4,042 search results (0.024 seconds)
  1. KR Pilgrim - Unknown license
  2. Cornel - Unknown license
  3. Padstow Demo - Unknown license
  4. KR In The Spotlight! - Unknown license
  5. Piss off the Professor - Unknown license
  6. Alecto Demo - Unknown license
  7. Gaheris Demo - Unknown license
  8. Nirvana - Unknown license
  9. Even Badder Mofo - Unknown license
  10. Ekberg Demo - Unknown license
  11. 101! Your FontZ Are Served - Unknown license
  12. Gohan - Unknown license
  13. Relieftechnik - Unknown license
  14. KR Bite Your Lip! - Unknown license
  15. Creature - Unknown license
  16. KR First Years Dings - Unknown license
  17. KR A Hunting We Go - Unknown license
  18. Ol' 54 - Unknown license
  19. PT Chocolate Dip - Unknown license
  20. GF Ordner Normal - Unknown license
  21. Vinyl Smooth BV - Unknown license
  22. Z Dabble Down - Unknown license
  23. Handmedown - Unknown license
  24. GF Ordner Inverted - Unknown license
  25. KR Kick Up Your Heels - Unknown license
  26. Evadare Demo - Unknown license
  27. FS Conrad by Fontsmith, $50.00
    Art into type In 2008, Fontsmith were approached by their friend, Jon Scott, to investigate whether a typeface could assume the aesthetic of one artist’s body of work. Jon’s not-for-profit charity, Measure, was organising an event for the artist, Conrad Shawcross, whose giant mechanical installation, entitled Chord, was going on public display in the long-disused Kingsway tram tunnel in Holborn. Chord explores the way we perceive time, as either a line or a cycle. Two enormous machines with dozens of rotating arms and moving in opposite directions, weave rope with almost infinite slowness. An unusual brief Phil Garnham visited Conrad in his Hackney studio to get a feel for his work and ideas. “Conrad is a very clever and philosophical guy. He struggled to see how typeface design had any relevance to him and his art. This was going to be a challenge.” The artist presented the type designer with a pile of rope and a huge diagram of sketches and mathematical workings. “This was, in essence, my brief.” Phil developed three concepts, the simplest of which ticked all the boxes. “The idea of the strokes in the letterforms appearing and ending at peaks or points of origin fitted perfectly with Conrad’s idea of time occurring and ending at two ends of the sculpture.” Two versions Phil planned modules for two versions of the typeface: one with five lines in the letterforms and one with seven. He then drew the modules on-screen and twisted and turned them to build the machine that is FS Conrad. “This is not a simple headline typeface,” says Phil. “It’s not a rigid structure. It has varying character widths, and it’s informed by real typographic insight and proportions so that it actually works as piece of functioning, harmonious type.”
  28. Evil Dead - Unknown license
  29. Fortuna Dot - Unknown license
  30. Santa's Hat - Personal use only
  31. Lymphatic - Unknown license
  32. Nord - 100% free
  33. sideburnBob - Unknown license
  34. Hendrix Demo - Unknown license
  35. Hesperides Demo - Unknown license
  36. The Font With No Name - Unknown license
  37. Butterfield Demo - Unknown license
  38. Ithuriel Demo - Unknown license
  39. Chang and Eng - Unknown license
  40. Albemarle Demo - Unknown license
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