3,174 search results (0.133 seconds)
  1. 1822 GLC Caslon Pro by GLC, $42.00
    This family was inspired by the well-known Caslon typeface created by William Caslon, the English font designer, who was, with John Baskerville, the progenitor of English Transitional typeface classification in the mid-18th century (See also our 1776 Independence). We were inspired by a Caslon style set used by an unknown Flemish printer from Bruges, in the beginning of 1800s, a little before the revival of Caslon style in the 1840s. Our font covers all Western, Eastern and Central European languages (including Celtic diacritics) and the Turkish alphabet, with a complete small-caps set in each of the two styles. (Please note: The complete character set is available only in TTF and OTF “Pro” version.)
  2. Chaucer by Volcano Type, $19.00
    Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) was a English poet, one of the most important figures in English literature.
  3. Neucha - Personal use only
  4. Philosopher - 100% free
  5. Dited - 100% free
  6. 20 db - Personal use only
  7. FFU Puzzle - Personal use only
  8. London - Personal use only
  9. Otscookie - Personal use only
  10. Molot - Personal use only
  11. Flexion Pro by Red Rooster Collection, $60.00
    Flexion developed out of design philosophy and ambigramatic artwork of John Langdon. Based on the contents in John’s book Wordplay, author Dan Brown hired John to create ambigrams for his forthcoming novel Angels & Demons. Mr. Brown was so impressed with his work he even named the main character Robert Langdon after John. After the success of Angels & Demons, Dan Brown wrote The Da Vinci Code. When the movie adaptation of that book was in the works, Dan suggested that John create titles for the movie based on ambigrams. John contacted Hal Taylor to create a font based on the lettering treatment to be used for the credits at the end of the movie. Unfortunately, it was decided that the film was running long and the original title concept was scrapped. By this time, Hal was well into developing a full type family, including small caps, alternate characters, lining and ranging figures. John was impressed with the way the design was turning out and decided that it had enough merit to be released as Flexion.
  12. CuprumFFU - Personal use only
  13. Metro - Personal use only
  14. East Anglia - 100% free
  15. Deutsche Zierschrift - Personal use only
  16. Offenbach Chancery - Unknown license
  17. Heidelbe-Normal - Unknown license
  18. Schwabacher - Personal use only
  19. Days - 100% free
  20. Comfortaa - 100% free
  21. Tikitype - Unknown license
  22. Anglican - Unknown license
  23. _a e i o u - Personal use only
  24. Furia & Venganza - Personal use only
  25. FlutedGermanica - Unknown license
  26. A Charming Font Leftleaning - Personal use only
  27. morevil - Unknown license
  28. New Gothic Textura - Personal use only
  29. Minster No 1 - Unknown license
  30. Bell by URW Type Foundry, $35.99
    Bell is a facsimile of the typeface cut originally for John Bell by Richard Austin in 1788~ using as a basis the matrices in the possession of Stephenson Blake & Co. Used in Bells newspaper~ The Oracle~ it was regarded by Stanley Morison as the first English Modern face. Although inspired by French punchcutters of the time~ with a vertical stress and fine hairlines~ Bell is less severe than the French models and is now classified as Transitional. Essentially a text face~ the Bell font family can be used for books~ magazines~ long articles~ etc.
  31. Curlmudgeon - Unknown license
  32. Sparrowhawk by Device, $29.00
    Sparrowhawk, a capitals only titling, evokes a suburban English gentility.
  33. Quest by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    Loosely based on Dorsey, an English typeface by Alan Dempsey.
  34. Curlmudgeon Hollow - Unknown license
  35. Curlmudgeon Italic - Unknown license
  36. Curlmudgeon Wideside - Unknown license
  37. Great Sage NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    This pseudo-Egyptian fantasy originally was named Karnac, and was unearthed in the pages of the 1888 American Type Founders Specimen Book. This version derives it name from a continuing character from Johnny Carson's stint on the Tonight show. Both versions of this font include the Unicode Latin 1252 and 1250 Central European character sets, with localization for Moldovan and Romanian.
  38. Celestial - Unknown license
  39. Simple Runes - Unknown license
  40. aaaiight! - Unknown license
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