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  1. Drunken Hour by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Drunken Hour is not your everyday-ransom-note font! It has autoligatures for both double numbers and letters, and a good handful of the most common letter combinations...even the accented characters has got their own unique look! Well, that means you can make your next punk-grunge project look like YOU actually did all the cutting of letters! :) You will need to use OpenType supporting applications to use the autoligatures.
  2. Mouse Paw by Alexander Sharkov, $5.00
    My home mouse, Hector, drew this wonderful font for kids. He tried very hard and hopes that you will like the result of his work! This font is perfect for advertising various children's brands, decorating children's books, and generally any children's projects! Hector and I believe that the font Mouse Paw will help you in any business.
  3. Horse Belonk by Arterfak Project, $16.00
    Introducing "Horse Belonk" a western style font. Designed well and inspired by cowboy, rodeo, texas, and vintage designs. This font is based on serif form and reversed contrast, featuring strong looks with the spurs in the middle. Horse Belonk is a display font with an additional Extrude style that you can apply to get a 3-Dimensional typographic design. It's bold, brave, and elegant to use on title or headline, poster, flyer, stickers, vintage logos, signboards, packaging, and more! Packed with extra special characters that allow you to create more magnificent designs. Here what you'll get : Uppercase Smallcaps Numbers & punctuation Ligatures Stylistic alternates Catchwords : And, Or, Is, The, By, On, Be, To, Out, End, In, Will, With, Of, No, For, From, At, Am, Pm. Thank you for watching! Cheers
  4. Uncle Hours by Adante Creative, $23.00
    Introducing by Adante.Creative Proudly Present, Uncle Hours Uncle Hours is A Bold Display Typeface Font Uncle Hours is perfect for product packaging, branding project, megazine, social media, wedding, or just used to express words above the background. Enjoy the font, feel free to comment or feedback, send me PM or email.
  5. Black Mouse by Letterafandi Studio, $18.00
    Black Mouse is a display font. It is a font ready to rock every design you want to create. It is perfect for logos, quotes, posters, clothing, and so much more! Add it to any of your creative projects, and be amazed by the generated outcome!
  6. 112 Hours by Device, $9.00
    Rian Hughes’ 15th collection of fonts, “112 Hours”, is entirely dedicated to numbers. Culled from a myriad of sources – clock faces, tickets, watches house numbers – it is an eclectic and wide-ranging set. Each font contains only numerals and related punctuation – no letters. A new book has been designed by Hughes to show the collection, and includes sample settings, complete character sets, source material and an introduction. This is available print-to-order on Blurb in paperback and hardback: http://www.blurb.com/b/5539073-112-hours-hardback http://www.blurb.com/b/5539045-112-hours-paperback From the introduction: The idea for this, the fifteenth Device Fonts collection, began when I came across an online auction site dedicated to antique clocks. I was mesmerized by the inventive and bizarre numerals on their faces. Shorn of the need to extend the internal logic of a typeface through the entire alphabet, the designers of these treasures were free to explore interesting forms and shapes that would otherwise be denied them. Given this horological starting point, I decided to produce 12 fonts, each featuring just the numbers from 1 to 12 and, where appropriate, a small set of supporting characters — in most cases, the international currency symbols, a colon, full stop, hyphen, slash and the number sign. 10, 11 and 12 I opted to place in the capital A, B and C slots. Each font is shown in its entirety here. I soon passed 12, so the next logical finish line was 24. Like a typographic Jack Bauer, I soon passed that too -— the more I researched, the more I came across interesting and unique examples that insisted on digitization, or that inspired me to explore some new design direction. The sources broadened to include tickets, numbering machines, ecclesiastical brass plates and more. Though not derived from clock faces, I opted to keep the 1-12 conceit for consistency, which allowed me to design what are effectively numerical ligatures. I finally concluded one hundred fonts over my original estimate at 112. Even though it’s not strictly divisible by 12, the number has a certain symmetry, I reasoned, and was as good a place as any to round off the project. An overview reveals a broad range that nonetheless fall into several loose categories. There are fairly faithful revivals, only diverging from their source material to even out inconsistencies and regularize weighting or shape to make them more functional in a modern context; designs taken directly from the source material, preserving all the inky grit and character of the original; designs that are loosely based on a couple of numbers from the source material but diverge dramatically for reasons of improved aesthetics or mere whim; and entirely new designs with no historical precedent. As projects like this evolve (and, to be frank, get out of hand), they can take you in directions and to places you didn’t envisage when you first set out. Along the way, I corresponded with experts in railway livery, and now know about the history of cab side and smokebox plates; I travelled to the Musée de l’imprimerie in Nantes, France, to examine their numbering machines; I photographed house numbers in Paris, Florence, Venice, Amsterdam and here in the UK; I delved into my collection of tickets, passes and printed ephemera; I visited the Science Museum in London, the Royal Signals Museum in Dorset, and the Museum of London to source early adding machines, war-time telegraphs and post-war ration books. I photographed watches at Worthing Museum, weighing scales large enough to stand on in a Brick Lane pub, and digital station clocks at Baker Street tube station. I went to the London Under-ground archive at Acton Depot, where you can see all manner of vintage enamel signs and woodblock type; I photographed grocer’s stalls in East End street markets; I dug out old clocks I recalled from childhood at my parents’ place, examined old manual typewriters and cash tills, and crouched down with a torch to look at my electricity meter. I found out that Jane Fonda kicked a policeman, and unusually for someone with a lifelong aversion to sport, picked up some horse-racing jargon. I share some of that research here. In many cases I have not been slavish about staying close to the source material if I didn’t think it warranted it, so a close comparison will reveal differences. These changes could be made for aesthetic reasons, functional reasons (the originals didn’t need to be set in any combination, for example), or just reasons of personal taste. Where reference for the additional characters were not available — which was always the case with fonts derived from clock faces — I have endeavored to design them in a sympathetic style. I may even extend some of these to the full alphabet in the future. If I do, these number-only fonts could be considered as experimental design exercises: forays into form to probe interesting new graphic possibilities.
  7. Scary Hours by Seemly Fonts, $12.00
    Scary Hours is a unique and spooky display font. It is perfectly suitable for any Halloween-related project or crafty idea! The only limit is your imagination.
  8. Vivala Coffee House Icons by Johannes Hoffmann, $19.00
    73 icons on the topic »coffee house.« The extensive kit includes the category’s coffee, drinks, food, coffee makers, roasted coffee and tea. The clear design is adapted to mobile interfaces and suitable for print, as well.
  9. Dad Collections by Ake, $12.00
    Introducing Dad Collections, a versatile duo font consisting of a modern script and display font that's perfect for a wide range of design projects. Whether you're designing wedding invitations, postcards, magazines, or any other project, Dad Collections adds a touch of elegance and sophistication to your work. With its clean lines, stylish curves, and legible characters, this font is sure to become a favorite in your design arsenal.
  10. Dea Githa by Gatype, $12.00
    Dea Githa is sweet calligraphy font, including Regular. This font is casual and pretty with swashes. Can used for various purposes. such as logo, product packaging, wedding invitations, branding, headlines, signage, labels, signature, book covers, posters, quotes and more. Thanks & Happy Designing!
  11. Giant Head OT - Unknown license
  12. Hemi Head 426 - Unknown license
  13. VTKS Dear Love - 100% free
  14. Redd or dedd - Unknown license
  15. YT Deal Latin by Yangtype, $9.00
    The concept of this letter is calmness. I created a variety of sans-serif fonts, and when I listed the fonts I had created, I was surprised that their shapes were not very different from each other. Among them, this font calmly caught my eye. The power of quiet progress is felt in this unremarkable form.
  16. HU Dear Molly by Heummdesign, $15.00
    English HU Dear Molly is a headline font for the title, and it is a cute typeface that is close to a round circle. Coolly stretched strokes create an interesting sense of rhythm. There is 1 weight of HU Dear Molly : Regular Greek Το HU Dear Molly είναι μια επικεφαλίδα γραμματοσειρά για τον τίτλο και είναι μια χαριτωμένη γραμματοσειρά που βρίσκεται κοντά σε έναν στρογγυλό κύκλο. Οι δροσερές πινελιές δημιουργούν μια ενδιαφέρουσα αίσθηση ρυθμού. Υπάρχουν 1 βάρη του HU Dear Molly: Regular Cyrillic HU Dear Molly - это шрифт заголовка для заголовка, симпатичный шрифт, расположенный рядом с круглым кругом. Крутые штрихи создают интересное чувство ритма. HU Dear Molly имеет 1 толщины : Regular
  17. Dear Sarah Pro by Betatype, $119.00
    Carefully considered letters written long-hand, sealed in an envelope and sent across continents were once the only connection for distant friends and lovers. Dear Sarah is a type that evokes the emotion of those handwritten messages. Using alternates, ligatures and a complex system for randomization and natural connected characters, Dear Sarah seeks to push the boundaries of digital type. The guiding question that drove the design of Dear Sarah was whether it was possible to create a natural looking script that worked well in running text. Hand-written types often work for two or three words, but as soon you you look at them in a paragraph, their unnatural textures make them feel contrived. As one of the first serious types to explore OpenType for a connected script, Dear Sarah uses a unique system to create natural connections. Often script types rely on one connecting point to make sure that all their characters fit together properly. Characters that naturally connect much higher, such as the ‘o’ or ‘v’ are distorted to connect at the same point as an ‘a’ or a ‘c’. Dear Sarah uses multiple sets of lower-case characters to connect at multiple points, creating a much more natural looking script. OpenType is also used to create variety, by using randomization techniques to insert disconnected characters as well as alternates, ligatures, swashes and ink blots to create a natural rhythm across multiple lines.
  18. Shake Your Head by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Shake Your Head is a grafitti font which involves both smooth curves and ragged edges. Somewhat a mixture between the grungy lines of TagBoyHardcore and the more elegant swings of TagStarHardcore. Furthermore Shake Your Head is spaced very tight and kerned even tighter in order to keep my way of writing tagfonts!
  19. Decade Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Decade Nouveau JNL is based on examples of an Art Nouveau wood type with a bit of Latin/Western typographic flare, and yet it is also reminiscent of the style's revival during the hippie movement of the 1960s.
  20. Millrich Reading NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    The 1918 specimen book of the Miller and Richard Type Foundry of London and Edinburgh featured this endearing typeface. Both versions of this font include the complete Latin 1252 and Central European 1250 character sets, as well as a very tasty f_f_i ligature.
  21. Archive Copperplate Head by Archive Type, $19.95
    Engraved shaded display typeface.
  22. Super Head Club by Fonts of Chaos, $10.00
    Super head Club is a font made with line. The shape of the letters is a sans-serif style round and bold. Works perfectly for vintage artworks.
  23. LD Dear Diary by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    If you've got a secret to tell, or just crave a unique font for cool scrapbook journaling, "Dear Diary" will fit the bill. This true type font looks handwritten with tall uppercase letters, and small, narrower lowercase script. Have some fun with it!
  24. Dastardly Deeds SRF by Stella Roberts Fonts, $25.00
    This design from Ray Larabie (and adapted by Jeff Levine) is so unusual. The lettering lends itself to messages of sinister intent or horror movie titles. The net profits from my font sales help defer medical expenses for my siblings, who both suffer with Cystic Fibrosis and diabetes. Thank you.
  25. GR Read Family by Garisman Studio, $20.00
    GR Read is a very cool font for headline designs with a bold and bold theme. With a strong display and clean nodes make text in the design become more character and great. Inspired by headline trends in a poster or magazine today. So that with a firm and a very modern style makes your design better! This font is formed from the headline display font of a very careful title. GR Read has about 350 flying machines. Suitable for all graphic design projects, prints, logos, posters, t-shirts, packaging, website, ticket and applies to several types of graphic design. Especially for the use of a title! Very suitable! GR Read is compatible with any software without pain, especially in headlines with GR Read pairing
  26. FP Head Pro by Fontpartners, $29.00
    Architectural yet human, as if the letter forms had been delicately carved in stone; their rounded stroke edges and corners lovingly eroded by the surf of the Baltic Sea; slightly overexposed, radiating comforting warmth, giving the impression one was looking at the characters against the setting sun. FP Head Pro reviewed by Yves Peters and Typographica.org: One of the most noteworthy typefaces for 2008.
  27. The Reading Display by Great Studio, $19.00
    The Reading Display is a new editorial serif with all clean and soft lines, tight curves, and a trendy elegant look. The Reading Display has two versions of the font, namely Regular Serif & Condensed Serif which are equipped with an italic version style, very suitable for your design needs such as very suitable for creating nostalgic designs but still clean and elegant such as headlines, magazines, logos, packaging, editorial, and so on. much more. Cheers, Great Studio
  28. Nouveau Heading JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Some pleasant Art Nouveau spurred serif hand lettering was found on the cover of a 1902 issue of “The Century Magazine”. This is now the digital typeface Nouveau Heading JNL, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  29. FF Real Head by FontFont, $50.99
    FF Real is a convincing re-interpretation of the German grotesque style from between 1998 and 1908, but with much more warmth and improved legibility as well as a hint towards the warmer American grotesques. Later on, not just slanted styles, but a “proper” italic version was added inspired by the way Roman and Italic are distinguished in traditional serif faces. NEW: a specially created set of obliques were added in 2018 to give designers more design flexibility, for those looking for a less calligraphic look. In 2020 the family was extended with matching condensed weights. FF Real was originally conceived by Erik Spiekermann as one text weight and one headline weight to be used as the only faces in his biography ‘Hello I am Erik’, edited by Johannes Erler, published in 2014. While Spiekermann drew the alphabets, he passed on the font data to Ralph du Carrois and Anja Meiners who cleaned it up and completed it. In the meantime, FF Real has been extended to a family of two styles and 65 weights each. The design of FF Real is rooted in early static grotesques from the turn of the century. Several German type foundries – among them the Berlin-based foundries Theinhardt and H. Berthold AG – released such designs between 1898 and 1908. The semi-bold weight of a poster-size typeface that was lighter than most of the according semi-bolds in metal type at the time, gave the impetus to FF Real’s regular weight. In the words of Spiekermann, the historical example is “the real, non-fake version, as it were, the royal sans serif face“, thus giving his new typeface the name “Real” (which is also in keeping with his four-letter names, i.e. FF Meta, FF Unit). FF Real is a convincing re-interpretation of the German grotesque style, but with much more warmth and improved legibility. With a hint towards the warmer American grotesques, Spiekermann added those typical Anglo-American features such as a three-story ‘g’ and an ‘8’ with a more defined loop. To better distinguish characters in small text sizes, FF Real Text comes in old style figures, ‘f’ and ‘t’ are wider, the capital ‘I’ is equipped with serifs, as is the lowercase ‘l’. What’s more, i-dots and all punctuation are round.
  30. Decadence Avec Elegance by Intellecta Design, $26.90
  31. Dear And Fans by Anaya Studio, $8.00
    Dear and Fans is all class. A stylish modern font that is a mix of serif and sans serif. It's soft curves mixed with high contrast glyphs lend it self to both feminine and masculine qualities. With a contrasting light italic, Dear and Fans works great in layout design for quotes or body copy. The Elegant curves also make for a unique logo or masthead. Dear and Fans comes with multilingual support also. Full upper/lower case, numbers, punctuation and multilingual support. Full italic style included also.
  32. MC Dear Eloise by Maulana Creative, $13.00
    Dear Eloise is an unique fancy signature script font. With regular mon-line stroke, fun character with a bit of ligatures and alternates. To give you an extra creative work. Dear Eloise font support multilingual more than 100+ language. This font is good for logo design, Social media, Movie Titles, Books Titles, a short text even a long text letter and good for your secondary text font with sans or serif. Make a stunning work with Dear Eloise font. Cheers, Maulana Creative
  33. Dear Penpal Script by Giaimefontz, $6.00
    This is a fully connected script font, not calligraphic, but entirely designed to follow handwritten cursive ligatures rules as teached in schools. In order to correctly visualize it, you have to enable OpenType features (Contextual Alternates, Discretionary Ligatures, Standard Ligatues and Kerning). Trying to write All Capitals will generate Block Letters writings, since cursive style doesn't allow more than the first uppercase per word, however this font is not meant to be a Block Letters font. Using specific type combinations will generate special glyphs. All of these features are intended to reproduce a classic schoolboy or schoolgirl notebook.
  34. LDJ Dear Santa by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    Letters to Santa are a highly anticipated holiday tradition. Use this fun font to add pizzaz and an endearing childish style to that letter or any creative lettering project.
  35. Edge Of Madness - Personal use only
  36. Game Of Squids - 100% free
  37. League of Ages - Personal use only
  38. Blood Of Dracula - Unknown license
  39. Shade of Adelyne - Personal use only
  40. Hand of God - 100% free
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