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  1. Engria by Eclectotype, $40.00
    Engria is a type family of four weights with corresponding italics that treads the fine line between sans and serif. There are serifs, of a sort, inspired by the brush. Not the marks made by a brush, but the actual splayed shape the bristles make when clamped together. Wedge-like chunks that resemble engraved forms, as the name Engria hints at. But it also has the appearance of a stressed, flared sans. This mixed approach lends a unique voice. Highly legible at text sizes, as indeed it is optimized for, Engria does however shine at display sizes thanks to its characteristic details – flared stems, angular counterforms, rugged ink traps and fluid curves. (I would recommend tracking it a little tighter at larger sizes.) Engria started life way back in 2014, and has been worked and reworked tirelessly to get to this finished product. My intent was to really push the idea of the white shapes being as important, if not more so, than the black. Engria is equipped for typographically demanding applications, boasting as it does an array of OpenType features, including small caps, automatic fractions, stylistic sets, various figure styles, arrows, case sensitive forms and more. It will make a very useful addition to your typographic arsenal, with a flare (ahem) for editorial work, but the individuality for packaging, branding, and logo work.
  2. Jendral Writing Pro by Saffatin.co, $23.00
    Introducing a "Jendral Writing Pro" font. A Latin Pro, writinable and super natural handwriting script fonts. Inspired by nowdays hand lettered trend. This font look very close like natural handwritten on modern script calligraphy nuance. With including over 630 ligatures. Meaning, 94 special ligatures and 536 standard ligatures, and a set of lowercase alternates. *Ligatures and Alternate glyphs encoded with PUA encoding*. With Opentype features, this font comes to life like you are writing there. In Adobe software, You ca turn off your "opentype" feature to accesses random/selected ligatures. Files included: Jendral Writing Pro OTF Jendral Writing Pro Swashes This font support Latin Pro accent letters of Central Europa, Western (À Â Æ È Ë ã ä æ è...) Thank you!
  3. Idiom by Reserves, $39.99
    Idiom is an extra-condensed, tightly spaced display face with congruent forms exuding a strong sense of rhythm and elevation. The basic stenciled geometric shapes are reminiscent of the decorative style found with P22 Albers and Futura Black. Careful consideration of each letter's construction, relative to all characters, lends Idiom a decided sense of cohesion and sophistication. The included non-traditional 'weights' (Medium and Bold) are completely blacked out, creating entirely new letterforms that exhibit a very stark, contemporary sense. Increasing the versatility of the Idiom family, a selection of OpenType features allow access to a set of contrasting linear punctuation forms, unconventional ligatures, case-sensitive punctuation and more. Features include: Basic Ligature set including 'f' ligatures (ae, oe, fi, fl, ff, fh, fj, ft, fa, ct, st, rt, ot, ta, sa, mi, si, vi, su, oc, oo, ru, ib) Alternate characters (M, W, T, ß, _, $, @, (), {}, [], /, \, |, -, –, —, +, -, ±, ≤, ≥, , «, », and more) Case forms (shifts various punctuation marks vertically to a position that works better with all-capital sequences, in this case the numerals or letters with ascenders) Slashed zero Full set of numerators/denominators and superscript/subscript Automatic fraction feature (supports any fraction combination) Extended language support (Latin-1 and Latin Extended-A) *Requires an application with OpenType and/or Unicode support.
  4. Budmo Jiggler - Unknown license
  5. Degrassi - 100% free
  6. Contour Generator - Unknown license
  7. Crystal Radio Kit - Unknown license
  8. Carbon Block - Unknown license
  9. Dyspepsia - Unknown license
  10. DirtyBakersDozen - Unknown license
  11. CrackMan - Unknown license
  12. Droid - Unknown license
  13. Deftone Stylus - Unknown license
  14. Burnstown Dam - Unknown license
  15. Credit River - Unknown license
  16. Duality - Unknown license
  17. Die Nasty - 100% free
  18. Dendritic Voltage - Unknown license
  19. Coolvetica - Unknown license
  20. Butterbelly - Unknown license
  21. Dignity Of Labour - Unknown license
  22. Cretino - Unknown license
  23. Charles in Charge - Unknown license
  24. Boron - Unknown license
  25. Cranberry Gin - Unknown license
  26. Counterscraps - Unknown license
  27. Dash Wisher by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    The name Dash Wisher is a wordplay. The letters of the font are also quite playful - you never know what comes next, when typing. There is no exact x-heigh, the baseline is jumpy, the descender and ascender are messed up...there are no real rules for Dash Wisher! But with all that in mind, it comes out surprisingly legible, which means it does have a wide range of use. Let your fantasy and imagination break the boundaries and Dash Wisher do the rest - or maybe the other way around! :) I've added both ligatures to substitute double letters and a set of alternate letters as well.
  28. Rutherford by Device, $39.00
    Rutherford is clear, robust and authoritative, and reads well at small text sizes while also having the required heft for larger headlines. A wide range of weights makes it a versatile choice for magazines, branding, brochures and advertising. A slightly condensed obround serif with squared stroke terminals. The t, j and f curve around to harmonize with the terminals on the a and g, as does the tail of the Q. The italic incorporates cursive forms on the ends of the lower right and upper left strokes, and uses a single-story a. Includes full European Latin support and alternate designs for the Q and g in all weights.
  29. Pucky by Just My Type, $25.00
    When teaching font-making at the Art Institute of Tucson, I give my students plenty of lab time to come up with design ideas. I designed Pucky while one class created their fonts. It came about through an idea for a capital A: sort of a triangle with two round sides and a crossbar formed by a circle falling out. (You can see it here.) In drawing that, I hit upon the idea of making the tops of the alphabet sharp and square and the bottoms rounded. (See the whole alphabet here.) Pucky suggests both circus and psychedelia. Hmmmm, does anybody have an “in” at Cirque du Soleil?
  30. Colin by Tickbite Type, $18.99
    Colin is a fresh, somewhat futuristic geometric sans serif type with a large x-height that, to me, communicates both seriousness and cheerfulness. It supports 70 languages incl. monotonic Greek and comes in 7 weights with a small number of alternate glyphs (ss01) for more flexibility. It features fractions, old style and tabular figures. Colin works great in titles, displays and short paragraphs. And where does it come from? To be honest, the reason for this font is a selfish one. I wanted a typeface where my initials (n and c) look identical, just rotated by 90 degrees. That didn’t completely work but, hey, it’s pretty close.
  31. Vivizza by Julia Visht, $20.00
    Vivizza Bold - Modern, classy and elegant! New stylish multifunctional Serif from Julia Visht! Perfect at large and medium size - Vivizza Bold does well from large eye-catching headlines , to medium headings. Two different models of letter spacing for uppercase and lowercase letters! Carefully constructed built-in opentype kerning pairs to ensure impeccable letter spacing throughout the font. Main features: -Ligatures. Set of opentype ligatures allows to make your design truly unique. -Great for web-design, logo creating, modern branding, posters, headers, advertising and so much more. -Multilingual support. English, German, Italian, French, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Italian, Spanish, Filipino, Scottish Gaelic,Indonesian, Irish, Swiss German, Portuguese, Finnish. Stylish Serif for Stylish Projects!
  32. CoolWool by Linotype, $29.99
    Linotype CoolWool is part of the Take Type Library, featuring winners of Linotype’s International Digital Type Design Contest. This font was designed by A. Leonardi and P. Wollein, who took their inspiration from clothing labels and care instructions. CoolWool is designed to look like it was stitched, a style of typeface which goes back to the hand embroidery of the time of Biedermeier. CoolWool, however, is a distinctly modern font with a technical feel. The font is not suited for longer texts, but CoolWool is good for shorter texts and headlines, especially because of the possibilities allowed by its three different styles, regular, stone washed (bold) and Cotton Club (outline).
  33. RyuGothic by StudioJASO, $42.00
    RyuGothic Family is a humanistic interpretation of the Hangul Gothic style. It delivers messages in a soft, calm tone that does not overpower. The narrow counter design of consonants in Hangul and the narrow counter of the Latin lowercase letters are connected to create a sense of structural unity between the two sets of characters. This enables you to read long lines and works well in a variety of media and situations. Each font includes: 2,350 Hangul syllables, the smallest unit for expressing modern Korean; Latin Basic; punctuation; symbols for Korean codepage. Cyrillic, Greek, and Kana alphabets were excluded. The punctuation is designed in the preferred location for Korean typesetting.
  34. Dabu by Gunjan, $42.00
    Dabu is a hand paint inspired high contrast decorative display typeface. With unique five ornamental layers which makes Dabu very presentable and eye catchy. Dabu has identical styles that very well goes with logo design, headline, creative sign boards, poster design, social media, fashion brand, beauty product branding, large print and screen. How to use Dabu ? - Select Dabu-Regular. - Copy the same one more time. - Select and choose any one Dabu Depth, Dabu Heart, Dabu Flower, Dabu Diamond, Dabu Square. - Select both and Aline. - Bingo!! :) No animals harmed in the making of this typeface Dabu is supportive to Adobe illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe In-design and All Adobe.
  35. Greuceanu by DePlictis Types, $36.00
    “Greuceanu” is the the name of a brave romanian fairy tale character and his mission was to eliberate de Sun and the Moon that were stolen by some Dragon like creatures that in romanian folklore they are called “ Zmei”. It inspired me to create this decorative uppercase display typeface with strong influences from old cyrillic writing and also a touch of fun and geometrical construction explorations. Besides Extended Latin Support it includes also Cyrillic and Greek alphabets as you already can expect from most of DePlictis Types releases. This decorative typeface goes well for use in book covers and headlines and only your creativity is the limit of its usability.
  36. FT Aessthetique by Foxys Forest Foundry, $24.00
    FT Aessthetique is a modern classic serif font that effortlessly combines delicate lines with bold strokes. Its aesthetic captures a beautifully romantic style, blending vintage elements with nostalgia. FT Aessthetique goes beyond being a font; it's a crucial brand element that seamlessly complements other fonts, imparting a sophisticated appearance to any project. Its professional characteristics make it appealing for expressing individuality across various endeavors. The font is perfect for large headlines and titles. FT Aessthetique features 65 ligatures and 35 alternative letters, expanding its versatility and providing creative possibilities. It supports most Latin-based languages and includes an extended set of symbols, punctuation, and diacritical marks.
  37. 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.
  38. Quant by Hoftype, $49.00
    Quant is a contrasted typeface with a fresh and well-reasoned appearance. It owes allegiance to classical structure but is a free design and does not refer to any historical model. Although it has strong qualities as a reading type, its distinct and powerful ductus makes it superb for headlines and in display sizes. Quant is well-equipped for ambitious typography. The Quant family consists of 8 styles, comes in OpenType format with extended language support for more than 40 languages. All weights contain small caps, proportional lining figures, tabular lining figures, proportional old style figures, lining old style figures, matching currency symbols, fraction and scientific numerals.
  39. Veotec by Hashtag Type, $29.00
    Veotec is a classic humanist sans that skilfully works for both screen and print due to its steep and precise angles enabling more negative space. Not only does this methodical approach improve legibility and readability at small sizes, it allows the bolder weights to feel harmonised and consistent without the compromise of this legibility. Angles are refined and considered with a balance between sharp and round curves adding a unique feature to this font. This also gives a modern and appealing feel at large sizes. Details include 6 well constructed weights, manually edited kerning, which is more open for on-screen devices, ligatures and alternatives.
  40. Stripes by profonts, $41.99
    Stripes is a caps only font and does not contain additional ligatures, because there is an easy way to create as many of them as you like. To form a ligature, convert your word or word string into vectors. Activate the corner points of the straight lines (not the round ones) of a letter and drag them over the next or the previous letter. This way you can create any ligature of your own. Beware of overkilling, it could decrease the legibility of your text. Besides the normal J, Stripes contains a stylistic alternate which should be used to avoid ugly gaps between critical letter pairs (see pdf document).
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