10,000 search results (0.035 seconds)
  1. EmPower42 - Unknown license
  2. Oldchristmas - Unknown license
  3. Wedgie - Unknown license
  4. Caseta Sans by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    Caseta Sans (Regular and Bold with Italics) completing a family of 3 font families with Caseta Regular and Caseta Slab.
  5. Caseta Slab by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    Caseta Slab (Regular and Bold with Italics) completing a family of 3 font families with Caseta Regular and Caseta Sans.
  6. Caseta by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    Caseta Regular (Regular and Bold with Italics) completing a family of 3 font families with Caseta Slab and Caseta Sans .
  7. Vuk by LetterPalette, $48.00
    Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic was a Serbian philologist and linguist who was the major reformer of the Serbian language. In addition to his linguistic reforms, Karadzic also contributed to folk literature, using peasant culture as the foundation. Because of his peasant upbringing, he was closely associated with the oral literature of the peasants, compiling it to use in his collection of folk songs, tales, and proverbs. He was well known abroad and familiar to Jacob Grimm, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and historian Leopold von Ranke. This typeface, based on his manuscripts, presents the perfect balance between casual handwriting and careful calligraphy. Thoroughly created by Vedran Erakovic and Marija Rnjak, it contains a comprehensive set of upper and lower case letter alternates. Thanks to some OpenType features, such as contextual alternates, this typeface approaches handwritten text as closely as possible. It is ideal for designing greeting cards, quotes, packaging, invitations, fashion layouts and much more.
  8. Chettos Script by Josstype, $10.00
    Introduce Chettos Script, Hand Lettered Calligraphy Font with beautiful waves and natural flow. has a unique letter style, with natural handdrawn, and has a softer and smoother character subtly connect all the characters. They have a simple elegant swashes in separate letters, you can use graphic design software to access the alternate letter. Chettos Script is perfect for weddings, invitations, greeting cards, quotations, posters, branding, business cards, stationary, title design, header blog, excerpts of art, the art of typography, letter envelopes modern or design books, occurred styles such as design handdrawn, title , letter marriage, pop vintage design, or purpose to make the project / art design we look beautiful and trendy. Chettos Script comes complete with 259 glyphs. This includes uppercase, lowercase, numbers, fractions, punctuation, multi-language support. and some other flying machines are variations that part of OpenType features such as; Standard ligatures, stylistic set, alternative style. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me via email: joelpopon@gmail.com
  9. Mica Valo by Jolicia Type, $19.00
    Mica Valo is a sophisticated serif font that exudes timeless elegance and refinement. Its graceful curves and meticulous detailing make it the perfect choice for projects that demand a touch of class. The inspiration for Mica Valo is drawn from the seamless marriage of classic serif aesthetics and a modern sensibility. The result is a font that transcends time, adding a touch of grace and poise to any visual composition. What sets Mica Valo apart is its Alternate version, which introduces a unique twist to the classic serif style. The alternates offer a subtle variation in letterforms, providing designers with the flexibility to experiment and create distinct, personalized looks. This feature makes Mica Valo an ideal choice for branding, editorial design, and other creative projects where a touch of individuality is desired. Incorporate Mica Valo into your creative toolkit and let its elegant vibes and alternate options elevate your designs to new heights, leaving a lasting impression on your audience.
  10. Bernadion by IbraCreative, $17.00
    Bernadion – A Modern Serif Typeface Bernadion, a modern serif typeface, seamlessly merges sophistication with contemporary design elements, creating a harmonious balance of timeless elegance and sleek aesthetics. With its refined letterforms and subtle geometric influences, Bernadion captures attention with a crisp and professional demeanor. The font’s balanced proportions and meticulous detailing ensure clarity and readability across various platforms, making it versatile for both print and digital applications. Whether employed in editorial design, branding, or web interfaces, Bernadion stands as a testament to the marriage of classic serif traditions and the demands of modern design, elevating any project with its distinctive and polished appeal. Bernadion is perfect for branding projects, logo, wedding designs, social media posts, advertisements, product packaging, product designs, label, photography, watermark, invitation, stationery, game, fashion and any projects. Fonts include multilingual support for; Afrikaans, Albanian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish.
  11. Konstructa Humana Stencil by TypoGraphicDesign, $19.00
    CONCEPT/ CHARACTERISTICS »Kon­strukta Humana Sten­cil« aka »Hot Cold« is a modern desi­gned sans serif type­face with huma­nist influ­en­ces and Sten­cil cha­rac­ter. The par­ti­ally strong line thick­ness dif­fe­rence (line con­trast) gives the font a touch of ele­gance and crea­tes ten­sion as fats. The font comes in 3 font styles. From ele­gant warm ten­der­ness »Thin« to the solid, bold, and robust­ness cold »Regular«. APPLICATION AREA The »Thin« font weight would pro­bably dig on fes­tive invi­ta­ti­ons and »Regu­lar« as con­cise pos­ter font. From head­lines in maga­zi­nes or web­sites about pos­ter design and fly­ers to t-shirt design. Just type it. TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS Head­line Font | Dis­play Font | Sans Serif Sten­cil Font »Kon­structa Humana Sten­cil« Open­Type Font (Mac + Win) with 375 gly­phs & 3 styles (regu­lar, light, thin). With alter­na­tive let­ters, liga­tures, accents & €.
  12. Calico Cyrillic - Unknown license
  13. CF Anarchy - Personal use only
  14. VTC Lo-Down - Unknown license
  15. VTC ScreamItLoud - Unknown license
  16. VTCBadWhipit - Unknown license
  17. VTCBadHangover - Unknown license
  18. VTCBadPlating - Unknown license
  19. VTCBadDrip - Unknown license
  20. VTC Boseephus - Unknown license
  21. VTC Seeindubbledointriple - Unknown license
  22. VTCBadLuck - Unknown license
  23. Typex by Device, $39.00
    Based on the lettering used on Alan Turing’s famous code-breaking machine at Bletchley Park, the “Bombe”, and the subsequent British answer to the German Enigma machine, the Typex. Research done at Bletchley Park on their restored and antique machines provided the inspiration. The unusual shapes for the capitals have all been retained - the square O, the monospaced characters and other eccentricities that make it unique. This reference material was then extended to the numerals (which did not exist in the original) and a full international character complement. The initial design of the bombe was produced in 1939 at the UK Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS) at Bletchley Park by Alan Turing, with an important refinement devised in 1940 by Gordon Welchman. It was based on a device that had been designed in 1938 in Poland at the Biuro Szyfrów (Cipher Bureau) by cryptologist Marian Rejewski, and known as the "cryptologic bomb" (Polish: bomba kryptologiczna). The Bombe was used to break the German Enigma code on a daily basis, and was a vital part of the Allied war effort. The British “Typex" (alternatively, Type X or TypeX) machines were an adaptation of the commercial German Enigma with a number of enhancements that greatly increased its security. It was used from 1937 until the mid-1950s, when other more modern military encryption systems came into use.
  24. Swiss 721 by Bitstream, $29.99
    Swiss 721™ is a sans serif family that ranges in style from thin to black while mixing in a few unexpected, but beautifully made and ironically flattering, outline weights that spice up the grotesque design. Couple these upstanding letterforms with matching italic styles and you have yourself a beautiful tool that is as legible on screen as it is off, has the technical prowess to conquer even the trickiest of design riddles and will work in a myriad of projects. Swiss 721 is a staple sans serif that you’ll never be sorry you have in your library. It’s been said that a simple sans serif is one of the most difficult typefaces to design. This is because when letters are reduced to their most basic details, irregularities and inconsistencies in design become immediately visible. The Swiss 721 typeface family is a quintessential example of letterforms distilled to their essence while still possessing warmth and verve. Based on mid-century sans serif typefaces, Swiss 721 is a versatile family of weights and proportions ideally suited to a wide variety of print and interactive design projects and is equally at home as headlines on billboards as it is navigation content on small screens. Swiss 721 takes the essence of mid 20th century sans serif typefaces and melds it with modern design consistency and a systematic weight range.
  25. LazyMeow - Personal use only
  26. SteveHandwriting - Unknown license
  27. Casino - Unknown license
  28. Knockout - Unknown license
  29. ZirkleOne - Unknown license
  30. CoolHandLuke ttext - Unknown license
  31. Wave - Unknown license
  32. Mama - Unknown license
  33. Akagi by Positype, $25.00
    Akagi started as a rough sketch while on a really long plane ride to Tokyo in 2007. I wanted to develop a sans that was a complete departure from my successful Aaux Pro (now Aaux Next) sans serif family. Whereas Aaux and its siblings are rather unforgiving and stark in their presentation, I wanted this new sans serif to "smile" at you when it's on the page. When the plane landed and I realized I did not sleep through the 15 hour trip, my brain shut off, the laptop closed and I hopped in the car to the hotel—forgetting the "new sans" folder on my desktop. Fast forward a few months and I found myself seeing a lot of crisp, rigid, robot-like sans serif typefaces everywhere... I enjoy these new crop of faces but wanted to see something "friendlier" and remembered my earlier sketch work. The groundwork was there screaming at me to complete and Akagi arose from the ashes. To be truly satisfied with it personally, a great deal of time was spent trying to create a harmony between line and curve in an attempt to show that you can be crisp, clean and legible and still keep some personality. The Light and Fat weights (regular and italic) are my favorites and I hope to see them as the workhorses of the typeface.
  34. Felt - Unknown license
  35. Salter - Unknown license
  36. Goudy Mediaeval - Personal use only
  37. Rudelsberg - Unknown license
  38. Zaleski - Unknown license
  39. Baldur - Personal use only
  40. Kramer - Unknown license
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing