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  1. DIN 2014 Rounded by ParaType, $40.00
    DIN 2014 Rounded is an extension of the industrial sans serif DIN 2014. It combines the softness and friendliness of the rounded endings with the seriousness and stability of the original typeface. Not a typical childish rounded font. DIN 2014 Rounded works well for medical or architectural topics, headings on the web or in periodicals, brand identity, packaging, and, thanks to the DIN proportions, for signage. DIN 2014 Rounded includes six styles ranging from extra light to extra bold, corresponding to the upright styles of DIN 2014, as well as a variable version. The typeface supports all European languages based on Latin, Cyrillic, and Asian Cyrillic (Tatar, Kazakh, Kyrgyz and other languages). Isabella Chaeva and Alexander Lubovenko worked on the rounded version. The typeface was released by Paratype in 2021.
  2. Quiroh by Hashtag Type, $32.00
    Quiroh is a functional typeface that expresses both artistic life and emotion. Taking its inspiration from the industrial revolution of the 19th Century where romance and science coincided. With a cushioned finish and designed according to traditional conventions, the sentiment is equally as important as the reason, resulting in a very pleasurable read. Quiroh includes both heavy display weights and lighter weights for small copy, it's a perfect tool for communicating to the masses. Tall ascenders and descenders give the typeface a distinctive look with an elegant feel, and while these expressive forms invite the reader to observe its visible shape and appearance, its rhythm and function invites the reader to peruse at their leisure. Full details include 7 weights from thin to heavy with over 470 characters, manually edited kerning and OpenType features.
  3. Millie by Kyle Wayne Benson, $10.00
    Millie is a stressed, geometric script who spends her days as industrial lettering and her nights paired with blackletter on the patches of motorcycle gangs. Millie was weighted by the conventions of broad nib calligraphy, inspired by the Milwaukee Tools logo, and finds herself best used in logos and titles. She was designed to be used on about a 20 degree angle, though she looks just fine on a level plane. By using opentype, many ligatures, and two sets of stylistic alternates, Millie was developed to look great with any string of letters. Access the first stylistic set for a disconnected script look, and the second set for even more connections and fluid script than standard. Millie Round takes the edge off a bit, giving the entire set a more approachable and versatile feel.
  4. Delectables by ITC, $29.99
    A former lettering artist at Hallmark Cards, Rob Leuschke now has his own thriving design businesses, Alphabytes and the new TypeSETit. Growing up in St Charles, Missouri, where he still lives, Rob showed great artistic promise at an early age. He earned a BFA in graphic design at the University of Missouri at Columbia. After graduation, his stint at Hallmark Cards gave him the opportunity to learn from and work with some of the best lettering artists in the industry. Rob struck out on his own in 1987 and now boasts a long list of clients from all over the world. Rob has created over 250 custom typefaces, and his work has been exhibited in New York. Ambiance BT is Rob’s first typeface published by Bitstream, with more to follow.
  5. Melidia by Nantia.co, $16.00
    My first encounter with brush lettering that has turned into a lovely bold font. I really loved the process of hand lettering with ink and I am so pleased how it developed into a lovely font. Melidia Font it’s a multilingual lettering font with Greek (of course), Cyrillic and Extended Latin characters and diacritics. The style of the font is perfect for your modern graphic design needs. For all the typography lovers, this typeface is a must-have. Also, Melidia Font is the ideal typeface for the food industry, for food branding, for restaurant menus and packaging. Additionally, you can use Melidia Font for a lovely wedding and baby shower invitation design. Especially if you are looking for a font for Instagram quote posts or any other social media content, this typeface is for you!
  6. DIN Next Stencil by Monotype, $56.99
    The DIN Next™ Stencil suite of designs is DIN with an attitude. It’s even more industrial strength than the original. DIN Next Stencil’s seven roman weights are perfect for projects that require a mechanized, military, or commercial vibe. If you’re looking to create commanding display typography, be it in advertising, apparel, packaging, posters, signage, wayfinding – or crash dummy name tags, DIN Next Stencil can be the perfect typographic enhancement. Based on Akira Kobayshi’s DIN Next with stenciling by Sabina Chipară, the wide range of weights and large complement of diacritical and international characters – including those for Cyrillic and Greek – further expand the design’s capabilities. The DIN Next Stencil fonts are powerful tools in their own right – and provide a distinctive supplement to the DIN Next typographic palette.
  7. Technik by CarnokyType, $25.00
    Technik is a constructed typeface, which is almost strictly designed from basic geometrical elements consisting of mainly circles, also squares and diagonal shapes. Another characteristic is the connection of diagonals, verticals and diagonals, and also of some circle shapes touching each other at one point. It gives this type an original look, and prevents the problematic dark places in some letters. The technical feeling of the type (mainly in uppercase letters) is balanced by the design of lowercase which looks more friendly and fresh. Technik is not designed as a text typeface, it is recommended mainly for display typesetting. You can use it for example in fashion industry or in branding typography, or everywhere where you need the technical feeling of the constructed typefaces to look less cold and more friendly.
  8. Elioth by Soerat Company, $20.00
    Elioth is a humanist font with angled terminals as a identity of this product. Comes with a modern look, this font suitable for display and body text. Elioth is perfect for advertising, packaging, logo, editorial and publishing, branding and other creative industries. This family of 9 weights from Thin to Heavy along with italics contain several OpenType features: Stylistic Alternates and Figures Variation (circled number, fraction, tabular lining, numerator, denominator). With over 752 glyphs per style, Elioth supports around 150+ languages in Latin and Cyrillic script. Family overview: 9 weights (from Thin to Heavy) + italics Extended Latin Cyrillic 752 glyphs Variable Font 150+ languages OpenType Features: Localized Forms Subscript and scientific inferiors Superscript (Superiors) Numerators and Denominators Fractions Lining Figures Tabular Figures Oldstyle Figures Circled Number Case-Sensitive Forms Standard and Discretionary Ligatures Stylistic Alternates
  9. Wild Muerayam by Luhop Creative, $10.00
    Wild Muerayam is an elegant, modern and functional unique featuring a calm text and an expressive display. This font looks harmonious in books and other periodicals, on posters or on magazine covers. The scope is not limited to the printing industry, because Wild Muerayam looks aesthetically pleasing wherever text is used. Wild Muerayam a serif display font with a modern yet luxurious style. Aesthetic and unique letterforms, as well as soft curves and wild shape of the letters make this font so iconic. Wild Muerayam Features: Uppercase and lowercase Multilingual Numerals Punctuation PUA Encoded Alternates Ligatures To be able to access alternative fonts, make sure the software you use can support opentype features such as Microsoft Word, Paint, Adobe, Corel draw, Cricut and other applications. I hope you enjoy!
  10. Hargloves by Heypentype, $17.99
    Hargloves is a modern sans serif font family. The overall design shapes taken from advance engineering technology themes in various industries like motorsports, biotech, games, architecture, robotics, and aerospace tech. A distinct visual characteristic of this font family can be found on 'G','O','P','Q', and 'R' letter. Each glyph design combined a geometric shapes and stylished ink-traps with parabolic curves. The design of the glyph curves taken from fast corner often found on motorsports circuit, when diagonal glyph shapes taken from aerodynamic in machine engineering and kinetic movement on sports. Hargloves consist of 12 font with 6 weight: From thin to Bold with each matching italics.It also contains extras 4 Icons designed specifically for sports entertainment. Hargloves support for most western languages and several opentype features.
  11. FF Info Display by FontFont, $72.99
    German type designers Erik Spiekermann and Ole Schäfer, and German design agency MetaDesign created this sans FontFont between 1996 and 2000. The family has 18 weights, ranging from Regular to Bold (including italics) and is ideally suited for advertising and packaging, book text, editorial and publishing, logo, branding and creative industries, small text, wayfinding and signage as well as web and screen design. FF Info Display provides advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, alternate characters, case-sensitive forms, fractions, super- and subscript characters, and stylistic alternates. It comes with proportional lining, proportional oldstyle, and tabular lining figures. In 1998, FF Info Display received the The Big Crit award. This FontFont is a member of the FF Info super family, which also includes FF Info Correspondence and FF Info Text.
  12. HS Aleman by Hiba Studio, $59.00
    HS Aleman is a modern OpenType Arabic Typeface. It is a modern Kufi / Naskh hybrid and keeps the balance between its construction and its flexibility in the transition between the thick and thin parts and it also contains a harmonious smooth curve at its parts in all characters, numbers and marks. This font contains some extended characters (swash), some variants of some characters (Stylistic Set), which gives the user some flexibility in using some characters. The font weights are refined with enhanced legibility and are ideally suited to advertising, extended texts in magazines, newspapers, book and publishing, and creative industries, meeting the purposes of various designs. This typeface supports Arabic, Persian, Pashtu, Kurdish Sorani, Kurdish Kirmanji and Urdu variants and it is available in '''five weights: light, regular, medium, bold and black.
  13. Mesca by S6 Foundry, $39.00
    Mesca is a distinctive multi-language font with characters (Latin, Greek, Cyrillic) for industry and digital, with elegant, high-quality typographic responses to the complex technological needs for different media and digital uniforms: TV screens, computers, and mobile phones, smartwatches also editorial fields such as print or digital magazines, books. Furthermore, its multifunctional character goes far beyond editorial and digital use. It promises great performance in terms of branding, advertising, signage, mobile app, etc. Mesca is a contemporary humanist sans-serif font with a generous x-height and slightly condensed proportions. Which offers a combination of good readability and space-saving. Built on rational lines of pure geometry, which presents a notable inclination in the terminals of the letters with external and internal acute angles that create a strong contrast.
  14. Kicker FC by Arkitype, $16.00
    Kicker FC is a typeface created for the love of sport, it has all the right elements to make for a great sports display font to give your brand and art work the right look and feel in this genre. It has a great variation in weights, stylistic alternates to provide flexibility and to add more customisation a shadow version for each weight to give your typography a custom graphic look and feel. Kicker FC is perfect for use in various sports categories, college sports, baseball, basketball, football and as show in all the poster images and more specifically the name Kicker FC, soccer. Not only is the typeface a perfect fit for sport, it works just as well for beverage, tech and various other industries. Narrow in width provides great eye catching headlines.
  15. Crescent by TrendGFX Design Studios, $20.00
    The most sensational design of the decade is now at large. These high-definition fonts can be used for titles, banners, tattooing, logotypes and many more places. Be it domestic or industrial, formal or informal, it can be used in every field imaginable. It has a sensational, funky style and remarks the current youth's style. Such a font style has never been seen by the world, until today. These designs are 100% original and handmade. I searched a million miles but found this as the most appropriate idea for the world of font types at this time. It's the coolest, funkiest and the best font ever made. It's the era of graffiti and 3D, and we've combined both to give you CRESCENT.. So, use it, love it, buy it!
  16. Lunatica by André do Carmo Gonçalves, $29.00
    Lunatica Display is a single weight, all capitals, slanted typeface ideal for titles and headlines due to its strong presence. It is constructed in a very modular fashion, stepping away from some typographic conventions, while keeping the form of its characters familiar and easily recognisable. This typeface is heavily inspired on the aesthetics of the space related sci-fi movie genre, specifically on the movie Moon (2009), directed by Duncan Jones and starring Sam Rockwell, from where it also picks up the inspiration for the name “Lunatica”. It was first designed as a branding exercise, thought to be the official typeface of Lunar Industries Ltd. — the company through wich the movie exists and unfolds. You can use Lunatica Display in more conventional contexts like branding but also in more experimental and futuristic-looking ways.
  17. Pagkaki by Nantia.co, $8.00
    Pagkaki Font is a fun display font, with support for Extended Latin and Greek characters. Of course, with this typeface, you have access to a Greek set of characters. Pagkaki Handcrafted Greek Font is a multilingual font that can transform any project into a bold graphic design statement. Also, this handmade font supports both uppercase and lowercase characters, and it is a powerful, bold handwritten font. Additionally, the font supports all the European languages with the Extended Latin character set. This craft font looks perfect on baby shower invitations, but not too childish. Again, if you are loving crafts this is the scrapbooking font for you! In addition, I have to mention the endless applications of this lettering font in food products, restaurant menus, hotels, and generally in the food and hospitality industries.
  18. Storica by Arkitype, $15.00
    Storica is a display typeface with roman style serifs that create a sense of history and culture. The Storica family has 7 weights as well as a Heavy Rough and Heavy Hand version that give you an option for a more rustic or hand style approach to you projects. The character set is expansive and has a wide range of language support. Storica has a great selection of Stylistic alternates, ligatures, small-caps, old-style numbers and more packed into the opentype features. This typeface is an excellent choice for branding, particularly in the beverage industry, it is also perfect for typographic layouts for magazines, poster, books etc. Storica has been designed to make it easy for a designer to create beautiful typography with creative flair quickly and easily.
  19. Moron by Barnbrook Fonts, $30.00
    Moron is a distinctive and idiosyncratic display typeface: a winsome-but-nasty, old-and-yet-new drawing of Victorian sans-serif letterforms (with some 1970s sausage fonts thrown in). Moron started life as a sans-serif redrawing of Nylon but developed into a unique typeface with a character all its own. It is based, very loosely, upon Victorian Tuscan and Grotesque type found in the churches and cemeteries of the city of Glasgow. These letterforms originated before the dawn of modernism and at a time when the Arts and Crafts Movement was flourishing. In this age of early mass production and mechanisation, the Victorian ability to balance functionality with ornamentation had fascinating results. The typography of that period displays a unique combination of industrial heft and romantic decoration.
  20. Toxigenesis by Typodermic, $11.95
    Inspired by the sleek lines of consumer electronics and the bold shapes of automobile design, Toxigenesis is the ultimate typeface for conveying a sense of scientific and industrial power. With its wide, plastic letterforms, Toxigenesis commands attention and exudes confidence, making it the perfect choice for any high-tech design project. Whether you’re designing the next generation of consumer electronics, presenting cutting-edge scientific research, or creating sleek industrial products, Toxigenesis is the font you need to make your message stand out. Available in five weights and italics, Toxigenesis gives you the flexibility to create powerful, attention-grabbing designs that convey your message with clarity and style. Most Latin-based European, Vietnamese, Greek, and most Cyrillic-based writing systems are supported, including the following languages. Afaan Oromo, Afar, Afrikaans, Albanian, Alsatian, Aromanian, Aymara, Azerbaijani, Bashkir, Bashkir (Latin), Basque, Belarusian, Belarusian (Latin), Bemba, Bikol, Bosnian, Breton, Bulgarian, Buryat, Cape Verdean, Creole, Catalan, Cebuano, Chamorro, Chavacano, Chichewa, Crimean Tatar (Latin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dawan, Dholuo, Dungan, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Filipino, Finnish, French, Frisian, Friulian, Gagauz (Latin), Galician, Ganda, Genoese, German, Gikuyu, Greenlandic, Guadeloupean Creole, Haitian Creole, Hawaiian, Hiligaynon, Hungarian, Icelandic, Igbo, Ilocano, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Jamaican, Kaingang, Khalkha, Kalmyk, Kanuri, Kaqchikel, Karakalpak (Latin), Kashubian, Kazakh, Kikongo, Kinyarwanda, Kirundi, Komi-Permyak, Kurdish, Kurdish (Latin), Kyrgyz, Latvian, Lithuanian, Lombard, Low Saxon, Luxembourgish, Maasai, Macedonian, Makhuwa, Malay, Maltese, Māori, Moldovan, Montenegrin, Nahuatl, Ndebele, Neapolitan, Norwegian, Novial, Occitan, Ossetian, Ossetian (Latin), Papiamento, Piedmontese, Polish, Portuguese, Quechua, Rarotongan, Romanian, Romansh, Russian, Rusyn, Sami, Sango, Saramaccan, Sardinian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian, Serbian (Latin), Shona, Sicilian, Silesian, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Sorbian, Sotho, Spanish, Swahili, Swazi, Swedish, Tagalog, Tahitian, Tajik, Tatar, Tetum, Tongan, Tshiluba, Tsonga, Tswana, Tumbuka, Turkish, Turkmen (Latin), Tuvaluan, Ukrainian, Uzbek, Uzbek (Latin), Venda, Venetian, Vepsian, Vietnamese, Võro, Walloon, Waray-Waray, Wayuu, Welsh, Wolof, Xavante, Xhosa, Yapese, Zapotec, Zarma, Zazaki, Zulu and Zuni.
  21. Expline Variable by Formatype Foundry, $140.00
    Expline typeface finds its roots in modernist design but subtly pays homage to early Modern Industrial Grotesks. This fusion creates a font that encapsulates the essence of tradition while embracing the contemporary. The font incorporates sharp details in select characters and curves, imparting a delicate sweetness while preserving the robust character associated with Grotesk fonts. This unique blend allows Expline to strike a perfect balance between display and text usage, making it a versatile choice for a variety of design projects. Expline's flexibility shines through its extensive weight options. The font family offers eight distinct weights, each thoughtfully crafted to establish a clear typographic hierarchy. Designers can easily choose the right weight to suit the specific needs of their projects, whether it's a bold headline or a refined body text. This variety ensures that your typography will always make the right visual impact. Expline typeface doesn't stop at weights. It provides expansive character sets across each weight, encompassing all Western European diacritics, Punctuation, Mathematics, and Numerics. This ensures that your typography will seamlessly support various languages and punctuation marks, making it a global choice. In addition, the font boasts OpenType features, granting the flexibility to explore multiple subsets. This includes alternate capital letterforms, tabular and lining numerals (both proportional and old-style), enabling endless typographic possibilities. Whether you're designing for print or web, these features allow you to fine-tune your typography for a perfect fit. Expline is a font that bridges the gap between modernist design principles and early industrial influences, resulting in a Neo-Grotesk font with a contemporary twist. Its comprehensive weight options, expansive character sets, and OpenType features make it a versatile choice for any medium between print and screen.
  22. Expline by Formatype Foundry, $39.00
    Expline typeface finds its roots in modernist design but subtly pays homage to early Modern Industrial Grotesks. This fusion creates a font that encapsulates the essence of tradition while embracing the contemporary. The font incorporates sharp details in select characters and curves, imparting a delicate sweetness while preserving the robust character associated with grotesk fonts. This unique blend allows Expline to strike a perfect balance between display and text usage, making it a versatile choice for a variety of design projects. Expline's flexibility shines through its extensive weight options. The font family offers eight distinct weights, each thoughtfully crafted to establish a clear typographic hierarchy. Designers can easily choose the right weight to suit the specific needs of their projects, whether it's a bold headline or a refined body text. This variety ensures that your typography will always make the right visual impact. Expline typeface doesn't stop at weights. It provides expansive character sets across each weight, encompassing all Western European diacritics, Punctuation, Mathematics, and Numerics. This ensures that your typography will seamlessly support various languages and punctuation marks, making it a global choice. In addition, the font boasts OpenType features, granting the flexibility to explore multiple subsets. This includes alternate capital letterforms, tabular and lining numerals (both proportional and old-style), enabling endless typographic possibilities. Whether you're designing for print or web, these features allow you to fine-tune your typography for a perfect fit. Expline is a font that bridges the gap between modernist design principles and early industrial influences, resulting in a Neo-Grotesk font with a contemporary twist. Its comprehensive weight options, expansive character sets, and OpenType features make it a versatile choice for any medium between print and screen.
  23. Leroy by Andinistas, $39.95
    Leroy is a font family of 5 members designed from geometrizing Roman and Gothic skeletons. Its purpose is to provide optimal reading of titles and paragraphs with strong mechanical flavor. Because of this, its variables are designed to sort information in media such as labels, signs and industrial atmosphere packaging related with the Soviet Union’s fonts in 1920. This idea matured white horizontal lines superimposed on alphabets drawn with an ancient architectural team known as “Leroy K & E Controlled Lettering System”. Then that evolved into a family concept unifying its proportion to the same X height for its members, resulting in a versatile type system. Therefore, Regular and Bold variables have low contrast between thick and thin strokes. Its upstream and downstream are extremely short, generating a suitable interline that clogs the vertical area. Its overall width equal to its X height, supports its tight spacing that compacts the horizontal area. Therefore, the variant with black caliber has plenty of contrast between thick and thin strokes. The light variable has a “blind” effect radiating light halos, ideal to propose hierarchies and combinations with orthogonal projection. In that sense, Leroy’s modular character reminds constructivist ideology merged with typographical variants suitable for graphic design with geometric look. To achieve this, I studied the softening of forms and counter blocks into a typographical system specially designed for composing useful information to attract attention. In that sense, the dingbats were obtained through a careful process of research and testings done with drawings that provided full and empty visual strategies that with the passage of time helped to forge the major decisions of a metamorphosis from industrial tools, birds and humans from pictogram mixing various genres.
  24. Gaz by Typodermic, $11.95
    Introducing Gaz, the square display typeface inspired by the gasoline station signs of the twentieth century. Sign painters used to refer to this type of lettering as “stovepipe”, due to its sharp angles and rounded corners. Gaz’s unique squareness exudes a vintage industrial charm, while still maintaining a friendly, almost organic feel. Gaz is available in seven weights and italics, giving you the flexibility to create a wide range of designs. But that’s not all. Gaz also comes in five greasy effect styles, perfect for creating that worn, grungy look. The ligatures contained in these styles are automatically substituted in most applications, projecting a more natural and authentic tone. Whether you’re creating a bold poster, an eye-catching logo, or a sleek website design, Gaz is the perfect choice for adding a touch of vintage industrial style. Try Gaz today and bring a piece of the past into your designs. Most Latin-based European writing systems are supported, including the following languages. Afaan Oromo, Afar, Afrikaans, Albanian, Alsatian, Aromanian, Aymara, Bashkir (Latin), Basque, Belarusian (Latin), Bemba, Bikol, Bosnian, Breton, Cape Verdean, Creole, Catalan, Cebuano, Chamorro, Chavacano, Chichewa, Crimean Tatar (Latin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dawan, Dholuo, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Filipino, Finnish, French, Frisian, Friulian, Gagauz (Latin), Galician, Ganda, Genoese, German, Greenlandic, Guadeloupean Creole, Haitian Creole, Hawaiian, Hiligaynon, Hungarian, Icelandic, Ilocano, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Jamaican, Kaqchikel, Karakalpak (Latin), Kashubian, Kikongo, Kinyarwanda, Kirundi, Kurdish (Latin), Latvian, Lithuanian, Lombard, Low Saxon, Luxembourgish, Maasai, Makhuwa, Malay, Maltese, Māori, Moldovan, Montenegrin, Ndebele, Neapolitan, Norwegian, Novial, Occitan, Ossetian (Latin), Papiamento, Piedmontese, Polish, Portuguese, Quechua, Rarotongan, Romanian, Romansh, Sami, Sango, Saramaccan, Sardinian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian (Latin), Shona, Sicilian, Silesian, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Sorbian, Sotho, Spanish, Swahili, Swazi, Swedish, Tagalog, Tahitian, Tetum, Tongan, Tshiluba, Tsonga, Tswana, Tumbuka, Turkish, Turkmen (Latin), Tuvaluan, Uzbek (Latin), Venetian, Vepsian, Võro, Walloon, Waray-Waray, Wayuu, Welsh, Wolof, Xhosa, Yapese, Zapotec Zulu and Zuni.
  25. Journal Sans New by ParaType, $40.00
    The Journal Sans typeface was developed in the Type Design Department of SPA of Printing Machinery in Moscow in 1940–1956 by the group of designers under Anatoly Schukin. It was based on Erbar Grotesk by Jacob Erbar and Metro Sans by William A. Dwiggins, the geometric sans-serifs of the 1920s with the pronounced industrial spirit. Journal Sans, Rublenaya (Sans-Serif), and Textbook typefaces were the main Soviet sans-serifs. So no wonder that it was digitized quite early, in the first half of 1990s. Until recently, Journal Sans consisted of three faces and retained all the problems of early digitization, such as inaccurate curves or side-bearings copied straight from metal-type version. The years of 2013 and 2014 made «irregular» geometric sans-serifs trendy, and that fact affected Journal Sans. In the old version curves were corrected and the character set was expanded by Olexa Volochay. In the new release, besides minor improvements, a substantial work has been carried out to make the old typeface work better in digital typography and contemporary design practice. Maria Selezeneva significantly worked over the design of some glyphs, expanded the character set, added some alternatives, completely changed the side-bearings and kerning. Also, the Journal Sans New has several new faces, such as true italic (the older font had slanted version for the italic), an Inline face based on the Bold, and the Display face with proportions close to the original Erbar Grotesk. The new version of Journal Sans, while keeping all peculiarities and the industrial spirit of 1920s-1950s, is indeed fully adapted to the modern digital reality. It can be useful either for bringing historical spirit into design or for modern and trendy typography, both in print and on screen. Designed by Maria Selezeneva with the participation of Alexandra Korolkova. Released by ParaType in 2014.
  26. Beton by Linotype, $29.99
    The Bauer Typefoundry first released the Beton family of types in 1936. Created by the German type designer Heinrich Jost, the present digital version of the Beton family consists of six slab serif typefaces. First developed during the early 1800s, by the 1930s slab serif faces had become one of many stock styles of type developed by foundries all over the world. Because of their distance from pen-drawn forms and their industrial appearance, they were seen as “modern” typefaces. (Their serifs kept them from being too modern.) The first slab serif typefaces were outgrowths of didone style text faces (e.g., Walbaum). As newspapers and advertising grew in importance in the western world (especially in “Wild West” America), type founders and printers began to create bigger, bolder typefaces, which would set large headlines apart from text, and each other. Through display tactics, businesses and industry could begin to visually differentiate their products from one another. This craze eventually led to the development of monster sized wood type, among other things. By the 20th Century, the typographic establishment had begun to tame, categorize, and codify 19th Century type styles. It was in the wake of this environment that Jost developed Beton. The Beton family is a type “family” in a pre-1950s sense of the word. Although six styles of type are available, only four of them fit in logical progression with each other (Beton Light, Beton Demi Bold, Beton Bold, and Beton Extra Bold). The other two members of the family, Beton Bold Condensed and Beton Bold Compressed, are more like distant cousins. They function better as single headlines to text set in Beton Light or Beton Demi Bold, of as companions to totally separate typefaces.
  27. Rexlia by Typodermic, $11.95
    Attention troops! If you’re looking for a typeface that embodies the strength and power of heavy duty industrial equipment and military weaponry, look no further than Rexlia! Inspired by the iconic Humvee, this industrial headline typeface features sleek and modern octagonal letterforms with rounded edges that perfectly capture the rugged, mechanical feel of battle-ready gear. With seven different weights to choose from, Rexlia gives you the flexibility to customize your message with precision and impact. Whether you’re looking to make a bold statement on your website or need a commanding header for your latest marketing campaign, Rexlia has you covered. So gear up and get ready to take your designs to the next level with Rexlia – the ultimate typeface for military-inspired graphic design! Most Latin-based European writing systems are supported, including the following languages. Afaan Oromo, Afar, Afrikaans, Albanian, Alsatian, Aromanian, Aymara, Bashkir (Latin), Basque, Belarusian (Latin), Bemba, Bikol, Bosnian, Breton, Cape Verdean, Creole, Catalan, Cebuano, Chamorro, Chavacano, Chichewa, Crimean Tatar (Latin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dawan, Dholuo, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Filipino, Finnish, French, Frisian, Friulian, Gagauz (Latin), Galician, Ganda, Genoese, German, Greenlandic, Guadeloupean Creole, Haitian Creole, Hawaiian, Hiligaynon, Hungarian, Icelandic, Ilocano, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Jamaican, Kaqchikel, Karakalpak (Latin), Kashubian, Kikongo, Kinyarwanda, Kirundi, Kurdish (Latin), Latvian, Lithuanian, Lombard, Low Saxon, Luxembourgish, Maasai, Makhuwa, Malay, Maltese, Māori, Moldovan, Montenegrin, Ndebele, Neapolitan, Norwegian, Novial, Occitan, Ossetian (Latin), Papiamento, Piedmontese, Polish, Portuguese, Quechua, Rarotongan, Romanian, Romansh, Sami, Sango, Saramaccan, Sardinian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian (Latin), Shona, Sicilian, Silesian, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Sorbian, Sotho, Spanish, Swahili, Swazi, Swedish, Tagalog, Tahitian, Tetum, Tongan, Tshiluba, Tsonga, Tswana, Tumbuka, Turkish, Turkmen (Latin), Tuvaluan, Uzbek (Latin), Venetian, Vepsian, Võro, Walloon, Waray-Waray, Wayuu, Welsh, Wolof, Xhosa, Yapese, Zapotec Zulu and Zuni.
  28. RQND Pro V.2 by Tondi Republk, $25.00
    Introducing RQND Pro 2 - The Futuristic and Industrial Sans Serif Font Welcome to the world of RQND Pro 2, a cutting-edge sans serif font designed to elevate your designs to new heights. With its industrial aesthetic and futuristic appeal, this font is the perfect choice for projects seeking a bold and contemporary look. Key Features: 1,201 Glyphs: RQND Pro 2 boasts an extensive character set, offering you a vast array of design possibilities. Supports 123 Languages: No matter where your audience is, this font ensures that your message is conveyed clearly and effectively. 20 Font Styles: With 5 font weights and 5 font widths, RQND Pro 2 offers 20 unique styles to suit every creative vision. Expanded to Extra Condensed: Whether you need a spacious layout or a compact design, this font delivers unmatched versatility. 18 OpenType Features: Unlock the full potential of RQND Pro 2 with various OpenType features, including small caps, alternate characters, standard numerals, circled numerals, fractions, and more. All Caps Font: Embrace the power of uppercase letters with this font, enhancing the impact of your message. Full Character Set: From standard numerals to punctuation marks, mathematical symbols to special characters, RQND Pro 2 has everything you need for seamless communication. Latin and Cyrillic Support: Perfect for international projects, this font provides complete support for both Latin and Cyrillic languages. RQND Pro 2 empowers designers, creatives, and typographers to explore new design territories. Its sleek and modern appearance makes it ideal for tech branding, UI design, editorial projects, advertisements, web design, and more. Discover a font that combines sophistication with contemporary flair. Elevate your designs with RQND Pro 2 and leave a lasting impression on your audience. Explore the full range of styles and unleash your creativity today.
  29. Amor Serif by Storm Type Foundry, $55.00
    Antique monumental incriptional majuscule, originally carved in stone, and sometimes called “Roman Capital”, is the origin of the upper-case part of our latin alphabet. Its narrowed form, derived from handwritten originals used between the first to third century A. D., served as the inspiration for the Mramor typeface, which I drew with ink on paper in 1988 under Jan Solpera’s leadership. After composing negative letters on a strip of film it was possible to use Mramor with the early phototypesetting devices. In 1994 with the help of Macintosh IIvi I added the lowercase letters and bolds, and issued this typeface as 14-font family. After some years of using Mramor for various purposes, I realized a need of modernization and humanizing its very fragile appearance, as well as removing numerous decorative and useless parts. Besides that, type design made a huge technical progress in past few years, so I was able to finish the remaining approximately 9600 glyphs contained in the present font system named Amor. It is already usual to combine sans and serif fonts within one family in order to distinguish (e. g. in a book) historical part from contemporary, a plain chapter from a special one, or, in quotations, to divide speaking persons. Sans-serif typefaces don't arise by simple removal of serifs; they have to be drawn completely separately, when occasionally many declined forms may be made, considered to the serifed original. Nevertheless, both parts of this type system appear consistent as for proportional, aesthetic and emotional atmosphere. Usage of type is often closely linked to its original inspiration, in this particular case with architecture and figurative sculpture. An inner “order” was also text setting in smaller sizes. A smooth scale of weights enriches the possibilities in designing of magazines, brochures, exposition catalogues and corporate identity. Economizing, but opened shape of characters is well legible and antique hint comes into play after longer reading.
  30. Supa Mega Fantastic by Nicky Laatz, $28.00
    Say hello to Supa Mega Fantastic! A casual font duo consisting of a hand-lettered inky script and a casual inked all caps font. The Script comes with a multitude of additional characters as Opentype Alternates, to add a fancy flair to your words as you require. All uppercase characters have a fancy alternate, and all lowercase letters have a selection of alternates for you to select from to suit your wording best. You can have it plain, or fancy shmancy :) The Script comes in two variants - Regular and slightly thinner. The slightly thinner version is best suited to lighter type on darker backgrounds, and the slightly thicker version is better suited to darker type on lighter backgrounds. Perfect for typography based branding, quotes, packaging design, greeting cards, recipe books, cosmetic brands, retro vintage badge design, creative headers and so much more.
  31. Sauna Pro by Underware, $50.00
    This sauna is as hot as you make it! Sauna Pro family comes for all sizes and ages, containing Regular, Bold and Black weights. Regular and Bold can be used together in various sizes in texts and headlines. Regular weight is supported with Small caps. Three Black styles are individual and specially made for display use (from magazine headlines to billboards). For every weight there are two italics. Basic Italic is formal and stable, Italic Swash is happy and fancy. Dingbats give a little extra next to the typographics. Dingbat fonts include 26 illustrations which can be used as plain black and white illustrations, or as multi-coloured illustrations. This style palette offers a flexible range for a wide variety of text and display typography. Sauna Pro has Underware’s world-dominating Latin Plus character set, supporting a total of 219 languages.
  32. Mirantz by insigne, $32.00
    Y’all ready for this? Now starting for Insigne: the new serif Mirantz. This rookie all-star plays a precise game every game, cutting at all the right angles to leave your reader impressed and ready to see more. You can always count on Mirantz to lead with solid mechanics and a clean style, but don’t be surprised when the face keeps it real with a little individual flare and creativity. This personal touch is nothing short of elegance in every appearance. So what makes us love this rookie above the other great players in the field? Contrast, for one. Mirantz brings more contrast to the game than most serifs out there. The serifs on this face have a crisp, sharp wedge that naturally draws the reader’s eye. You can’t help but fall in love with its clean, natural style. Mirantz also features a tall x-height and regular proportions that can play a number of positions on the page and still stay strong through the last half of the copy or even the final period. Mirantz is a solid powerhouse player, containing a complete set of small capitals and nine weights from thin to bold. It can play well both down low and up top with its subscripts and superscripts and can move your reader’s eye easily across the copy with its titling capitals, condensed and extended variants, and open style figures. With its options covering more than 72 Latin-based languages, look for this newcomer to have international success in the near future. It you haven’t set your draft picks for this next round of projects, think hard before passing up Mirantz. A capable serif like this one is a guaranteed asset to any team of fonts. Production assistance from Lucas Azevedo.
  33. Linotype BlackWhite by Linotype, $29.99
    BlackWhite is a titling typeface created by Ferdinay Duman in 1989 styled after the designs of the late 1980s. Like the name says, the figures emphasizes the play between dark and light. To this end, most inner spaces have been deleted. The constructed outlines of the robust figures draw the attention. In some weights, Duman split the figures horizontally, giving them a unique look. The technical and mechanical BlackWhite is perfect for generous headlines on fliers or in trendy magazines.
  34. Pina Colada by Larin Type Co, $12.00
    Pina Colada this beautiful handwritten font duo is a smooth script and playing sans, they perfectly combine and complement each other, they will bring their unique style to any design project and make it unique. It is as sweet as Pina Colada, fall in Love with its incredibly versatile and simple style and use it to create gorgeous wedding invitations, beautiful stationery, greeting cards, attractive social media messages and more! This font is easy to use, has OpenType features, and supports PUA encoding.
  35. Lina Serif by Caroline Herr, $18.00
    Lina Serif is an antiqua balanced between classic and modern. The design focused on the combination of flowing shapes and partially edged transitions, that give Lina her character. The font plays with a high line contrast in combination with dynamic shapes. This makes Lina a casually elegant display font. The terminals remind on floral shapes. Lina gives your design a human, natural touch. Lina Serif is available in 4 weights or as variable font with infinitely variable interpolation of weight.
  36. Tecna Dark Down Triangle BNF by Descarflex, $30.00
    The Tecn@ Dark&Light Triangle Background Nomenclature Font family is differentiated by the direction of the triangle tip in the 4 cardinal points. The family were designed to head, enumerate, indicate or highlight writings or design plans, for this reason, the characters are available only in capital letters and some signs or symbols that can serve such purposes. A triangle or empty character is included so that the user can use it overlaying any character of his choice or to be used alone.
  37. Kahlo Rounded by Latinotype, $25.00
    Kahlo Rounded is a new version that plays hipster style with a Latin flavor. It was inspired by the strong influence of Mexican decorative elements as you can see in the set of ornaments and patterns. Kahlo Rounded has four weights and italics, initial capital letters, some alternate characters and ending. It works well for magazine headlines, posters, logos, cosmetics packaging, advertising etc. Salud! Languages include: Basic Latin, Western European, Euro, Catalan, Baltic, Turkish, Central European, Romanian and Pan Africa Latin.
  38. Positive Feature by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    Positive Feature is a handmade, layered font. All layers come with contextual alternates, which means you have 4 different versions of each lowercase letter to play around with. What's cool about the two layer versions is that they mix in a lovely way! Try typing your text with layer 1, copy/paste layer 2 on top in a different color - perhaps even alter the transparency a bit...and all of a sudden a nice effect sees the light of day!
  39. Album Cover JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    An older typeface belonging to a family of sans serif fonts known as Grotesque (or Grotesk in the classic spelling) has been re-drawn by Jeff Levine and released as Album Cover JNL. The font's name is derived from the fact that this typeface was found on many long-playing record jackets during the 1950s and 1960s. To add a look closer to that of hand-set type, there are minute variants in some of the heights of the characters.
  40. HMS Gilbert by Fenotype, $35.00
    HMS Gilbert is a hand drawn collection of fonts designed to play perfectly together. HMS Gilbert contains seven different fonts, five of which also have texturised versions of them. In addition to fonts there is also Catchwords and Ornaments -sets of nice extras that help you to complete your designs with a coherent look. Most of the fonts are equipped with OpenType features such as Swash, Stylistic Alternates and Automatic Ligatures to help you to achieve more custom and “hand made” look.
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