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  1. Kalenderblatt Grotesk - Personal use only
  2. Blocked Off - Personal use only
  3. Accent Watermelon - Unknown license
  4. Jelek - 100% free
  5. Concielian Break - Unknown license
  6. Abaddon™ - Unknown license
  7. HVD Rowdy - 100% free
  8. SF RetroSplice Shaded - Unknown license
  9. rockdafonkybit - Personal use only
  10. Surf Punx - Unknown license
  11. Comic Strip MN - Unknown license
  12. Deng Thick - Unknown license
  13. Jumbo - 100% free
  14. Induction - Unknown license
  15. Nonstop - Unknown license
  16. Shadow of Xizor - Unknown license
  17. Spacebeach - Personal use only
  18. Yahoo!© - Unknown license
  19. Quadaptor - Unknown license
  20. Moby - Unknown license
  21. Ben Brown - Unknown license
  22. Metro-Retro - 100% free
  23. Shoguns Clan - Unknown license
  24. Tozuna - Personal use only
  25. Masterforce Solid - Unknown license
  26. Rasstapp 1.0 - Unknown license
  27. CRAY AN? - 100% free
  28. GUNBATS - Unknown license
  29. Loud noise - Unknown license
  30. Rock ‘n Roller - Unknown license
  31. Big Blocko - Unknown license
  32. SF Speakeasy Shaded - Unknown license
  33. 1-2-3 GO! - Personal use only
  34. Sk8ordye - Unknown license
  35. Holitter Forge - 100% free
  36. Albatross - Unknown license
  37. Malutzki Initials by Spirit & Bones, $15.00
    In 1980, Peter Malutzki, Heidi Hübner-Prochotta and Manfred Prochotta founded the FlugBlatt-Presse and began producing broadsheets, which they called FlugBlätter and which also gave their press its name. They were mostly woodcuts or linocuts, combined with hand-set typography. When they finished the series in 1984 there were 67 FlugBlätter. During a Frankfurt Book Fair in the 1980s the collector Rob Saunders acquired FlugBlatt No. 37 along with other prints. Later they became part Letterform Archive, a non-profit museum and special collection library in San Francisco, which Rob Saunders founded in 2014. In 2021, Letterform Archive posted the FlugBlatt No. 37 on social media, where type designer Lena Schmidt saw it, immediately fell in love with it, and developed the plan to bring it into the digital world. After contacting Peter Malutzki – who is still working as a book artist today – and in close consultation with him, Schmidt translated the letterforms into a font series, Malutzki Initials. The three fonts can be used for black (single-color) text using the Regular style, or for multicolor text by applying different colors to the Letter Layer and Figure Layer styles.
  38. Daiquiri by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    Daiquiri is a revival of a handlettered font in two weights, from an ad for Puerto Rico Rum dating back to the forties or fifties. I found the ad on a French antique market on my last visit for Mardi Gras in Nice. The ad read "Breeze through the heat, be a Daiquiri fan". That's why they had this "fan" in the illustration! Did they want you to rotate like a fan when you had enough Daiquiris? Or did they just do it for that little "Jeu des mots"? Anyway I found the handlettering very pretty, so I took those few letters and made a whole font out of them. I think Daiquiri has that touch that brings those happy and uncomplicated times back when advertising was still fun. I started something like 20 years later in advertising and things had gotten more stringent. We already had to satisfy those marketing guys with their scholarly attitude. They have taken all the fun out of the job, for the creators as well as for the consumers. I would like to see more uncomplicated ads like this again, yours Gert Wiescher
  39. Nippon Note by Hanoded, $15.00
    I just returned from a short holiday in Japan. I stayed in hostels and small guesthouses and noticed a peculiar thing they all had in common: they love little notes, telling you where to go, what to do, how to use the microwave oven and when to check out. These notes were sometimes printed, but more often they were handwritten. I found that the Japanese way of writing roman characters is a little, well, unusual. The letters are correct, but they have that typical ‘Japanese look’ - most notably the a and A the b, d and g, the p and P and the t and T. I can’t really tell you what makes them look different, maybe it’s the proportions, but I do know that a Nippon Note is highly recognisable. So, here is Nippon Note, a highly recognisable, handmade font. You don’t really have to be in Japan to use it, but it will give your designs that extra cachet. And don’t forget Nippon Note Kawaii - the cute doodle font which is free if you download the Nippon Note family! Comes with extensive language support, but unfortunately not Japanese…
  40. VVDS Sunshine Bridge by Vintage Voyage Design Supply, $12.00
    Sunshine Bridge is a retro modern font family, featuring a retro brush script with an artistic modern bold sans serif. They complement each other perfectly. You can use the Sans as main and Script as additional, or vice versa. This family gives you a modern look with a vintage mood. So, you can use it both as in vintage-look projects - Beer bar or Brewery logo etc, or as Modern magazine headline or any modern print. It includes a lot of OpenType Features in Script with Swashes and Alternates to give you a little more hand-touch look. The family includes: Clean and Pressed versions Well Kerned Multilingual Support OpenType Features Modern / Vintage look
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