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  1. Serpentine by Linotype, $29.00
    Dick Jensen (USA) designed Serpentine, is a contemporary-looking display font, for the Visual Graphics Corporation in 1972. With the rise of digital typesetting and desktop publishing, this typeface quickly became both popular and ubiquitous. This dynamic, wide, boxy design is identifiable via tiny triangular swellings at the stroke endings - what might be called semi-serifs. Serpentine is available in six different font styles: Light, Light Oblique, Medium, Medium Oblique, Bold, and Bold Oblique. Serpentine" is a greenish rock that sometimes resembles a serpent's skin, and is often used as a decorative stone in architecture. Though this font doesn't seem at all snaky or sinuous, it does have an architectural, stone-like solidity. The subtle, almost non-existent curves and semi-serifs keep it from being too stern or cold. Although the underlying strokes of each weight are similar, the six members of the Serpentine font family all present their own individual personalities. Serpentine Light lends itself well to text for onscreen displays, for instance, while the numbers from typeface's heavier weights are seen around the world on soccer jerseys! Additionally, the oblique styles convey a streamlined sense of speed, furthermore lending Serpentine well to sport and athletic applications (especially the faster, high-speed varieties). Because of its 1970s pedigree, Serpentine has come to be known as a genuine "retro" face. This makes the typeface even more appropriate for display usage, in applications such as logo design, magazine headlines, and party flyers. If you like Serpentine, check out the following similar fonts in the Linotype portfolio: Copperplate Gothic (similar serifs) Eurostile (similar width) Princetown (another "athletic" font) Insignia (similar "techno" feeling)"
  2. Tramuntana 1 Pro by Vanarchiv, $50.00
    Tramuntana 1 Pro was inspired by the late Renaissance and Mannerist spirit and it was designed by Ricardo Santos during 2009 for his Master in Advanced Typography (Eina-Barcelona). This project was also inspired by Robert Granjon, Garamond and Sabon typefaces. The name tramuntana (Tramontane) is the Catalonian word for the cold wind that comes from the Pyrenees mountains and goes as far as the Balearic Islands. It was designed for editorial purposes (books and magazines). This typeface family contains different font versions for different optical sizes, caption, text, subhead and display, all of them with different x-height proportions and contrast. The serifs are asymmetrical and the letterforms have geometric modulated strokes which simulates the calligraphic variations. Its design approach gives a dynamic feeling, contributing to text flow and continuous reading. The kerning has been optimized for Baltic languages and Western, Southern, and Central European languages.
  3. Breda by Eurotypo, $18.00
    Breda is a Geometric Sans-serif; it is constructed from simple geometric shapes such as the circle and rectangle. This family of fonts starts from a very thin single-line face to a strong heavyweight, called Black Face. The Breda font is austere style, functional and clear, emerged from straight lines, primary shapes, which is now jumping into the typographic and graphic design scene. They are presented in six wights with their corresponding italics.
  4. Cullion by Greater Albion Typefounders, $9.95
    Cullion is a new departure for Greater Albion, being a modern Fraktur, embodying future trends sch as highly stylised glyphs, a single case of lettering and highly evolved letterforms. At the same time it can trace its inspiration back to blackletter traditions, and is inspired by the sort of ironwork to be found in a medieval portcullis. The resulting typeface can sit happily in traditional, modern or futuristic design work. As the gallery images suggest, it does rather lend itself to work with a 'horror' theme, but it could have many other uses too-even in religious work. Cullion is particularly effective in poster headings.
  5. Mokgech by Alit Design, $15.00
    The Mokgech typeface is inspired by cool old style blackletter letters. Mokgech typeface has many alternative characters such as swash, ligature and a choice of several characters from uppercase or lowercase letters. In addition, the Mokgech font is also equipped with an italic version. It is suitable for gothic, tattoo, serious and horror themed designs. Can be used for the design of alcoholic beverage packaging, tattoo, pomade designs, barbershops and so on with the Victorian classic concept. Apart from that this font is very easy to use in both design and non-design programs because all alternates and glyphs are supported by Unicode (PUA).
  6. Vistr by Kobuzan, $18.99
    Vistr is a reverse-contrast display typeface inspired by western movies, infused with the tension of classic horror films. Powerful serifs, smooth curves, sharp details and an impressive contrast of strokes are unusually combined with each other. This creates a dramatic, eye-catching effect. Which is ideal for use in large sizes in titles and headlines to create a gloomy mood. This is an ALL-CAPS font. There is support for extended Latin, basic Cyrillic, and Greek. Features: – Total glyph set: 351 glyphs; – 1 style; – Support 210+ languages; – Latin Extended; – Cyrillic Basic + Bulgarian letters; – Greek; OpenType features: – Uppercase; – Proportional numerals; – Punctuations and symbols; – Arrows; – Stylistic alternates (ss01).
  7. Ash - Unknown license
  8. Delphian by Monotype, $29.99
    Designed by Robert Hunter Middleton in 1928, Delphian is one of Middleton's most handsome display typefaces. The Delphian face has many uses, from book titles to corporate identity material, where a modern, yet classic look is desired.
  9. Vivala Line by Johannes Hoffmann, $16.00
    Vivala Line is a real italic, and it was inspired by old Polish children's books with its charming hand drawn lettering titles. Fields of application are posters, magazines, packaging design, books, corporate design up to consolidating reading.
  10. Portfolio by Wilton Foundry, $29.00
    In spite of the fact that Portfolio's capitals are highly ornate, it is still very legible. Portfolio, in combination with its elegant lowercase, creates a prestigious presentation useful for Certificates, Wedding Invitations, Corporate Identities, Brochures, and Headlines.
  11. Freewill by Gassstype, $27.00
    Freewill - Handmade Rough Brush Font with ligature and Multilanguage support.inspired by the famous minimalist logo, perfect for the purposes of designing templates, brochures, videos, advertising branding, logos and more. Perfect for adding a unique twist to word-mark logos, as well as numbers and punctuation making it super fantastic. Like all of my fonts it is inspired by lettering from the good old past, but it still has a strong modern appearance. Its wide range of stylistic alternates allows versatile design options and works perfectly for headlines, logos, posters, packaging,,coffee shops, restaurants, magazine's headers, signs or gift/post cards,cafe's and weddings.Best for halloween poster, horror poster, childrenbook, cartoon, comic etc
  12. Ghostly Guffaws by Putracetol, $22.00
    Introducing Ghostly Guffaws, a Halloween Funny Theme Font that encapsulates the spooky yet playful spirit of Halloween. This unique display font, crafted with precision. Ghostly Guffaws is characterized by its all caps lettering, making it a perfect choice for bold and eye-catching headlines. With seven distinct variations tailored to fit the eerie theme, this font is versatile and adaptable. Whether you’re designing logos or branding materials, Ghostly Guffaws adds a touch of whimsy and horror that’s bound to captivate your audience. It’s not just limited to Halloween; use it for children’s themes, crafting projects, invitations cards, packaging designs, posters titles, business signage, greeting cards stickers books magazines or any design needing a dash of creepy charm.
  13. Forgotten Dream by Hanoded, $15.00
    I had a really weird dream the other night, but when I woke up, I had forgotten it. I had the feeling it was about something important, but I cannot, for the life of me, recall what I dreamt about! Forgotten Dream is a horror brush font, which I made with a brushy brush and Chinese ink. It looks like something right out of a nightmare, but you can also use it for something important. Like a ‘keep your distance’ poster, or a sign about the importance of washing ones hands. But then again, if you play in a death metal band, then Forgotten Dream font could be exactly what you need for your album cover!
  14. Ghostbumps by Rometheme, $25.00
    Introduce our new font “Ghostbumps” is a scary display font, this font looks horror, cool, cartoon, playful, catchy and easy to use. Highlight : - Easy instalation - Work on PC or Mac - PUA Encoded Support - Basic Latin A-Z and a-z - Numbers - Symbols - No special software is required, The fonts can be opened and used in Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe InDesign, even work on Microsoft Word.
  15. TF Sadistic by Teenage Foundry, $19.00
    TF Sadistic is our display font, carefully crafted to bring a sharp and charming look to your designs. With its distinct style and versatile nature, our fonts are the perfect choice for creating attention-grabbing metallics, horror posters, and other impactful visual materials. Our sharp display fonts are designed to make a statement. Its sharp edges and unique letter shapes exude strength and power.
  16. Demons Light by Yoga Letter, $13.00
    "Demons Light" is a halloween themed font that will add horror and excitement to your Halloween party. This font is very easy to use because it has been specially designed. "Demons Light" is also equipped with multilingual support, numeral and punctuations, ligatures, uppersace, and lowercase. So that this font is very complete and is expected to be able to help your work or Halloween moment.
  17. Georgia Pro by Microsoft, $40.00
    Georgia was originally designed in 1996 by Matthew Carter and hand-tuned for the screen by Tom Rickner. The Georgia family received a major update in 2011 by Monotype Imaging, The Font Bureau and Matthew Carter. Georgia is the serif companion to the sans serif screen font, Verdana. It was designed specifically to address the challenges of on-screen display with elegant yet sturdy and open forms. If you must have one serif face for reading on a computer, then you've found the best one right here. The original Georgia family included four fonts: regular, italic, bold and bold italic. The new and expanded Georgia Pro family contains 20 fonts in total. The Georgia Pro and Georgia Pro Condensed families each contain 10 fonts: Light, Regular, Semibold, Bold and Black (each with matching italic styles). Georgia Pro includes a variety of advanced typographic features including true small capitals, ligatures, fractions, old style figures, lining tabular figures and lining proportional figures. An OpenType-savvy application is required to access these typographic features.
  18. Jellyka Castle's Queen - Personal use only
  19. Polla - Unknown license
  20. Vampetica - Personal use only
  21. Bleeding Freaks - Unknown license
  22. DuerersMinuskeln - 100% free
  23. KlingonBlade - Unknown license
  24. Haunt AOE - Unknown license
  25. Magnum - Unknown license
  26. Gamera - Unknown license
  27. Graffito - Unknown license
  28. Skeleton Sketched - 100% free
  29. TRUEblood - Personal use only
  30. Creepy Tales by Ditatype, $29.00
    Creepy Tales is a spine-chilling display font that will send shivers down your spine. With its big letters and bold weight, this font demands attention and exudes fear. The horror theme is brought to life with meticulously crafted dripping ink details on each letter, adding a nightmarish and eerie touch to the font. Each letter in this font is bold and impactful, making a powerful statement in your designs. The large size of the letters further intensifies the font's haunting presence. The dripping ink details in this font give the font an organic and unsettling appearance, as if the letters are oozing with dread. These haunting details add a sense of macabre and create an atmosphere of suspense, immersing the viewer into a world of dark and chilling horrors. For the best legibility you can use this font in the bigger text sizes. Enjoy the available features here. Features: Multilingual Supports PUA Encoded Numerals and Punctuations Creepy Tales fits in headlines, logos, movie posters, flyers, invitations, branding materials, print media, editorial layouts, headers, and any project that requires a terrifying touch. Find out more ways to use this font by taking a look at the font preview. Thanks for purchasing our fonts. Hopefully, you have a great time using our font. Feel free to contact us anytime for further information or when you have trouble with the font. Thanks a lot and happy designing.
  31. Mundenge Rock by Holland Fonts, $30.00
    Borrowed vernacular from African hair studio signs. manually drawn with drop shadow. Used first as cover and label lettering of a cd with music from Zimbabwe, and completed later as a full character set for the typographic issue 'National Typographica' of I-Juici Magazine, in South Afrika.
  32. Bestan by Konstantine Studio, $17.00
    Bestan is inspired by the typography of the ship's steel containers and industrial-based business branding. Added a slight touch of futuristic vibes to make Bestan appears as a fresh game-changer, either for corporation purpose and also modern urban vibes to your visual graphic design stuff.
  33. Olystar by NicolassFonts, $35.00
    Unleash the power of modern typography with Olystar, a captivating font family meticulously crafted on the foundation of the beloved Olyford font. Olystar boasts 5 exquisite weights and more than 400 glyphs in each style. This family is perfect for logotypes, advertising, packaging, corporate identities, and more.
  34. Neuropa by Device, $39.00
    Neuropa is a five-weight extended sans that projects a muscular corporate authority. The bowls of the rounded characters use an ‘obround’ form, and the apexes of the A and V and the uprights on the D and E are curved to suggest a sleek modernity.
  35. Altruiste by ParaType, $30.00
    Altruiste is a decorative slab serif typeface with distinctive sharp features. It was inspired by the idea of ​​duplicating elements, conveying typeface a unique look. It is austere, sophisticated typography marked by light shapes, yet of a strong nature. Altruiste is the perfect choice for a wide range of tasks such as creating logos, signboards, posters, invitation cards and more. The typeface is available in 5 weights, from hairline to regular with italics. Each style contains 600 extended Latin and Cyrillic characters. Altruiste was designed by Alexey Chekulaev in 2021, based on the light styles of the Postulat typeface.
  36. Fauna by Pasternak, $12.00
    Fauna is a stylish font inspired by hi-fi elements combined with square forms and straight lines. It also has the features of Constructivism, including solidity, emphasis on geometric shapes, and austerity. Bold futuristic characters make this font an ideal option for the development of a minimalistic and recognizable design, necessary for any modern project. It’s perfect for the creation of logos, titles, social media posts, posters, and ads. Due to the clear and eye-catching design of the characters, the font will surely attract your audience. It includes all basic symbols and characters. Plus, Fauna features proper kerning and supports several languages.
  37. Humanista by KaiserType, $30.00
    "Humanista" is the name of a multilingual chancery script font by Bertram Kaiser. The idea in this long-term project was to blend the boundaries between analogue calligraphic handwriting and designing a font digitally, while using all technical possibilities of modern type design. All glyphs were originally written with a broadnib and then carefully vectorized, creating a human charme inside the font. In this design you will find influences from great calligraphy masters like Hermann Zapf or Werner Schneider. The pro version comes along with a big variety of alternate glyphs, initial and terminal forms, swash capitals and ligatures, which gives you the possibility of designing individual text layouts. Inside the font you will also find a set of italic roman capitals plus fitting numerals and interpunction, which can be treated like a font itself. You can activate them through the Open-Type menue (stylistic-set 4) or set manually via the glyphs window (ADOBE applications). When using the feature "swashletters" make sure to also activate the feature "contextual alternates" to get an appealing textdesign with alternating swashletters. This font can be used for display sizes as well as for smaller textsizes like on Invitationcards or in magazines.
  38. Fontella by Canada Type, $24.95
    Italian type design master Aldo Novarese was not famous for making calligraphic designs, nor had he any interest in them. He is much better known for his text faces, and quite innovative sans serif and decorative designs which became the definition of what we now know as techno and modern. But in 1968, Novarese surprised everyone with a fantastic flowing deco script entitled Elite. Novarese's formula of simple soft curves and toned-down swashes makes for one of the most unique alphabets ever seen, not to mention one of the best flowing and most legible scripts. This is now its digital incarnation, named Fontella. Fontella's applications are virtually limitless. This is the sort of script that can feel at home pretty much anywhere; a sign, a fridge magnet, a bumper sticker, a greeting card, a movie poster, a book cover, music artwork, magazine ads, newsletter headlines, etc. Digitized from original specimen and expanded with a few built-in alternates and ligatures by Rebecca Alaccari, the font was named after the famed jazz singer Fontella Bass. These letters are just so sweet they had to be called Fontella.
  39. Basic Commercial Soft Rounded by Linotype, $29.99
    Basic Commercial is a font based on historical designs from the hot metal typeface era. It first appeared around 1900, and was created by type designers whose names have not been recorded but whose skills cannot be overlooked. This typeface's design has been popular among groups and movements as diverse as the Bauhaus, Dadaism, and the masters of Swiss/International-Style typography. It influenced for a variety of later grotesque fonts, such as Helvetica and Univers. Basic Commercial was distributed for many years in the United States under the name Standard Series. The typeface worked its way into many aspects of daily life and culture; for instance, it became the face chosen for use in the New York City subway system's signage. The Basic Commercial's font family members have a clear and objective design. Their forms exhibit almost nothing unusual, but remain both lively and legible nonetheless. Perhaps for this reason, Basic Commercial's design has been popular with graphic designers for decades. To read more about the history of typefaces like Basic Commercial, visit our font feature, The Sans Serif Typefaces. In addition several weights of this typefamily are available as soft rounded versions."
  40. Organic Pro by Positype, $29.00
    When I released the original Organic in 2009, I was satisfied with it. It was what was possible from me and the technology at the time. The Organic Pro of 2021 takes those original desires of delivering a highly legible and friendly sans serif, and doubles down on those notions, while exploring what further infusing warmth in a highly structured sans serif can really do for a client. Free of distracting and potentially dating visual traits and cues that could be seen as endemic of a specific time period or ‘type trend’, Organic Pro is its own person—take it or leave it. Inviting warmth, assured reliability, and a head nod of confidence is what you walk away with—a stark contrast to the cold, impersonal geometrics and grotesques proliferating the design annuals currently. Releasing this typeface now, completely redrawing the masters, as well as expanding the weight and language options, should be seen as a laid back challenge that we need to do less with type, let it communicate confidently and warmly when it needs to, and stop forcing one-size-fits-all type trends on everyone.
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