2019 and become widespread among free display fonts. The big update wasn't been only adding more weights and contrasts but also changing a lot of glyphs and adding new ones. Now Mak supports all Latin-based languages and European Cyrillic. Experiments with historical forms, contrasts, and daring shapes to create a new image of Ukrainian Cyrillic and Latin based on it.
  7. Pontina by KaiserType, $30.00
    Pontina is the name of a multilingual didone typeface. Its elegant character is built up of playful and lively strokes combined with high ascenders and high capital letters, that gives the classical forms a modern individual touch. It combines both: legibility and an ornamental curvy look for display purposes. The typeface provides true italic fonts for each weight, which fit harmoniously to the regular fonts. Pontina can be used for headlines and also works well in smaller text sizes. The text styles have slightly lower capitals and ascenders for better legibility. Also the font comes along with a set of different ligatures as well as swash letters and all necessary open-type features.
  8. Bakeshop by Melvastype, $29.00
    Bakeshop is a casual script font family. It is drawn with rounded marker so the contrast is quite low. It has bumps at the end of strokes where the pen has stopped and the ink has spread. Bakeshop includes three weights and has both connecting and non-connecting versions. Connecting Bakeshop versions has OpenType features like Final Forms, looping connections with lowercase e, high connecting stroke with ascenders and plenty of discretionary ligatures. You can enable Final Forms either enabling Final Form feature or Contextual Alternates. If you want to use the high connection strokes with ascenders enable Stylistic Alternates or Stylistic Set 2. And if you like to use the ligatures just enable Discretionary Ligatures feature.
  9. Modar by SAMUEL DESIGN, $29.00
    MODAR means Modern and Artistic. A good font must be enduring and of high quality. This typeface is beautiful and noble, like an elegant sculpture, both historical and modern. This font is great for fashion, magazines, premium services, publishing, and also great for premium brands. MODAR is paired with a sans-serif typeface for a simple yet elegant visual effect. The font is very straight and has high-quality details, combining Eastern and Western aesthetics in one typeface. Designers borrowed classic fonts such as Didot and Canela in this font, combined with the elegant style of personal advocacy, to create 350 characters. I hope this font will help your brand be more visible.
  10. Fette Trump-Deutsch, designed by Dieter Steffmann, is a typeface that captures the essence of traditional German craftsmanship in typography. This font stands out for its bold and robust character, r...
  11. Moyenage by Storm Type Foundry, $55.00
    Blackletter typefaces follow certain fixed rules, both in respect to their forms and to the orthography. Possibly, they were a reaction to the half-developed Carolingian minuscule which was soon to end in the Latin script. Narrow, ordered script was to replace the round, hesitant and shattered shapes of letters in order to simplify writing, to unify the meaning of individual letters, and to save some parchment, too. Opposed to the practice common in monasterial scriptoriums where Uncial, Irish and Carolingian inspiration flew freely and as a result, the styles of writing differed in each monastery, the blackletter type was to define one, common standard. It was to express spiritual verticality, in perfect tune with the architecture of the Gothic era. Typography became an integral part of the overall style of the period. The pointed arch and the blackletter type were the vanguard of the spectacular transformation from the Middle Ages towards the modern era, they were a celebration of a time when works of art were not signed by their makers yet. Some unfortunate souls keep linking blackletter solely with Germany and the Third Reich, while the truth is that its direct predecessor, the Gothic minuscule, evolved mostly in France. Even Hitler himself indicated blackletter type obsolete in the age of steel, iron and concrete – thus making a significant contribution to the spreading of the Latin script in Germany. Once we leave our prejudice aside, we find that the shapes of blackletter type have exceptional potential, unheard of in sans-serif letterforms. The lower case letters fit into an imaginary rectangle which is easily extended both upwards and sideways. In its scope and in the name itself, the Moyenage type family project is to celebrate the diversity of the Middle Ages. I begun realizing the urge to design my own blackletter when visiting the beer gardens of Munich and while walking through the villages of rural Austria. The letters from the notice boards of inns are scented with spring air, with the flowers of cudweed, with white sausage and weissbier. The crooked calligraphic hooks and beaks seem to imitate the hearty yodeling of local drinkers and the rustle of the giant skirts of girls who distribute the giant wreaths of beer jugs. Moyenage is, however, a modern replica of blackletter, so it contains some otherwise unacceptable Latin script elements in upper case. I chose these keeping the modern reader in mind, striving for better legibility. The font is drawn as if written with a flat pen or brush, and with the ambition to, perhaps, serve as a calligraphic model. In medium width, the face is surprisingly well legible; it is perfect for menus as well as posters and CD covers for some of the heavier kinds of music. It has five types of numerals and also a set of Cyrillic script, symbolising the lovelorn union of Germans and Russians in the 20th century. Thus, it is well suited for the setting of bilingual texts of the German classic literature, which, according to the ancient rules, must not be set in Latin script.
  12. Neo Retro by Set Sail Studios, $17.00
    Disclaimer: An unhealthy amount of energy drinks were consumed while creating this product Bring some loud, bright, and nostalgic fun to your designs with the Neo Retro font pack! Create bold, vibrant, 90s-inspired designs in just a few clicks—giving you more time to hang out at the mall, go to a drive-in, kick-ass at the arcade or go make the perfect mix-tape (you get the idea). Here's a run through the font family; Neo Retro Font • A high energy font with clean edges and sharp ends. An all caps font, but with a larger and smaller variation included as upper and lowercase sets. Neo Retro Alt Font • This is a second version of the Neo Retro Font, with a completely new set of upper & lowercase characters drawn in the same style. If you wanted to avoid letters looking the same each time to recreate a custom-made style, or try a different word shape, simply switch to this font for an additional layout option. Neo Retro Icons Font • A set of 36 fun, hand-drawn icons designed to match with the Neo Retro font. Includes doodles, shapes, zig-zags, underline swashes & more. Simply install as a separate font and type any A-Z or a-j letter to generate an icon. Language Support; English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Indonesian, Malay, Hungarian, Polish, Croatian, Turkish, Romanian, Czech, Latvian, Lithuanian, Slovak, Slovenian.
  13. kaufhalle - 100% free
  14. Grotesca by GroupType, $19.00
    Grotesca Extra Condensed™ defines the term ""extra condensed"". With some unusual design quirks, this sturdy design has roots in styles popular in 1920s Germany. First brought to market by the Fundicion Tipografica Richard Gans type foundry (1888-1975) in Spain, the designer of Grotesca is unknown and the font was formerly sold only in Spain.
  15. Brocken by RMU, $35.00
    Good ideas never will die. Based on the concepts of former Leipzig student Volker Küster in the mid-1960s, I redrew and digitized the basics and extended them into a complete multilingual caps-only poster font which I named “Brocken”. Its letter-forms strongly remind me of the mighty rocks covering the highest peak, Brocken, in Northern Germany.
  16. Buchfraktur by RMU, $25.00
    The late-19th and early-20th century standard blackletter family in Germany, in three weights. To get access to all ligatures, it is recommended to activate both Standard and Discretionary Ligatures. You find the round s on the # key, and by typing the combination N-o-period and activating the OT feature Ordinals you get the numero sign.
  17. Slogan by Linotype, $29.99
    Helmut Matheis originally designed Slogan for the Ludwig and Mayer type foundry in Frankfurt, Germany. Slogan is an informal script of medium weight, with some variation in color. Its caps are flowing and the lowercase letters are close fitting. A lighter, more upright companion was designed by Helmut Matheis as well; its design is named Charme.
  18. GalacticaBats - Unknown license
  19. Jolly - Personal use only
  20. MB TyranT - Personal use only
  21. Greek House Fathouse - Unknown license
  22. Tattoo Sailor - Personal use only
  23. Xenippa - Unknown license
  24. Xirwena - Unknown license
  25. Pea Mystie - Personal use only
  26. Pea Lyndal - Unknown license
  27. Pea Superamy - Unknown license
  28. Pea Marcie - Unknown license
  29. Pea Friend - Unknown license
  30. Pea Protani - Unknown license
  31. Pea Monica - Unknown license
  32. Pea Kristin - Unknown license
  33. Pea Steph - Unknown license
  34. Pea Kareen - Unknown license
  35. Pea Tangee - Unknown license
  36. Pea Jamie - Unknown license
  37. Pea Melanie - Unknown license
  38. Pea Sarahloo - Unknown license
  39. Pea HeidiQ - Unknown license
  40. Pea Johanna - Unknown license
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