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  1. Alright, fasten your seat belts, typography enthusiasts and font aficionados, because we're about to take a wild ride into the cosmos of creativity with "Blaster Infinite" by the enigmatic and clever...
  2. As of the last update in my training data, there wasn't a widely recognized font specifically named "Rhino Dino" in the mainstream typographic resources or font libraries. However, the imaginative po...
  3. Camy by Scholtz Fonts, $9.50
    I wanted to create a "handwriting" font which could be used professionally. I have often needed such a font with a variety of weights and styles for a particular project and have had to resort to mixing fonts, creating a rather messy, amateur job. Camy is named for a little village in South West France where I did much of the initial work on this font. Camy is ideal for contemporary display work, comes in ten styles, and has a contemporary appeal with its casual, easy to read letters. Camy was designed as a total professional package for designers looking for a handwritten font suitable for all kinds of contemporary display work: the idea being that once you have the Camy Professional Pack you don't have to waste time searching for other handwritten fonts. The Family: LIGHT -- NARROW - light weight, condensed width, delicate line -- MEDIUM - light weight, delicate line -- WIDE - light weight, expanded width, delicate line NORMAL WEIGHT -- NARROW - of medium weight and condensed width - perfect for limited space -- MEDIUM - of medium weight -- WIDE - of medium weight and expanded width BLACK - for best readability -- NARROW - condensed width for bolder statements in small areas without losing legibility -- MEDIUM - for bolder statements -- WIDE - expanded width for bolder statements FAT -- WIDE - for maximum impact Use a combination of styles for product branding, book covers, invitations, greeting cards. The Camy combination works well for both headings and body text. Camy contains over 250 characters - (upper and lower case characters, punctuation, numerals, symbols and accented characters are present). It has all the accented characters used in the major European languages.
  4. Black Devils Graffiti by Sipanji21, $13.00
    Black Devils Monoline Graffiti Font This font designed so that users can use it more easily and make graffiti designs easier. Black Devil is very suitable for use in various media such as; packaging, logos, labels, posters, shirt designs, bulletins, typography, and many other media, especially with graffiti look.
  5. Vabioxe by Sipanji21, $16.00
    Vabioxe - Amazing Monoline Graffiti Font This font designed so that users can use it more easily and make graffiti designs easier. Vabioxe is very suitable for use in various media such as; packaging, logos, labels, posters, shirt designs, bulletins, typography, and many other media, especially with graffiti look.
  6. Plain O Matic - Unknown license
  7. Filou by Volcano Type, $19.00
    Filou is a genuine bastard inspired by three different typefaces. It consists of three weights: "Regular", "Medium" and "Extra" which can be easily mixed together.
  8. That by Suomi, $30.00
    This is That: a family of four weights with roman and true italics, and also with chiselled medium weight, and Irregular variant for, well, variety.
  9. Radish & Garlick by Jehansyah, $9.00
    This font is inspired by clean handwriting that is a bit simple, but still maintains elegance and creates a luxurious feel in the design, Radish and garlick This handcrafted font, so cute and so cute for any design you want to look simple yet aesthetically pleasing, use this design for all your design needs, it will potentially be your best font choice use it for all your design needs, print media, brochures, social media, social media status, letters, invitations, and much more. Thank you very Much
  10. Kaligawe by Locomotype, $19.00
    Introducing Kaligawe, the perfect font for designers looking to make a bold statement with their work. This display sans font boasts a unique blend of mediaeval and sans-serif characteristics that will give your designs a distinct edge. With nine weights available, from Thin to Black, you'll have plenty of options to choose from when it comes to creating eye-catching posters, attention-grabbing headlines, captivating movie titles, and stylish packaging. What sets Kaligawe apart from other fonts is its ability to combine old-world charm with modern style. Its mediaeval touches provide a classic, timeless feel, while its strong sans-serif characteristics give it a contemporary edge. The result is a font that can be used for a wide range of design projects, whether you're creating something with a vintage vibe or a more modern look.
  11. AB Ticena by Andres Briganti, $20.00
    Elegant and idiosyncratic, AB Ticena is a display and extended typeface inspired by the ancient forms of Lombardic capitals. The sometimes quirky and capricious letterforms take their inspiration from medieval forms found in inscriptions and manuscripts where latin Roman capitals were taken to new stylistic and even extreme expressions. The ultra-wide horizontal proportions and its modulated, humanistic strokes gives it a more refined and contemporary edge. AB Ticena works best for logotypes, short and striking headlines, and editorial purposes. A set of ligatures and stylistic alternates is also available for selected characters and pairings.
  12. Manuscript Felice by Kaer, $24.00
    Manuscript Felice blackletter font family with 2 styles. This font family based on vintage Italian Processional manuscript. The book block has disintegrated, and I don’t know who is the author. Luckily I found the last owner, Felice Osio and the last date 1634. That's all) I manually redesign original and regular style fonts from this folio. Also, I’ve added some modern symbols. With this set, you can precisely imitate medieval style text. You’ll get: * Initials & Regular styles * Uppercase and lowercase * Multilingual support * Numbers * Symbols * Punctuation * Ligatures Best, Roman. Thank you!
  13. PR-Uncial by PR Fonts, $10.00
    This is our first font, based on Peter's own personal way of writing uncials, The rounded letters of the fourth to eighth centuries. The characters in the caps position are more closely related to the classical Roman forms, and the lowercase position has letters that are the more rounded, medieval forms, at the same size, so they can be freely mixed, for a hand lettered appearance. This typeface is currently used for the titles in the TNT Television show "the Librarians". It was originally designed in 1998, and is now available in Open Type Format.
  14. Yavome by Arterfak Project, $26.00
    Spread your love with Yavome :) Yavome is a quirky Serif font, with modern experimental shapes. Designed with high contrast and artistic curves, it gives a dynamic impression and graceful movement with additional special characters! Yavome is inspired by medieval typography, developed into an elegant and unique form, making it especially suitable for use in display, branding, logos, and quotes. The font can be used on flyers, posters, stories, invitations, t-shirts, stickers, and more. What you will get: Uppercase Lowercase Numbers & punctuation Symbols Stylistic alternates Ligatures (lowercase) Accented characters. Thank you for all your support!
  15. Heavy Rain by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Heavy Rain is a decorative roman typeface. Drawn and created by Mans Greback during 2020 and 2021, this medieval serif font has a distinct classic style and a historical character. It gives antiquity to any graphic project, and with its ornamental capitals it accentuates your message. In addition to the decorated uppercase, it is provided in a regular, simplified text style. Heavy Rain is built with guaranteed top-notch quality. It has extensive lingual support, covering all Latin-based languages. It contains all characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  16. Lord Story by Letterhend, $19.00
    Lord Story is a great display font with medieval middle age theme. This font is also suitable to be applied especially in logo, and the other various formal forms such as invitations, labels, logos, magazines, books, greeting / wedding cards, packaging, fashion, make up, stationery, novels, labels or any type of advertising purpose. Features : uppercase & lowercase numbers and punctuation multilingual alternates & ligatures PUA encoded We highly recommend using a program that supports OpenType features and Glyphs panels like many of Adobe apps and Corel Draw, so you can see and access all Glyph variations.
  17. Dragon Fang by astroluxtype, $20.00
    Dragon Fang is a headline display font set. The style suggests Medieval font forms but in a contemporary sense. The font contains uppercase and lowercase letterforms which include a few alternate characters. Look for the swash “B” and “D” to give your design project a special look. Influenced by everything from Rick Griffin and Linotext to tribal tattoo art this font will bring a contemporary edge to your design project. Fantasy book cover art, album covers, even that horror movie will find many uses for astroluxtype’s Dragon Fang.
  18. Dark Blades Steel by Tadiar, $19.00
    !!! Please note that the font works in Photoshop CC2017 and higher and in Illustrator CC 2018 and higher only. !!! DarkBlades Steel is an unique vintage color gradient vector SVG font you may use in your projects just typing a text in Illustrator or Photoshop. DarkBlades Steel is derivative from DarkBlades Font Family: https://www.myfonts.com/collections/dark-blades-font-tadiar Designed for: - Vintage branding (Clothes, Alcohol, Bikes, Games) - Horror - Music branding - Myth: Vampires, Zombie, Halloween, Werevolves, Magic, Fantasy - Medieval style Well use in vintage labels, headers & titles, Posters, Street Signs and other Outdoor, Package Design.
  19. Cadora Woods by Hanoded, $15.00
    Last year I walked half of Offa’s Dyke path, a long distance trail on the Welsh/English border. Walking the trail, I came across a beautiful stretch of forest with a lovely name: Cadora Woods. Cadora Woods font was made with a Japanese brush pen. It sort of looks medieval and a friend of mine suggested it would be the font of choice for maps of ‘The Shire’. I guess that is true, but I am convinced you can come up with some innovative uses for this font!
  20. Deng Thick - Unknown license
  21. Pipo by bb-bureau, $65.00
    Pipo is a minimalist rounded tubular and stencil font in 5 weights (Thin, Light, Regular, Medium & Bold) — many symbols and cleverly ligatured! language: all latin glyphs
  22. BB book A by bb-bureau, $65.00
    bb-book A — breaking rules typeface Expressive book serif (triangular and curved) kicking up weight, width and contrast — in 4 styles: light, regular, medium and bold.
  23. Cow-Spots - Unknown license
  24. Bankai Street by Sipanji21, $14.00
    Bankai Street - Realistic Monoline Handwritten Graffiti Font This font designed so that users can use it more easily and make graffiti designs easier. Bankai Street is very suitable for use in various media such as; packaging, logos, labels, posters, shirt designs, bulletins, typography, and many other media, especially with graffiti look.
  25. Bombardies by Figuree Studio, $18.00
    Hello, this is Bormbardies modern Graffiti Font! This font was designed so that users can use it more easily and make graffiti designs easier. Bombardies is very suitable for use in various media such as; packaging, logos, labels, posters, shirt designs, bulletins, typography, and many other media, especially with graffiti look.
  26. Arabetics Symphony by Arabetics, $59.00
    Arabetics Symphony is a Sans Serif Latin typeface with a comprehensive support for the Arabetic scripts, including Quranic texts. It is designed with a uniform glyph thickness and weight throughout, using a combination of simplified and clear open lines and curves and plenty of spikes and visual hints to compensate for the missing Latin serifs or traditional cursive Arabic calligraphic influence. This type family is suitable for both text and display applications. Additional Latin spacing is added to match an overall open-looking Arabic and is further maintained by a careful implementation of a typical Latin font kerning process. The design of this font family, including metrics and dimensions, was intended to make its Latin harmonize with other Arabetics foundry fonts. Arabetics Symphony fully supports MS 1252 Western and 1256 Arabic code pages, in addition to all the transliteration characters required by the ALA-LC Romanization tables. Users can either select an accented character directly or form it by keying the desired combining diacritic mark following an unaccented character. For Arabic, it fully supports Unicode 6.1, and the latest Arabic Supplement and Extended-A Unicode blocks. The Arabic design of this font family follows the Mutamathil Taqlidi design style with connected glyphs, emphasizing vertical strokes to bring added harmony, and utilizing slightly varying x-heights to match that found in Latin. The Mutamathil Taqlidi type style uses one glyph for every basic Arabic Unicode character or letter, as defined by the Unicode Standards, and one additional final form glyph, for each freely-connecting letter of the Arabic cursive text. Arabetics Symphony includes the required Lam-Alif ligatures in addition to all vowel diacritic ligatures. Soft-vowel diacritic marks (harakat) are selectively positioned with most of them appearing on similar high and low levels—top left corner—, to clearly distinguish them from the letters. Tatweel is a zero-width glyph. Keying the “tatweel” key (shft-j) before Alif-Lam-Lam-Ha will display the Allah ligature. Arabetics Symphony includes both Arabic and Arabic-Indic numerals, in addition to generous number of punctuation and mathematical symbols. Available in both OpenType and TrueType formats, it includes two weights, regular and bold, each has normal, Italic, and left-slanted styles.
  27. Valentine by profonts, $51.99
    Valentine is another brand-new profonts script typeface family with versions in light, light italic, medium and medium italic, supplied in the new OpenType Pro font format. Valentine contains about 1.100 glyphs for every weight, covering the complete Latin character set (West, East, Baltic, Turkish, Romanian), and a huge number of handmade ligatures, character combinations and alternates to make it a perfect OpenType Pro connecting script. Valentine is a very distinguished, elegant and versatile script font.
  28. Aseel by MAKYN, $40.00
    Aseel is a contemporary and legible typeface. It is intended to work well in the context of information and signage design. It also works well as a body text typeface as it is characterized by open counter forms and a large x-height. It is based on the Naskh calligraphic structure and has a medium stroke contrast. The letters are condensed to fit more information per line and it exists in three weights, regular, medium and bold.
  29. Daleant by Maculinc, $15.00
    The new beautiful and attractive Serif Font comes with a unique alternative in each Uppercase, This Font is available in Uppercase and Lowercase Complete with Numbers, Punctuation, Alternate and Ligatures. Daleant Serif Font is available in the family of Light, Light-Italic, Regular, Italic, Medium, Medium-Italic, Semi Bold, Semi Bold-Italic, Bold, Bold-Italic. Alternatives and Ligatures in this font are only available in uppercase letters, Add alternatives to make sentences more unique and interesting.
  30. Florensans by Milan Pleva, $18.00
    Florensans is an all caps display sans serif typeface in elegant & modern style with ligatures, special alternative glyphs and old style figures. The Florensans family contains three weights: Light, Regular and Medium. Florensans is ideal for headlines, headers, logos, labels, packaging, postcards, presentations, magazines, invitations, etc. Features: 3 Weights - Light, Regular and Medium Basic latin alphabet A-Z 64 Ligatures & Alternates 56 Accented characters Numbers, Punctuation, Currency, Symbols, Math symbols & Diacritics Old style figures Enjoy Florensans!
  31. Ultraworld - Unknown license
  32. TM Pedestal - Unknown license
  33. TM Tramway - Unknown license
  34. Neoro by Lurinzu Studios, $16.50
    Neoro is an Art Deco condensed display typeface with an emphasis on its legibility to work as a “workhorse” typeface. Neoro is developed with the intention to be used in almost all media and sizes. By combining the characteristics of an Art deco type with an emphasis with it’s legibility, this typeface is versatile in almost all medias you can think of! Magazines, body text, captions, headlines, display, albums and almost any media you can think of! *This font includes letters, numbers, multi-language, and all essential marks needed.
  35. Second Reign by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Second Reign is a decorative medieval typeface. With borders and diamonds, this magic typeface of extreme variability brings us to glorious worlds in the golden times of epic sagas. Second Reign is the typeface of a viking king or a knight order. Use it for a Middle Ages game, a fantasy headline, or as a logotype for anything of historical theme. With usage in any modern software, the letters will automatically overlap and embrace in an elegant way. To make heraldic symbols, copy these icons: 🐉 🐎 👑 🗡 🦁 🦅 🦌 + ♖ × ✝ ⚓ * ⚔ † ‡ Alternatively write %A %B %C ... etc to create the heraldry. (Download required.) Dragon, Horse, Crown, Sword, Eagle, Deer, Cross, Anchor are some of the logos. Use [ ] for side borders. Example: [Royal⚔Thrones] The Second Reign family consists of four variations: The weight styles Thin, Medium and Bold, plus the decorated Border style. The font is built with advanced OpenType functionality and has a guaranteed top-notch quality, containing stylistic and contextual alternates, ligatures and more features; all to give you full control and customizability. It has extensive lingual support, covering Greek and Cyrillic, as well as all Latin-based languages, from North Europe to South Africa, from America to South-East Asia. It contains all characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  36. First Reign by Mans Greback, $49.00
    First Reign is a decorative medieval typeface. With borders and ornaments, this swirly uppercase typeface of extreme variability brings us to glorious worlds in the golden times of epic knight sagas. First Reign is the typeface of a Royal House, of vikings, kings and queens. Use it for a Middle Ages game, a fantasy headline, or as a logotype for anything of historical theme. With usage in any modern software, the letters will automatically overlap and embrace in an elegant way. To make heraldic symbols, copy these icons: 🐉 🐎 👑 🗡 🦁 🦅 🦌 + ♖ × ✝ ⚓ * ⚔ † ‡ Alternatively write %A %B %C ... etc to create the heraldry. (Download required.) Dragon, Horse, Crown, Sword, Eagle, Deer, Cross, Anchor are some of the logos. Use [ ] for side borders. Example: [Magic⚔Thrones] The First Reign family consists of four beautiful styles: Decorated capital font provided in Thin, Medium and Bold, plus a Border style. The font is built with advanced OpenType functionality and has a guaranteed top-notch quality, containing stylistic and contextual alternates, ligatures and more features; all to give you full control and customizability. It has extensive lingual support, covering Greek and Cyrillic, as well as all Latin-based languages, from North Europe to South Africa, from America to South-East Asia. It contains all characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  37. FS Lucas by Fontsmith, $80.00
    Pure and not-so-simple Maybe it’s the air of purity, openness and transparency that they transmit, but geometric typefaces are more popular than ever among leading brands. Based on near-perfect circles, triangles and squares, geometric letterforms look uncomplicated, even though making them readable is anything but – something the designers of the first wave of geometric fonts discovered nearly a century ago. Many of the world’s most recognisable brands in technology, retail, travel, food, manufacturing and other industries continue to be drawn to the straightforward, honest character that geometric fonts convey. Fontsmith set out in 2015 to develop a typeface in the same tradition, but optimised for the demands of modern brands – online and offline usage, readability and accessibility. And, of course, with the all-important Fontsmith x-factor built in. FS Lucas is the bold and deceptively simple result. Handle with care The letterforms of FS Lucas are round and generous, along the lines of Trajan Column lettering stripped of its serifs. But beware their thorns. Their designer, Stuart de Rozario, who also crafted the award-winning FS Millbank, wanted a contrast between spiky and soft, giving sharp apexes to the more angular letterforms, such as A, M, N, v, w and z. Among his inspirations were the colourful, geometric compositions of Frank Stella, the 1920s art deco poster designs of AM Cassandre, and the triangular cosmic element symbol, which led him to tackle the capital A first, instead of the usual H. The proportions and angles of the triangular form would set the template for many of the other characters. It was this form, and the light-scattering effects of triangular prisms, that lit the path to a name for the typeface: Lucas is derived from lux, the Latin word for light. Recommended reading Early geometric typefaces were accused of putting mathematical integrity before readability. FS Lucas achieves the trick of appearing geometric, while taking the edge off elements that make reading difficult. Perfectly circlular shapes don’t read well. The way around that is to slightly thicken the vertical strokes, and pull out the curves at the corners to compensate; the O and o of FS Lucas are optical illusions. Pointed apexes aren’t as sharp as they look; the flattened tips are an essential design feature. And distinctive details such as the open terminals of the c, e, f, g, j, r and s, and the x-height bar on the i and j, aid legibility, especially on-screen. These and many other features, the product of sketching the letterforms in the first instance by hand rather than mapping them out mechanically by computer, give FS Lucas the built-in humanity and character that make it a better, easier read all-round. Marks of distinction Unlike some of its more buttoned-up geometric bedfellows, FS Lucas can’t contain its natural personality and quirks: the flick of the foot of the l, for example, and the flattish tail on the g and j. The unusual bar on the J improves character recognition, and the G is circular, without a straight stem. There’s a touch of Fontsmith about the t, too, with the curve across the left cross section in the lighter weights, and the ampersand is one of a kind. There’s a lot to like about Lucas. With its 9 weights, perfect proportions and soft but spiky take on the classic geometric font, it’s a typeface that could light up any brand.
  38. FS Lucas Paneureopean by Fontsmith, $90.00
    Pure and not-so-simple Maybe it’s the air of purity, openness and transparency that they transmit, but geometric typefaces are more popular than ever among leading brands. Based on near-perfect circles, triangles and squares, geometric letterforms look uncomplicated, even though making them readable is anything but – something the designers of the first wave of geometric fonts discovered nearly a century ago. Many of the world’s most recognisable brands in technology, retail, travel, food, manufacturing and other industries continue to be drawn to the straightforward, honest character that geometric fonts convey. Fontsmith set out in 2015 to develop a typeface in the same tradition, but optimised for the demands of modern brands – online and offline usage, readability and accessibility. And, of course, with the all-important Fontsmith x-factor built in. FS Lucas is the bold and deceptively simple result. Handle with care The letterforms of FS Lucas are round and generous, along the lines of Trajan Column lettering stripped of its serifs. But beware their thorns. Their designer, Stuart de Rozario, who also crafted the award-winning FS Millbank, wanted a contrast between spiky and soft, giving sharp apexes to the more angular letterforms, such as A, M, N, v, w and z. Among his inspirations were the colourful, geometric compositions of Frank Stella, the 1920s art deco poster designs of AM Cassandre, and the triangular cosmic element symbol, which led him to tackle the capital A first, instead of the usual H. The proportions and angles of the triangular form would set the template for many of the other characters. It was this form, and the light-scattering effects of triangular prisms, that lit the path to a name for the typeface: Lucas is derived from lux, the Latin word for light. Recommended reading Early geometric typefaces were accused of putting mathematical integrity before readability. FS Lucas achieves the trick of appearing geometric, while taking the edge off elements that make reading difficult. Perfectly circlular shapes don’t read well. The way around that is to slightly thicken the vertical strokes, and pull out the curves at the corners to compensate; the O and o of FS Lucas are optical illusions. Pointed apexes aren’t as sharp as they look; the flattened tips are an essential design feature. And distinctive details such as the open terminals of the c, e, f, g, j, r and s, and the x-height bar on the i and j, aid legibility, especially on-screen. These and many other features, the product of sketching the letterforms in the first instance by hand rather than mapping them out mechanically by computer, give FS Lucas the built-in humanity and character that make it a better, easier read all-round. Marks of distinction Unlike some of its more buttoned-up geometric bedfellows, FS Lucas can’t contain its natural personality and quirks: the flick of the foot of the l, for example, and the flattish tail on the g and j. The unusual bar on the J improves character recognition, and the G is circular, without a straight stem. There’s a touch of Fontsmith about the t, too, with the curve across the left cross section in the lighter weights, and the ampersand is one of a kind. There’s a lot to like about Lucas. With its 9 weights, perfect proportions and soft but spiky take on the classic geometric font, it’s a typeface that could light up any brand.
  39. Touch Tone by Jeff Kahn, $29.00
    Touch Tone introduces a condensed lowercase and oblique italics to the uppercase font inspired by the "Dr. Strangelove" movie titles – designed by Pablo Ferro. Touch Tone's naive hand-drawn strokes rely on a quirky variable width-brush. They are looser, more textured, tactile, more informal, with quirky nervous lines. A family of four fonts: it includes two weights, light and medium, and both with roman and italics. All the fonts include the same patterns and ornaments. However, many of the “medium” font weight ornaments are beefed up to visually match. Touch Tone utilizes OpenType features. It imitates handcrafted lettering by including 2 glyphs for each U&lc letter (4 sets) – all kerned with care. This medley avoids a repetitious appearance so each sentence looks original and hand-drawn. The uppercase includes two widths – extra condensed and extended. Add whimsy and eccentricity by mixing the extra condensed caps with extended caps and the lowercase alphabet. Use the Contextual Alternates, or Stylistic Alternates features panel, or select the alternates in the Glyphs palette. Touch Tone includes oldstyle numerals, a variety of retro patterns, dingbats, speech bubbles, icons, banners, graphic arrows and ornaments. Each font includes 403 glyphs. Suitable for display or text and many European alphabets. Purchase both weights, roman and oblique italics to emphasize words. Touch Tone combines cool graphics and patterns with OpenType. Generously apply Touch Tone for added warmth and a "Rat Pack" groovin' message.
  40. Kimono Kong - Unknown license
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