Jacob, you love him or you hate him... either way, his handwriting rocks! LD Jacob is great for journaling, adorning scrapbook pages, or adding that final touch to your project.
LD Genial is a fun font with various letters toggled up or down, and a hand written feel. It's sure to quickly become a favorite in your creative paper crafting tool set.
Your grade school teacher would be proud of this smooth flowing handwriting font. Perfect for any formal invitation, newsletter, scrapbook layout, etc.
This font looks as if it was engraved on a plaque. Each letter has a top and bottom line. When you put the ending parts using the [ and ] keys, it forms a beautiful plaque. It is great for a more formal title.
Bring an old west flavor to your lettering projects. The block letters of this "Wanted" font are reminiscent of western posters and signs. It's a fun choice for cowboy scrapbook pages and cards.
This old fashion font looks like it belongs on a saloon sign. If you've got old west style photos, finish up your scrapbook page with title and journaling done in this cool font. It's perfect for lettering on western themed invitations, newsletters, sign, flyers, even menus.
LD Baskin Sundae is as cute as it can be, and versatile too! Use this font to make perfectly designed layouts ...you know, you can complete your paper or scrapbooking creation in minutes!
LD Cursive Flourish is the ultimate in casual elegance. This handwritten script comes complete with fancy flowing flourishes. Intricate and so unique! See LD Cursive for this font without flourishes.
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!
Use LD Funky Scribble wherever you'd like to lighten the mood. It's handwritten look is so great for journaling, newsletters, etc. Have fun with Funky Scribble!
Hot Betty combines clean, modern lines with the fun of mixing it up a bit. Who says you can't substitute an uppercase for a lowercase? or vice versa? Go ahead...have some fun!