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  1. Letterpress Text by Chris Costello, $22.75
    This font is based on the popular and timeless Caslon design and was carefully digitized from the pages of an early 19th century book. I was excited to see some unique design treatments of characters such as the lower case italic 'p', the question mark, and various swash caps that I had never seen before. During the conversion process, I made sure to preserve the worn look of faded ink on old paper by maintaining a subtle level of decay and opacity with each character. For missing characters not found in the book, I created new characters that were faithful to the style of the rest of the family. Used as a text font, The Letterpress Text Family successfully reproduces the appearance of old letterpress lithography.
  2. beachsunshine - Personal use only
  3. Cheri Liney - Personal use only
  4. KG Always A Good Time - Personal use only
  5. Snoopy - Unknown license
  6. tobminx - Personal use only
  7. Aracne Ultra Condensed Regular - Personal use only
  8. Janda Happy Day - Personal use only
  9. You Wish You Were a Shirley - Unknown license
  10. Evanescent - Unknown license
  11. HWT Roman Extended Fatface by Hamilton Wood Type Collection, $24.95
    The design of the first "Fat Face" is credited to Robert Thorne just after 1800 in England. It is considered to be the first type style designed specifically for display or jobbing, rather than for book work. The first instance of Fat Face in wood type is found in the first wood type specimen book ever produced: Darius Wells, Letter Cutter 1828. This style was produced by all early wood type manufacturers. The style is derived from the high contrast, thick and thin Modern style of Bodoni and Didot developed only decades previously. The extended variation makes the face even more of a display type and not at all suitable for text. This type of display type was used to compete with the new Lithographic process which allowed for the development of the poster as an artform unto itself. This new digitization by Jim Lyles most closely follows the Wm Page cut. The crisp outlines hold up at the largest point sizes you can imagine. This font contains a full CE character set.
  12. RoglianoPro by Untype, $25.00
    RoglianoPro is a 70-font humanist slab serif super family (7 weights on 5 styles each plus matching italics) that while maintaining a strong and direct backbone, sustains a warm undertone that nods to the lettering and lithographic posters of the Victorian era when you take into account its multiple stylistic alternates, borders and decorative ornaments. Extremely legible for small text as well as finely-detailed enough to be very attractive when used in large settings, RoglianoPro is a versatile typeface that offers a wide range of voices that can move from mechanical to humanistic with absolute ease, and perform efficiently from branding to editorial design. Its Slab serif letterforms are strong, but gregarious and approachable – it’s friendly, but its solid presence is still a typographic force to be reckoned with. Rogliano includes a large set of over 900 glyphs, support for more than 200 latin script languages, a full complement of ligatures, small caps, swashes, William Morris-influenced borders and many Opentype features. In summary, a great addition to any multi-purpose type library.
  13. Neospace Exp - Personal use only
  14. Jotting - Unknown license
  15. Garbancera by Rodrigo Navarro Bolado, $30.00
    Gothic fraktur inspired design, I wanted to resemble old german calligraphy but making it very geometric, so I used an isometric reticle during sketching. This is a display font, created for BIG sizes, non textual. I recommend it for branding, poster, logos or titles. Its very experimental -- it exists within the limits of legible and illegible reading. I choose the name “Garbancera” because gothic calligraphy has issues that are linked with dark, gloomy, lugubrious things or fear feelings, culturally in Mexico. I related this with death and for mexicans, death is something we celebrate and give us joy and happiness, annoying, the most representative Mexican characters, one of those is “La Calavera Garbancera” or better known as “La Catrina”, a clothes skeleton with only a hat. It was drawn this way to make a critic to all Mexicans at that time, that were poor but they wanted to represent a high lifestyle, “those that where to the bones, but with a French hat with ostrich feathers”. La Catrina was created by José Guadalupe Posada, a Mexican lithographer but also a newspaper illustrator. I think this is a beautiful font that can lead to great results, just use it wisely.
  16. Butterflies - Unknown license
  17. Lightmorning - Unknown license
  18. KG Keep Your Head Up - Personal use only
  19. Aircloud - Personal use only
  20. Pecot - Unknown license
  21. Miso - 100% free
  22. Creepygirl - Unknown license
  23. manu - Unknown license
  24. SF Beaverton - Unknown license
  25. SF Beaverton SC - Unknown license
  26. Black Eye Nue - Unknown license
  27. Univox - Unknown license
  28. Giro - 100% free
  29. Trapped - Unknown license
  30. Janda Scrapgirl Dots - Personal use only
  31. XPCrazy - Unknown license
  32. Arggh @$*# Lite - Unknown license
  33. Presstape Lite - Personal use only
  34. Saginaw - Unknown license
  35. Peex - Unknown license
  36. Bellerose - Unknown license
  37. Arbeka - Unknown license
  38. Burning - Unknown license
  39. Omellons - Unknown license
  40. Scrapes - Unknown license
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