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  1. Canbera by Viswell, $19.00
    Canbera is an old style serif font, its funky, round, hight-contrast and bold shape with a retro touch is perfect for displayed, head text, logotype and many more.
  2. Lektorat by TypeTogether, $35.00
    Florian Fecher’s Lektorat font family is one for the books, and for the screens, and for the magazines. While an editorial’s main goals are to entertain, inform, and persuade, more should be considered. For example, clear divisions are necessary, not just from one article to the next, but in how each is positioned as op-ed or fact-based, infographic or table, vilifying or uplifting. From masthead to colophon, Lektorat has six concise text styles and 21 display styles to captivate, educate, and motivate within any editorial purpose. Magazines and related publications are notoriously difficult to brand and then to format accordingly. The research behind Lektorat focused on expression versus communication and what it takes for a great typeface to accomplish both tasks. In the changeover from the 19th to 20th century, German type foundry Schelter & Giesecke published several grotesque families that would become Lektorat’s partial inspiration. Experimentation with concepts from different exemplars gave birth to Lektorat’s manifest character traits: raised shoulders, deep incisions within highly contrasted junctions, and asymmetrical counters in a sans family. After thoroughly analysing magazine publishing and editorial designs, Florian discovered that a concise setup is sufficient for general paragraph text. So Lektorat’s text offering is concentrated into six total styles: regular, semibold, and bold with their obliques. Stylistic sets are equally minimal; an alternate ‘k, K’ and tail-less ‘a’ appear in text only. No fluff, no wasted “good intentions”, just a laser-like suite to focus the reader on the words. The display styles were another matter. They aim to attract attention in banners, as oversized type filling small spaces, photo knockouts, and in subsidiary headings like decks, callouts, sections, and more. For these reasons, three dialed-in widths — Narrow, Condensed, and Compressed — complete the display offerings in seven upright weights each, flaunting 21 headlining fonts in total. If being on font technology’s cutting edge is more your goal, the Lektorat type family is optionally available in three small variable font files for ultimate control and data savings. The Lektorat typeface was forged with a steel spine for pixel and print publishing. It unwaveringly informs, convincingly persuades, and aesthetically entertains when the tone calls for it. Its sans serif forms expand in methodical ways until the heaviest two weights close in, highlighting its irrepressible usefulness to the very end. Lektorat is an example of how much we relish entering into an agreed battle of persuasion — one which both sides actually enjoy.
  3. Deception by Typodermic, $11.95
    Introducing Deception—the sub-pixel typeface that’s about to blow your mind! With ten captivating effects, this font is a must-have for anyone looking to create unique and eye-catching designs. Deception Array is the perfect choice for modern architectural themes, with wide blocks reminiscent of a digital VU meter. Deception Bars gives your text a mesmerizing look, like it’s being viewed through lenticular glass. Deception Blocks approximates the heavy JPEG degradation and pixel sharpening glitch effects that are all the rage right now. Looking for something flashy and prestigious? Try Deception Diamonds with a glow effect. Deception Lines can produce a grayscale effect or banding depending on resolution and rendering type, so keep experimenting to see what works best for you. Deception Particles echoes the look of impact printers or laser-etched sell-by dates, giving your text a vintage feel. Deception Plusses radiates positivity with its energetic design. Deception Process simulates grayscale LCD text or a thermal printer on the fritz, perfect for creating a unique and edgy look. Deception Scanline duplicates the appearance of television picture tube text rendering, ideal for recreating a videogame or retro computing vibe. And if you’re feeling daring, Deception System smacks of 1-bit dithering gone completely haywire! Each style of Deception is available in Regular and Bold, with OpenType fractions, numeric ordinals, and plenty of currency symbols included. So what are you waiting for? Try out Deception today and take your designs to the next level! Most Latin-based European writing systems are supported, including the following languages. Afaan Oromo, Afar, Afrikaans, Albanian, Alsatian, Aromanian, Aymara, Bashkir (Latin), Basque, Belarusian (Latin), Bemba, Bikol, Bosnian, Breton, Cape Verdean, Creole, Catalan, Cebuano, Chamorro, Chavacano, Chichewa, Crimean Tatar (Latin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dawan, Dholuo, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Filipino, Finnish, French, Frisian, Friulian, Gagauz (Latin), Galician, Ganda, Genoese, German, Greenlandic, Guadeloupean Creole, Haitian Creole, Hawaiian, Hiligaynon, Hungarian, Icelandic, Ilocano, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Jamaican, Kaqchikel, Karakalpak (Latin), Kashubian, Kikongo, Kinyarwanda, Kirundi, Kurdish (Latin), Latvian, Lithuanian, Lombard, Low Saxon, Luxembourgish, Maasai, Makhuwa, Malay, Maltese, Māori, Moldovan, Montenegrin, Ndebele, Neapolitan, Norwegian, Novial, Occitan, Ossetian (Latin), Papiamento, Piedmontese, Polish, Portuguese, Quechua, Rarotongan, Romanian, Romansh, Sami, Sango, Saramaccan, Sardinian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian (Latin), Shona, Sicilian, Silesian, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Sorbian, Sotho, Spanish, Swahili, Swazi, Swedish, Tagalog, Tahitian, Tetum, Tongan, Tshiluba, Tsonga, Tswana, Tumbuka, Turkish, Turkmen (Latin), Tuvaluan, Uzbek (Latin), Venetian, Vepsian, Võro, Walloon, Waray-Waray, Wayuu, Welsh, Wolof, Xhosa, Yapese, Zapotec Zulu and Zuni.
  4. Coomeec by Linotype, $29.99
    Although Andi AW. Masry designed his Coomeec typeface with one eye on comic books, this is more than just another cartoon font. Even in our short profile of the font below, we're sure you'll find enough to be surprised by the calligraphic aesthetic and the wide range of potential uses of Coomeec. Typography had been one of Andy AW. Masry's hobbies before he turned professional in 2008 and formed his own agency in Jakarta in Indonesia. The former construction engineer had already spent many hours of his leisure time in following his pastimes of designing, photography and Latin typography. Fascinated by the close interaction between text and image in comic books, one of his first projects was the development of his font Coomeec™. The condensed letters of Coomeec seem to have more in common with a calligraphic brush typeface than a more conventional cartoon font. With the characteristic line forms of a brush font, the not unextensive variations in line thickness and numerous small embellishments to the glyphs, Coomeec can be used to enhance your projects with animated effects. You can achieve this not just in the larger font sizes; the font is also very legible in small sizes thanks to its large x-height. There are certain unusual letter forms, such as that of lowercase 'g', 's' and uppercase 'Y', that provide Coomeec with a touch of the exotic. As Coomeec has numerous character alternatives, you can use it not only to create diverse designs but also to ring the changes with the character of the text itself. There are variants for most lowercase letters, some of which exhibit only minor differences, such as the lack of a curlicue on the 'b', a modified downstroke on the 'h' and an elongated base for the 'k'. In the case of other letters, such as the 'q' and the 'r', there are significant disparities between variants. The uppercase characters are also available in a lively swash style with significantly extended terminals. Among the range of characters of Coomeec are oldstyle and lining figures designed for proportional and tabular setting. All alternatives are available in the form of the corresponding OpenType versions. Coomeec comes in two weights; Regular and Bold, each with its Italic version. The form of the slightly inclined Italic characters is identical to that of their upright counterparts with the exception of the lowercase 'f', which has an ascender in its Italic version. As an OpenType Pro font, the glyphs available for Coomeec ensure that it can be used to set not only western European but also central European texts. Coomeec is not just at home when used to set headlines. The excellent legibility of this individual and vibrant typeface means that it's also ideal for setting shorter texts. The various alternative letters provide the designer with the opportunity to vary the textual appearance, and to choose between creating a more formal or more light-hearted effect. Coomeec is not only available in an OpenType version but is also obtainable as a web font, so that you can employ its exotic features to good effect when creating internet pages.
  5. Jartifisa by Agniardi, $15.00
    Jartafisa is a strong and playful script inspired by the natural beauty of flowers. Fall in love with its organic charm, and take any spring craft to the next level!
  6. Steamboat by Atlantic Fonts, $26.00
    Steamboat is ready to embark on the next great adventure. Steamboat’s ribbony script has a vintage vibe, but is eager to put a playful twist on whatever comes its way.
  7. Robertson by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A great overall Text and Headline face, with its matching drawn Italic it has unlimited possibilites. Even as a stand alone, the Italic will work in just about any design.
  8. Wonderful JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A little bit of thick-and-thin Art Deco hand lettering is offered up in Wonderful JNL, based on some promotional text found on an old piece of sheet music.
  9. Illumini by The Infamous Foundry, $39.00
    Illumini is a thin and rounded neoish sans-serif suitable for everything from logotypes to large text blocks. It contains several of the traditional ligatures normally found in serif fonts.
  10. Cooper BT by Bitstream, $34.99
    Cooper Black, commissioned by Barnhart Brothers & Spindler, is the best known of Oswald Cooper’s typefaces. Bitstream has expanded the 1921 original into a complete series of round-edged text faces.
  11. JH Hadi by JH Fonts, $70.00
    JH Hadi is an Arabic Naskh typeface, including three weights; it is typical for long running text, headlines, branding & signage... The diacritic positioning is fine tuned per the publishers requirements.
  12. Letters And Lace by Celebrity Fontz, $24.99
    Letters and Lace is a replica of hand-crafted lace letters. Delicate and artistic, these letters will give warmth to any text. Comes with a full set of accented characters.
  13. Island Sans by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A beautiful face that really works well for any application a distinguished clean look. Headlines, subheads and text anything goes. Will also work as a bolder version of California Sans.
  14. Snubnose by Bogstav, $17.00
    ALL CAPS font with lovely traces after the brushstrokes. With contextual alternates, which makes sure that your text varies between 5 different versions of each letter - and they cycle automatically!
  15. Muskamot MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Solid and elegant font family will stand out in headlines, signage, packaging and much more. The choice of 7 weights makes it super versatile to use in your next design.
  16. Tapas Signpainting by Cifonts, $50.00
    Tapas Signpainting is a typeface based on traditional sign painting letters designed by Cifonts. This family has six variants and is useful to compose display texts, vintage logos, headlines & packaging.
  17. Penmanshift JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Penmanshift JNL by Jeff Levine is actually a semiscript - a vertical text font with the curved lines of a script alphabet, but the look and feel of a poster letter.
  18. Cambridge Round by AVP, $29.00
    Cambridge Round provides a rounded version of Cambridge, useful for headings and more informal texts. The family contains four weights in three widths with matching italic forms for all variants.
  19. TG Halo by Weishan Gao, $50.00
    TG HALO font is a relatively round font, which can be used in catering industry, children's products and so on. The application of title and text can be well recognized.
  20. Bevelle by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Bevelle is a serif font with characters that have beveled corners. It is ideal for headlines, titles, branding, small blocks of text or wherever a clean, fresh look is desired.
  21. Hebrew Tsefat by Samtype, $34.00
    This is a beautiful typeface to invitations, posters, cover books and small texts. All diacritic marks for vocalization are present (Nikud), including shevana, kamats katan, cholam chaser and dagesh hazak.
  22. M Ling Wai F HK by Monotype HK, $523.99
    M Ling Wai is a humanistic script based on a real handwritten style. It has a feminine, urban and lively character filled with literate finesse. M Ling Wai was written with a thin ball pen by a young woman in a unique, personal, running writing style, such that it is real, natural and feminine. Contrast of strokes is low and the text is visible and eye-catching. Its light to medium stems (豎) make it suitable for small text and subheading with little conglutination. All strokes are highly irregular, inconsistent, irregularly oriented and tightly coupled or connected. Spatial distribution, positioning, size and relative proportion of radicals fully reflect a natural and personal favor. It is one of the first proportional width font in a full scale. It is best suited for casual lively text, illustrations, set upright (non-slanted), non-condensed.
  23. M Ling Wai P HK by Monotype HK, $523.99
    M Ling Wai is a humanistic script based on a real handwritten style. It has a feminine, urban and lively character filled with literate finesse. M Ling Wai was written with a thin ball pen by a young woman in a unique, personal, running writing style, such that it is real, natural and feminine. Contrast of strokes is low and the text is visible and eye-catching. Its light to medium stems (豎) make it suitable for small text and subheading with little conglutination. All strokes are highly irregular, inconsistent, irregularly oriented and tightly coupled or connected. Spatial distribution, positioning, size and relative proportion of radicals fully reflect a natural and personal favor. It is one of the first proportional width font in a full scale. It is best suited for casual lively text, illustrations, set upright (non-slanted), non-condensed.
  24. Seconda by Durotype, $49.00
    Wait a second... Seconda. A sans serif with its own individuality. A typeface which combines character with legibility. A typeface which combines business with pleasure. Its moderate contrast and narrowing terminals give this typeface a gentle and sophisticated nature. Use it for books, reports, magazines, business letters — and relax. Use it for brochures, posters, signs, corporate identity projects — and enjoy. Seconda has sixteen styles, extensive language support, eight different kinds of figures, sophisticated OpenType features — so it’s ready for advanced typographic projects. For text and display use. When using Seconda in small text sizes, it will be a reliable and legible text face. When using it in big display sizes, it will show its refined details. Seconda has the companion typefaces Seconda Soft, Seconda XtraSoft, and Seconda Round. For more information about Seconda, download the PDF Specimen Manual.
  25. Karmina Sans by TypeTogether, $49.00
    Karmina Sans follows the steps of its successful award winner cousin, Karmina Serif. It shares the same technical excellence and it achieves similar stylistic features, but the new sans serif version proposes a much more versatile tool for editorial designers. Karmina Sans has six different weights with their matching italics, from light to heavy and from continuous text to headlines to small text. The heavy weight delivers one of the darkest and most powerful impressions out there while the text weights are perfect companions for Karmina Serif. The OpenType Pro package of Karmina Sans includes nearly 900 characters per weight, including small caps, fractions, old style and lining numbers, scientific superior/inferior figures, complete ordinal and inferior alphabet, and a set of symbols and arrows. It supports over 40 languages that use the Latin extended alphabet.
  26. Escritura by Vanarchiv, $30.00
    The handwriting typeface Escritura was created for editorial purposes and the letter forms are influenced by chancery handwriting from the Italian Renaissance. The asymmetrical shapes of the undulating serifs cause the characters to have a large aperture. Originally designed for display sizes, the typeface also comes in a text version for small sizes. With taller vertical proportions, the text version has slightly longer serifs and increased white space between the characters to optimize legibility in small sizes. Ascenders and descenders and serifs are shorter in the display version, which has more economical letter spacing resulting in a visually compact text image. The stress in the letter strokes create changing widths according to their direction, improving the calligraphic rhythm in the characters. The oblique crossbar as well as other typographic details lend the typeface that typical Renaissance atmosphere.
  27. Bahar by Hurufatfont, $29.00
    Bahar was inspired by the playful-energetic nature of Cooper Black from Souvenir's soft but confident stance and was born from the idea of creating a new structure by blending this structure with calligraphic strokes. The title and body are presented in two sets for perfect results. Bahar has a wide variety of character alternatives to create the perfect and fun title. It offers calligraphic flavors with swashes, start-finish forms, and fun ligatures. Bahar Text is prepared for Body texts and offers a good reading experience. Does not include swash and style alternatives. Bahar consists of five weights, Bahar Text four, a total of nine weights, and 18 styles with true italics. For each weight, there is a complete set of open type features including ligatures, small caps, old-style and table numbers, and positional numbers.
  28. JMTF Robin by John Moore Type Foundry, $55.00
    JMTF Robin is a new post-modernist typeface in the spirit of Art & Crafts, born as a concept of a reformulation of a Gothic traditional building structure. Interestingly medieval structural architectural rescue form is for creating a font of traits absolutely contemporary without losing its artisan flavor. JMTF Robin is then a modular typography with very specific characteristics that provides an innovative texts while an appearance of great personality. Early versions of Robin was winners in Letras Latinas 2006. JMTF Robin representing a before and after in terms of contemporary texts composition. JMTF Robin is a typeface family that is presented in a wide variety of forms, from JMTF Robin in condensed forms to other roman proportions like Robin9, ideal for text, also JMTF Robin comes in Shadow and Double Outline. I dedicate this letter to creative genius William Morris father of modernism.
  29. Atlantica by Jonahfonts, $35.00
    My pet peeve for many years has been with the 'rn' in small texts, especially with my smart phone. I felt that perhaps others may have the same peeve. I decided to try and fix that with Atlantica. As you can see in poster No. 4. "With the combination of 'rn' in small text it tends to appear as 'm'. Therefore it may be read as 's t e m' instead of 's t e r n'. Altalntica has an alternate 'rn'. By invoking the < Contextual-Alternate > feature. Atlantica will replace each 'rn' - or you may individually change them if you desire". Also note the deep cuts to help legibility for smaller texts. This combination apparently does not appear in many words, but when it does it can suggest a different word as in; eastern, stern, tarnish, Tornado, Turn and in some names as well.
  30. Expedition One by Gustav & Brun, $6.00
    To be independent or to be dependent? The formula “one plus one is one” is here essential for this to work. The different cases, upper and lower is dependent on one another. To give us clarity they have to work together, to be like one the upper and lower cases must work together. Expedition One works best in InDesign or equivalent software. How to use it: write your text in lower case, copy the text frame and ”Paste in Place”, change your lower case text to upper case (you do that under top menu->type->change case). Change colour if you want to and maybe change the blending mode in the effects window to “multiply” makes it even more sparkling. On numbers and ampersand for example, you have to use the glyph window in InDesign to find their second half.
  31. The Overleys by Fargun Studio, $14.00
    The Overleys is a handwritten font with quick dry strokes and a signature style. perfect for branding projects, homeware designs, product packaging or simply as a stylish text overlay to any background image or posters. The Overleys has an entire alternate glyph set. This is accessible simply by their own separate font file - just install this as normal and select 'The Overleys Swash' , ‘The Overleys Alt' or ‘The Overleys Brush’ in your text-tool. The Overleys includes 3 Font files: 1. The Overleys - A handwritten script font containing upper & lowercase characters, numerals and a large range of punctuation. 2. The Overleys Alt - The second version of The Overleys, with a completely new set of both lower and uppercase characters. 3. The Overleys Swash - A set of 26 hand-drawn swashes, with cool touch to underline you’re The Overleys text.
  32. Knife Fight - Personal use only
  33. Veru Serif - Unknown license
  34. Blue Typewriter by Ana's Fonts, $16.00
    Blue Typewriter is a bold typewriter font and scans pack (with graphics, text, paper) sampled from old documents, for an authentic vintage look. Use this set in any designs that needs a vintage touch: in long or short texts, in digital collages, branding and packaging, social media posts, logotypes, etc. Included in this product: Blue Typewriter font with variations: underlined, dashed, crossed-out and dashed underline, in SVG and vector versions (with the vector versions created separately, so that the two versions include subtle differences)
  35. Luckylove by Scratch Design, $9.00
    Luckylove is a modern script font with natural brush effects in the bouncy curve and loops. This font will make your design text look stand out and also perfect for logos, posters, wedding invitations, websites, printed quotes, invitations, cards, product packaging, headers, and whatever with a feminine touch in your designs. Luckylove is an awesome script font that comes with some of the lowercase alternates, that allows you to create even more authentic modern script-feel text. Another feature of this font is complete with multi-languages.
  36. Lasta by Tour De Force, $25.00
    Lasta is small serif font family with simple elegant shapes, refreshing Italics and poetic endings. Containing 2 weights and 2 italics, with lower x-height which brings more air (empty space, white space...) into paragraphs making text more graceful and legible. Thin serifs bring small touch of dynamic into letter forms, just enough to bring specific tone to paragraph. Beside being mainly imagined as fully text family, Lasta is suitable titles or decorative typography as well for, especially the Italics with fancy curvy endings.
  37. Alkalis by Craft Supply Co, $20.00
    Alkalis: Modernity Meets Elegance Meet Alkalis – Modern Elegant Serif, where modern meets timeless. This serif offers the perfect contrast for versatility. It’s crafted for both text and display needs. Alkalis brings a touch of elegance to any project. Balanced Contrast With Alkalis, experience the ideal balance in font design. The contrast is just right, not too sharp, not too soft. This balance makes it perfect for an array of uses. Plus, it’s designed to be as fitting for body text as it is for headers.
  38. Funky Gloom by Invasi Studio, $16.00
    Introduction Funky Gloom is a Fancy and modern font with a Blackletter style, special for your Display or Body text Design, which puts a bold on your projects and will inspire you to create something unique or modern look design. Funky Gloom will help you to create special and touching typographical designs for your Display or Body text project, it is perfect for headings, flyers, greeting cards, product packaging, book cover, printed quotes, logotype, apparel design, album covers. Funky Gloom Features: Ligatures Alternate Multi-language Punctuation
  39. Orgon by Hoftype, $49.00
    Orgon, a new linear typeface family, fresh and easy but with a warm touch. It appears uncomplicated, unpretentious, but still distinctive. Its quiet text flow allows smooth reading even for longer texts. The Orgon family comprises 16 styles and is well suited for ambitious typography. It comes in OpenType format with extended language support. All weights contain ligatures, small caps, superior characters, proportional lining figures, tabular lining figures, proportional old style figures, lining old style figures, matching currency symbols, fraction- and scientific numerals and matching arrows.
  40. FF Avance by FontFont, $65.99
    Dutch type designer Evert Bloemsma created this serif FontFont in 2000. The family contains 4 weights: Regular, Italic, Bold, and Bold Italic and is ideally suited for book text, editorial and publishing, small text as well as web and screen design. FF Avance provides advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, small capitals, alternate characters, case-sensitive forms, fractions, and super- and subscript characters. It comes with a complete range of figure set options – oldstyle and lining figures, each in tabular and proportional widths.
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