10,000 search results (0.084 seconds)
  1. Foundry Origin by The Foundry, $90.00
    Foundry Origin has an elemental quality hinting at its ‘Egyptian’ roots. Developed out of the desire to create a serif typeface with a difference, Foundry Origin's elegant design and versatile family of weights, with lyrical cursive italic, generous x-height and classical proportions, make it ideal for editorial and information design. A quiet design with a big presence, tipped to become a modern classic.
  2. Neubau Grotesque by TipografiaRamis, $29.00
    Neubau Grotesque is an upright italics variation of Neubau Sans and is built in three weights. The main difference of this typeface is that it presents a softer and more human look (less techno), while retaining the condensed geometric structure of its counterpart. Neubau Grotesque is recommended for use as a display font, and has been generated in a single OpenType format with Western CP1252 character set..
  3. Magica by K-Type, $20.00
    MAGICA is a book and display face that is both distinctive and legible – clear letterforms and a generous x-height make Magica a good choice for text or titles. The typeface has elegantly chamfered serifs and a confident, vivacious character that is equally suited to formal and informal usage. Magica is available in three weights – Regular, Medium and Bold – each supplied with a free italic.
  4. FeggoliteMono by Ingrimayne Type, $6.95
    FeggoliteMono is a decorative, monospaced typeface family with a small x-height and long descenders. Two styles (plain and bold but renamed in 2020 as light and regular) were created in 1994 and revised in 2010. In 2020 a bolder bold was added along with italics versions for each of the three weights. The design was an attempt to create a decorative typewriter font.
  5. Senhan by Studio Principle Type, $17.00
    A timeless serif with a distinctly contemporary attitude. The Senhan font family makes a statement with confidence. Defined by sexy, sharp, angular contours when used in headline and display scenarios, this family of 5 weights and italics is a real eye-catcher. But with a tall’ish x-height for legibility, and a medium contrast, Senhan is a workhorse at small sizes and in lengthy blocks of copy.
  6. Constellation Pro by Tilde, $39.75
    Constellation started with a simple geometric concept in the manner of Art Deco which gradually developed to a complete typeface, both upright and italic, total of seven weights. The concept allowed the font to be designed from Ultra Light in both very light and quite black styles. This Pro font is packed with all European and Cyrillic alphabets, small caps, variable figure sets and features .
  7. Intrinseca by AVP, $29.00
    With only a suggestion of the serifs remaining, Intrinseca is modelled on traditional serif letterforms but with low-contrast stroke widths and a generous x-height. The family has a clean appearance and excellent readability. Six weights plus italics, small caps and extended language support make Intrinseca ideal for magazines, books and web – wherever distinctive headings and a variety of text options are required.
  8. Fidel by Latinotype, $25.00
    Fidel Black Essential is a heavily weighted, condensed, sans-serif typeface with a large x-height. Ideal for short, high-impact headlines, its design is inspired by Russian Constructivism and old Cuban communist posters. Variants include Fidel Black, Fidel Black Italic and Fidel Black Stencil. Fidel Black Essential is an excellent choice for headlines, subheadings, posters and logotypes. Languages: Basic Latin, Euro, Mac OS Roman.
  9. Movida by ROHH, $39.00
    Movida™ is a 101-font mega family - modern, spurless, with geometric flat-sided nature. Its versatile character and huge choice of styles let it serve as a charismatic display typeface as well as clean contemporary tool for setting paragraph text. Its dynamic personality fits perfectly to such industries as sports, gaming, technology, streetwear, automotive. Movida works great for logo design & branding, magazine editorial use, web design, user interfaces and mobile applications. Movida features a super-flexible 3-axis variable font allowing fluent adjustments to width, weight and italic angle. This single font contains all the styles and features of the whole mega family. Main features: 5 widths (Narrow, Condensed, Normal, Expanded, Wide) 10 weights for each width (from Hairline to Black) + 10 corresponding italic styles 1 variable font (3 axes: weight, width, italic angle) modern, slick & sharp spurless design large x-height improving legibility in small sizes flattened oval shapes, adding vertical rhythm and elegance to narrow styles extended latin language support OpenType features (case sensitive forms, standard and discretionary ligatures, stylistic sets, contextual alternates, lining, oldstyle and tabular figures, slashed zero, fractions, superscript and subscript, ordinals, currencies and symbols)
  10. Neue Reman Gt by Propertype, $49.00
    Neue Reman Grotesk It has 70 font styles in total family + 1 Variable. This typeface is designed to be used very practically. Each style can be changed easily. Has a variety of alternative letters that can be selected to make typography designs more attractive. The family comes in 7 weights with matching italics + Variable Font File and includes multilingual latin pro characters. 1. Extra Light - Condensed - Expanded - Slanted Italic 2. Light - Condensed - Expanded - Slanted Italic 3. Regular - Condensed - Expanded - Slanted Italic 4. Medium - Condensed - Expanded - Slanted Italic 5. Semi Bold - Condensed - Expanded - Slanted Italic 6. Bold - Condensed - Expanded - Slanted Italic 7. Heavy - Condensed - Expanded - Slanted Italic Neue Reman Grotesk contains 750 glyphs, a Latin Pro Fonts. This is the second version of Neue Reman Family. Complete with Stylistic Alternates, Stylistic Set, Caps Swashes Letter, Standard Ligatures, Discretionary Ligatures, Tabular Figures, Proportional Figures, Superscript, Subscript, Scientific Inferiors, Fractions, Ordinals, Arrows and a variety of figures and fractions. Neue Reman typeface suitable to use in multipurpose projects such as on websites, systems, printing, embedding, servers, screens, display, digital-ads, branding, logos, titles, headlines, teks, and everything else. Need something else? Get in touch with us on propertype.foundry@gmail.com Thank you
  11. FS Split Sans by Fontsmith, $80.00
    Quirky and irregular FS Split is no ordinary typeface. Its irregular proportions make it unique, with round letters appearing wide, and straight letters narrow. Other quirks include its eclectic crossbars – the uppercase ‘A’ has an unusually low bar, while the bar on ‘G’ is particularly long. The uppercase has many interesting features in fact, including large counters, closed terminals on certain letters like ‘J’, and a cap-height that lines up with ascenders. The lowercase also holds surprises – the dots on ‘i’ and ‘j’ are unusually large, and some characters, such as ‘g’, feature double-storey counters. An extreme but stylish italic The italic versions of FS Split Sans and Serif are particularly striking. While similar in style to their upright, Roman versions, they take on a larger-than-usual 18-degree angle, making the forward-slant more dramatic. Although the main purpose of any italic is to help words and phrases stand out, this unique execution helps to make the italic variants of FS Split stylish fonts in their own right – they would work brilliantly on magazine covers, in titles and headlines, pull quotes, and even used commercially in logos and corporate branding. Serif and sans: a split personality FS Split Sans and Serif have their differences but also their similarities, contrasting and complementing each other perfectly. This ‘love hate’ relationship inspired the name of the typeface family, and means the two variants provide a versatile, typographic palette for use in graphics and branding. While its proportions are similar to the sans, the serif has a bigger contrast between its weights of bold, regular and light, bracketed serifs, and different styles of terminals, some being straight and others ball-shaped. FS Split Sans has more subtlety and simplicity, with a smaller weight contrast, less flamboyant terminals, and more consistent counter sizes. The two variants are distinct yet alike, so can be used successfully either in isolation or together.
  12. FS Split Serif by Fontsmith, $80.00
    Quirky and irregular FS Split is no ordinary typeface. Its irregular proportions make it unique, with round letters appearing wide, and straight letters narrow. Other quirks include its eclectic crossbars – the uppercase ‘A’ has an unusually low bar, while the bar on ‘G’ is particularly long. The uppercase has many interesting features in fact, including large counters, closed terminals on certain letters like ‘J’, and a cap-height that lines up with ascenders. The lowercase also holds surprises – the dots on ‘i’ and ‘j’ are unusually large, and some characters, such as ‘g’, feature double-storey counters. An extreme but stylish italic The italic versions of FS Split Sans and Serif are particularly striking. While similar in style to their upright, Roman versions, they take on a larger-than-usual 18-degree angle, making the forward-slant more dramatic. Although the main purpose of any italic is to help words and phrases stand out, this unique execution helps to make the italic variants of FS Split stylish fonts in their own right – they would work brilliantly on magazine covers, in titles and headlines, pull quotes, and even used commercially in logos and corporate branding. Serif and sans: a split personality FS Split Sans and Serif have their differences but also their similarities, contrasting and complementing each other perfectly. This ‘love hate’ relationship inspired the name of the typeface family, and means the two variants provide a versatile, typographic palette for use in graphics and branding. While its proportions are similar to the sans, the serif has a bigger contrast between its weights of bold, regular and light, bracketed serifs, and different styles of terminals, some being straight and others ball-shaped. FS Split Sans has more subtlety and simplicity, with a smaller weight contrast, less flamboyant terminals, and more consistent counter sizes. The two variants are distinct yet alike, so can be used successfully either in isolation or together.
  13. Slippery by Eko Bimantara, $22.00
    Slippery is a warm serif that's formed with the aim of readability. The letterforms is filled with soft edges, spacious counters, moderate x-height, and slippery italics.
  14. Astoria Sans by Alan Meeks, $45.00
    The Sans serif companion to Astoria. Based heavily on Gill especially in the mid weights and with a consistant series of condensed weights. Designed specifically as a text face it still works very well as a headline font. There are 6 weights with accompanying Italics.
  15. Rothorn by ROHH, $35.00
    Rothorn™ is a modern, minimalist geometric sans with its own personality derived for subtle design details, such as cut diagonal corners, pointed t, very small contrast and closed aperture. The letterforms give the typeface a lot of charisma, keeping a very minimal, clear and well balanced look at the same time. Its powerful and sharp shapes together with the variety of weights from Hairline to Black make it a perfect choice for headlines and branding. Generous x-height, careful spacing and distribution of weights give it a color and legibility great for long paragraphs of text. Rothorn is a geometric member of a large type system including such families as Montreux Grotesk (Swiss-style grotesk), Lütschine (narrow headline family) and Conthey (narrow headline unicase family). The Rothorn family consists of 10 weights with corresponding italic styles, giving a total of 20 styles. Italic styles were hand drawn to get sharp and fine letter shapes. It includes a 2-axis variable font letting you adjust the weight and italic slant to your exact needs. The family has extended latin language support, as well as broad number of OpenType features, such as, case sensitive forms, ligatures, contextual alternates, lining, oldstyle, tabular and circled figures, slashed zero, fractions, superscript and subscript, ordinals, currencies and symbols.
  16. Hypop by Factory738, $15.00
    HYPOP is a strong and condensed sans serif font family with a nostalgic vibe. Combining retro and minimalist elements resulted in an elegant design. The different weights give you a lot of options when it comes to choosing the right typographic color for your project. 5 Weights (Thin, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Black) 2 Styles (Regular and Italic) Basic Latin A-Z and a-z Numerals & Punctuation Stylistic Ligatures glyphs Multilingual Support for ä ö ü Ä Ö Ü ... Free updates and feature additions Thanks for looking, and I hope you enjoy it.
  17. Le Blanc by Factory738, $15.00
    Le Blanc is a strong and condensed sans serif font family with a retro vibe. Combining vintage and minimalist elements resulted in an elegant design. The different weights give you a lot of options when it comes to choosing the right typographic color for your project. 5 Weights (Thin, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Black) 2 Styles (Regular and Italic) Basic Latin A-Z and a-z Numerals & Punctuation Stylistic Ligatures glyphs Multilingual Support for ä ö ü Ä Ö Ü ... Free updates and feature additions Thanks for looking, and I hope you enjoy it.
  18. Motorway by K-Type, $20.00
    MOTORWAY is the companion typeface to TRANSPORT, the British road sign lettering. The Motorway alphabet was created for the route numbers on motorway signage, and is taller and narrower than the accompanying place names and distances which are printed in Transport. However, for Motorway Jock Kinneir and Margaret Calvert created only the numbers 0 to 9, the capitals A, B, E, M, N, S and W, ampersand, slash, parentheses and a comma. So, although the lettering made its first appearance on the Preston bypass in 1958, K-Type Motorway is the first complete typeface and contains all upper and lower case letters, plus a full complement of punctuation, symbols and Latin Extended-A accented characters. As with the Transport alphabet the starting point was Akzidenz Grotesk, Motorway taking inspiration from condensed versions. Changes were mainly driven by a quest for legibility, resulting in some reduced contrast between horizontal and vertical strokes, and Gill-esque straight diagonal limbs on the 6 and 9, and high vertex for the M. Kinneir and Calvert designed the limited range of characters in two weights; a SemiBold 'Permanent' weight for use as white letters on blue motorway signs, and a Bold 'Temporary' weight for heavier black letters on yellow non-permanent signage. In addition to creating full fonts in both original weights, the K-Type family adds a new Regular weight, plus a set of italics, completing a highly usable condensed typeface which, while rooted in history, is fully functional for both print and web usage. The K-Type fonts are spaced and kerned normally, simply increase the tracking to recapture the generous spacing of motorway signage.
  19. Yassitf by Ingrimayne Type, $6.00
    Yet another san serif typeface, Yassitf is a generic sans, a font meant to blend in rather than stand out. It has little contrast and is almost monoline. It includes three widths: condensed, narrow, and regular. The widths have four to six weights: ultra thin, thin, light, plain, bold, and extra bold. Further, each width and weight combination has both upright and italics styles. The thirty fonts in the family contain several open-type features, including both proportional and tabular (monospaced) numbers.
  20. Lichtspiele by Typocalypse, $29.00
    Cinemas from the early 20th century are called “Lichtspiele” in Germany. “Lichtspiele” transports you back to a time where neon lights and marquee letters decorated cinema façades. Of the five styles, three have two versions of italics — the left-leaning italic evokes looking up from lower-left, the right-leaning italic is as if we are looking from lower-right. Display is the basic style, while Neon is inspired by the old neon letters found outside cinemas. Try placing Neon Outline on top of Display or Neon to add another layer to your artwork. Neon 3D is a extruded version of Neon. The Screen Credits style is based on the notes — producers, cast, crew and so on — on movie posters. Get more out of life, go out to a movie.
  21. The Seasons by My Creative Land, $25.00
    The Seasons is an elegant classic serif font family consisting of a high contrast serif fonts with a vintage chic look, with corresponding calligraphic cursive italics that are based on a number of humanist italic scripts and written with a Pilot Parallel Pen. Both upright and italic fonts (6 in total) share same style soft terminals with a sharp cut and are enhanced by OpenType features such as ligatures and stylistic alternates. The Seasons can be used in high-end branding, logo designs, magazines, product packaging & invitations.
  22. Monia by Johannes Hoffmann, $15.00
    Monia is a modern grotesque typeface family designed as a copy and display typeface. With its range of twelve weights, true italic weights, it offers a wide variety of design possibilities such as posters, magazine, corporate or packaging.
  23. Colagent by Great Studio, $25.00
    Colagent is a high-contrast typography inspired by transitional and contemporary typography. The font expands its usability by providing weights ranging from Light to black. Natural curves, swelling and slanting stems grow in characters as the font gets heavier. While the thinner weights have reduced contrast and optical corrections to create a warm and soft appearance. Featuring charming italic letters, exceptional bold weights, and full character support for over 200 Latin-based languages. Colagent excels in display settings such as editorial design, titles, branding projects, logo design, packaging, magazine headings, advertising, short or long text. Colagent also comes with four Variable font versions: Regular, Italic, Condensed, and Condensed Italic to make it easier for designers to explore and perfect beautiful designs, uncovering many visual tones and hidden secrets.
  24. Rogik by holyline design, $19.00
    Rogik by Holyline, Rogik is a expressive serif font family, This font very elegant, unique , has a strong and sharp character. This font comes in nine weight with italic so there are a total of 18 fonts and support variable for upright and italic. It's very unique, playful, elegant and very easy to combine with your design style. Rogik also inspire by metal, pop, punk and street ware, fashion brand. Rogik perfect for headline, sub headline ,custom logo, packaging, quote, merchandise, sticker, badges, social media posts, label, album cover and anything for your creativity. Rogik is perfect font if you want something new with your project, you can play the 18 fonts style, and you can pairing this font with the weight, its very satisfy. So happy creating!
  25. Samosata NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Samosata NF is based on Lucian Bernhard’s eponymous Gothic, but it employs all of the alternate characters seldom seen today. The result is an elegant, classical typeface with subtle Art Deco shadings. Available in two weights, all versions of this font include the Unicode 1250 Central European character set in addition to the standard Unicode 1252 Latin set.
  26. Cushy by Jeff Kahn, $-
    Cushy is a versatile san serif font that’s stuffed with numerous plush swashes and unique alternates. But it’s not limited to display use only. Cushy is well suited for text or display applications. Cushy’s large “x” height, square proportions, and generous even weight enhance its legibility in all point sizes. The font’s bold personality radiates friendliness and warmth. Clean classic proportions lend it authority and vigor. Cushy bends around corners and flows throughout. You won't find any sharp corners. The diagonal strokes possess a subtle arch and enhance its characteristics. Available in 8 styles with multiple weights: Thin, Light, Regular, Bold, including italics. Cushy includes stylistic sets, stylistic alternates, swashes, ligatures & discretionary ligatures, and foreign language diacritic glyph support. Cushy provides 40 distinctive swash options, 17 ligatures, and 13 alternates. Weights include Thin, Light, Regular, Bold, with italics. Cushy is suited for corporate ID, retail, magazines, books, brochures, websites, logotypes, etc.
  27. De Fonte Plus by Ingo, $39.00
    A variation of ”Helvetica according to the blur principle.“ The underlying typeface is ”Helvetica“, the only true ”run-of-the-mill“ typeface of the twentieth century. The distortion principle used simulates the photographic effect of halation and/or overexposure. The light weight, »DeFonte Léger«, nearly breaks on the thin points, whereas on those points where the lines meet or cross, dark spots remain. The characters are ”nibbled at“ from the inner and outer brightness. On the normal and semibold typestyles, »DeFonte Normale« and »DeFonte Demi Gras«, the effect is limited almost exclusively to the end strokes and corners, which appears to be strongly rounded off. The bold version »DeFonte Gros« is especially attractive. As a result of ”overexposure“, counters (internal spaces) are closed in, while characters become blurred and turn into spots; new characteristic forms are created which are astoundingly legible. The fat version »DeFonte Gros« is particularly appealing. “Overexposure” leads to drifted counters, letters blur into spots; new characteristic forms emerge, which are surprisingly easy to read.
  28. Buslingthorpe by Shinntype, $39.00
    What intrigued me about Buslingthorpe was the virtuoso challenge it presented, of designing a typeface that would, despite a ridiculously tiny x-height, still possess a coherent harmony betwen upper and lower case, and read confortably. At the same time, beyond pure plastic formality, I was aware that there are strong connotations of historicism in this noble style, with overtones of regal magnificence, on account of the extravagant leading and generous point size required for adequate visibility—in traditional letterpress printing such proportions, with so few characters per square inch, were pricey and devoured resources. There are two iconic early 20th century designs in the genre: Koch Antiqua (Rudolf Koch, Klingspor Foundry, 1922) and Lucian (Lucian Bernhard, Bauer Foundry, 1925). Both these have x-heights smaller than fifty percent of ascender height, which nominally defines the category. So I made these my benchmarks, and determined to outdo them in dramatic fashion. —Nick Shinn, Orangeville, March 2021
  29. Kaushan Script - 100% free
  30. Grand Prix ES - 100% free
  31. Blazing - Unknown license
  32. Daville Condensed Slanted - Unknown license
  33. Juan Miro - Unknown license
  34. Paddington - Unknown license
  35. Tork - Unknown license
  36. HOUSEPIPES - Unknown license
  37. View Slant Black ExtExp - Personal use only
  38. GEOspeed SC - Personal use only
  39. Mangerica by Ndiscover, $25.00
    This design incorporates different styles into a consistent look. A pinch of script, a little of geometric and some humanistic shapes as well create a very distinguishable sans-serif. It has an overall good feeling specially on the heavier weights that have intended contrast irregularities to create a 'cartoonish' look. On the intermediate weights the design will preform well on small font sizes because of its large counters, low contrast and large x-height, but as you go to the extremes you will see shapes full of personality that will pop out in large font sizes. The font is loaded with opentype features such as small caps, ligatures, alternates, old style figures, and much more. The italic version is deeply rooted in the calligraphic heritage of the Italics. This way the brush inspired strokes are emphasized as well as an overall calligraphic look. Far from being a mere slant, Mangerica Italic had every lowercase glyph redesigned as well as some uppercase, besides that, every glyph was optically adjusted to ensure not only aesthetics but functionality too.
  40. Zornale by Eurotypo, $20.00
    The "Zornale", is an original manuscript that contains a large amount of data, providing a daily record of the books acquired by the Venetian bookseller Francesco de Madiis, between 1481 and 1488. Zornale is a family of text fonts in five weights that can be combined with the variant Caption with short ascenders and descendants. The family is completed with true italics in two weights (light italics and italics) specially designed for use in reading texts. These fonts have been designed with precise kerning and full OpenType features: Small caps, old-style numbers, Swashes, stylistic and contextual alternates, ligatures and case-sensitive forms. Each font contains 549 glyphs for complete control and enhance typographic refinement.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing