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  1. Opium by Max Prive, $39.00
    Opium — a humanist display typeface with futuristic flared lines inspired by the anatomy of opium flowers. Designed using the herbarium specimens of Papaver somniferum.
  2. Bludgeon by Monotype, $29.99
    The Bludgeon font was designed by Jon H. Clinch. The lively expressive and inky splashing letterforms of the Bludgeon font have a splattered appearance.
  3. Tatiana by ParaType, $30.00
    Designed at ParaType in 1995 by Tagir Safayev. Based on informal handwriting. Formerly known as PT Tagir. For use in advertising and display typography.
  4. Ramshackle JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Ramshackle JNL was modeled from a 1940s lettering stencil and takes its place amongst the many vintage stencil font designs redrawn by Jeff Levine.
  5. Fleuron Ornaments by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Fleuron Ornaments was inspired by old world designs and patterns. There is an assortment of 47 ornaments all located under the character set keys.
  6. Baobab by Artcity, $8.00
    Super heavy font inspired by the wide trunk of African trees known as baobabs, available in two versatile styles, with sharp, and rounded corners.
  7. Laughin by GroupType, $19.00
    Designed by Andrew Smith this bouncy and playful headline font does not take itself seriously. Perfect for headlines, children's books or on the web.
  8. Vermouth by Resistenza, $39.00
    Vermouth is a new Layered font family inspired by Italian signs of the 60s You can create awesome colorful display text overlapping some styles.
  9. Elegant Ornaments by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Elegant Ornaments was inspired by typographic ornaments from historic sources. There is an assortment of 47 ornaments all located under the character set keys.
  10. Witches Crow by Forberas Club, $16.00
    Witches Crow is a Halloween Treat by our team. It's perfectly matches for any invitation type, and children theme, cartoon, poster, display, and comics.
  11. Thistle Borders by Wiescher Design, $19.50
    Thistle Borders are yet another "trouvaille". Great borders made out of thistles, teasles and flowers from the meadows of Victorian times by Gert Wiescher
  12. Manbokun by ahweproject, $10.00
    Introducing Manbokun – a typeface that has a unique letterform inspired by Japanese kanji typography. Suitable for headlines, titles, logos, logotypes, posters, brochures, and more!
  13. PIXymbols ADA Signs by Page Studio Graphics, $40.00
    Signage mandated by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, plus additional accessibility signs, in both font and EPS format in the same package.
  14. Plant Assortment by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Plant Assortment was inspired by plant renderings from historic sources. This font contains an assortment of 47 plants located under the character set keys.
  15. Blippo by Bitstream, $29.99
    Another variant of Bayer’s Universal Alphabet, resembling ITC Bauhaus in design, ITC Ronda in proportion and fit, prepared by FotoStar in the mid 1970s.
  16. Ritmo by Monotype, $29.99
    Designed by Aldo Novarese and released in 1955, the Ritmo Bold font has broad, tapered strokes that have been drawn with a square nib.
  17. Modest Ornaments by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Modest Ornaments was inspired by simple typographic ornaments from historic sources. There is an assortment of 47 ornaments located under the character set keys.
  18. Decomic Oblique by Volcano Type, $19.00
    Decomic Oblique is one of the handmade fonts of illustrator Paul Hoppe who lives in New York. The font was digitized by Boris Kahl.
  19. Rody by Discourse Type, $5.00
    Rody is the inspired by early russian typographic designs and works well with Lazar . It comes with small caps and a range of ligatures.
  20. Scholle by Tour De Force, $25.00
    Characterized as inline display font family with childish manners, Scholle offers positive (Shadow) and negative (Regular) weights grouped by bouncing rhythm of its characters.
  21. HildiniaDonut by JOEBOB graphics, $-
    HildiniaDonut is the second font designed by Hilde Rikken (age 10). I think a mouse took a little bite out of all the characters...
  22. AringtonDemo - Personal use only
  23. TT Tsars by TypeType, $39.00
    TT Tsars useful links: Specimen | Graphic presentation | Customization options The TT Tsars font family is a collection of serif display titling fonts that are stylized to resemble the fonts of the beginning, the middle and the end of the XVIII century. The project is based on title fonts, that is, the fonts that were used to design book title pages. The idea for the project TT Tsars was born after a small study of the historical development of the Cyrillic type and is also based on Abram Shchitsgal’s book "Russian Civil Type". At the very beginning of the project, we had developed a basic universal skeleton for the forms of all characters in all subfamilies of the family, and later on, we added styles, visual features, artifacts and other nuances typical of the given period onto the skeleton. Yes, from the historical accuracy point of view it might be that such an approach is not always justified, but we have achieved our goal and as a result, we have created perfectly combinable serifs that can be used to style an inscription for a certain time period. The TT Tsars font family consists of 20 fonts: 5 separate subfamilies, each of which consists of 4 fonts. Each font contains 580 glyphs, except for the TT Tsars E subfamily, in which each font consists of 464 characters. Instead of lowercase characters in the typeface, small capitals are used, which also suggests that the typeface is rather a display than text one. In TT Tsars you can find a large number of ligatures (for Latin and Cyrillic alphabets), arrows and many useful OpenType features, such as: frac, ordn, sinf, sups, numr, dnom, case, onum, tnum, pnum, lnum, salt (ss01), dlig. Time-related characteristics of the subfamilies are distributed as follows: • TT Tsars A—the beginning of the 18th century (Latin and Cyrillic) • TT Tsars B—the beginning of the 18th century (Latin and Cyrillic) • TT Tsars C—the middle of the 18th century (Latin and Cyrillic) • TT Tsars D—the end of the 18th century (Latin and Cyrillic) • TT Tsars E—conditionally the beginning of the 18th century (only Latin) TT Tsars A and TT Tsars B families (both the beginning of the 18th century) have different starting points: for TT Tsars A it is Latin, for TT Tsars B it is Cyrillic. The development of the TT Tsars A family began in Latin, the font is based on the royal serif Romain du Roi. The Cyrillic alphabet is harmoniously matched to the Latin. The development of the TT Tsars B family began in Cyrillic, which is based on a Russian civil type. Characteristic elements are the curved one-sided serifs of triangular characters (A, X, Y), drops appear in the letter ?, the middle strokes ? and P are adjacent to the main stroke. Latin was drawn to pair with Cyrillic. It is still based on the royal serif, but somewhat changed: the letters B and P are closed and the upper bar of the letter A rose. This was done for the visual combination of Cyrillic and Latin and at the same time to make a distinction between TT Tsars A and TT Tsars B. TT Tsars C is now the middle of the 18th century. Cyrillic alphabet itself did not stand still and evolved, and by the middle of the 18th century, its forms have changed and become to look the way they are shown in this font family. Latin forms are following the Cyrillic. The figures are also slightly modified and adapted to the type design. In TT Tsars C, Cyrillic and Latin characters are created in parallel. A distinctive feature of the Cyrillic alphabet in TT Tsars C is the residual influence of the flat pen. This is noticeable in such signs as ?, ?, K. The shape of the letters ?, ?, ?, ? is very characteristic of the period. In the Latin alphabet, a characteristic leg appears at the letter R. For both languages, there is a typical C characterized by an upper serif and the appearance of large, even somewhat bolding serifs on horizontals (T, E, ?, L). TT Tsars D is already the end of the 18th century when with the development of printing, the forms of some Cyrillic characters had changed and turned into new skeletons of letters that we transposed into Latin. The figures were also stylized. In this font, both Cyrillic and Latin are stylistically executed with different serifs and are thus logically separated. The end of the century is characterized by the reduction of decorative elements. Straight, blueprint-like legs of the letters ?, R, K, ?. Serifs are very pronounced and triangular. E and ? are one-sided on the middle horizontal line. A very characteristic C with two serifs appears in the Latin alphabet. TT Tsars E is a steampunk fantasy typeface, its theme is a Latinized Russian ?ivil type (also referred to as Grazhdansky type which emerged after Peter the Great’s language reform), which includes only the Latin alphabet. There is no historical analog to this typeface, it is exclusively our reflections on the topic of what would have happened if the civil font had developed further and received a Latin counterpart. We imagined such a situation in which the civil type was exported to Europe and began to live its own life.
  24. Ronduit Capitals Light - Personal use only
  25. Syntha - Personal use only
  26. Syntha - Personal use only
  27. Neues Bauen - Unknown license
  28. pks-masry - 100% free
  29. Mayonaise - Personal use only
  30. 2 Lines - Personal use only
  31. Tin Doghouse - Unknown license
  32. Kleist-Fraktur Zierbuchstaben - Personal use only
  33. Prociono - 100% free
  34. Tin Birdhouse - Unknown license
  35. Silvercrush by IKIIKOWRK, $17.00
    Introducing SILVERCRUSH Typeface, created by ikiiko. A rough letters with expressive strokes and have a strong character for street art typeface. Silvercrush typeface is perfect for an poster event, urban brand, hipster magazine, fashion stuff, quotes, and all the design elements that require a street vibes. What's included? Uppercase & Lowercase Number & Punctuation Bonus Alternates Multilingual Support Enjoy our font and if you have any questions, you can contact us by email : ikiikowrk@gmail.com
  36. Sempione by CAST, $45.00
    Sempione is a spanking new sanserif family suitable for publishing and advertising that looks great in small and large sizes. Its two main styles, Grotesk and Modern, are inspired by the early grots and 20th-century sanserifs. They come in seven weights with the matching italics, Grotesk Cursive and Modern Slanted. The considerable variety of letterforms and styles, along with some peculiar stylistic sets, will be appreciated by designers looking for more freedom of choice.
  37. Copal by Adobe, $29.00
    Inspired by the carvings on meso-American monuments, David Lemon of Adobe's type staff created Copal. It is named after a resin that was burned as incense by ancient cultures and which is used today as a binding agent in printer inks and varnishes. The fonts in Copal can be used individually or combined to achieve chromatic effects. Try the decorated letters in headlines when you are in need of a burst of primitive energy.
  38. Utopia by Adobe, $29.00
    Utopia, created by Robert Slimbach and presented by Adobe in 1992, was intended to solve a number of typographic problems related to office correspondence. This demanded versatility, so Slimbach created a font family with cuts for text, for titles, extra bold for headlines, small caps, all caps with numerals, old face numerals, fractions, ligatures and scientific markings. Not just its forms, but also its aesthetics make the balanced, elegant Utopia suitable for any use.
  39. Softmachine by Shinntype, $39.00
    Everything about Softmachine—the rounded terminals, the bold weight, the letter forms and proportions—is designed with one objective: to create a uniform distance between letter strokes, in and between characters. This is achieved by the shape, spacing and kerning of letters, and by using contextual alternates to control adjacent glyph combinations. The effect translates, in the Outline font, into an overlapping outline of remarkably even thickness. Also included: an alternate stylistic set.
  40. Hounslow by Device, $29.00
    Hounslow is closely related to Acton in structure, and takes the latter’s simple block construction into the third dimension. Three variants – open, solid and shadow – can be freely mixed in one setting for effect. Originally designed solely in the italic variant, an upright was added by request. A further unreleased set with a range of line weights was later commissioned by the New York Times magazine, and used extensively in their television supplement.
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