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  1. Home School by Fox7, $10.00
    Home School is a tall and cute, easy-to-read sans serif font. You can use it for various projects, such as blog posts, logos, branding, ads, invitations, greeting cards, planners, photo albums, decorations, and much more.
  2. Bostroom by Lemonthe, $14.00
    Bostroom is a beautiful brush font. Bostroom Font is perfect for many different project such as logos & branding, invitation, stationery, wedding designs, social media posts, advertisements, product packaging, product designs, label, photography, watermark, special events or anything.
  3. Gleamore by GlyphStyle, $17.00
    Gleamore is a decorative display font, looks stylish. The bold shape combined with the unique curve shape makes this font easy to read and looks beautiful. - Font feature Uppercase, Lowercase, Numerals & Punctuations, Stylistic Alt, Swash Ligature, Multilanguage
  4. Christmas Shadow by Yoga Letter, $18.00
    "Christmas Shadow" is a beautiful handwritten font with a love shape. This font is equipped with uppercase, lowercase, numerals, punctuation, and multilingual support. It is suitable for weddings, engagements, invitations, back to school, autumn, Christmas, and others.
  5. White Pen by Khurasan, $8.00
    Introducing the White Pen script, a font that is very fresh and unique style handmade. White Pen script is perfectly suited to logo, signature, stationery, poster, apparel, branding, wedding invitation, card, tagline, layout design, and much more !!.
  6. Tosca Pen by Khurasan, $8.00
    Introducing the Toscal Pen script, a font that is very fresh and unique, handmade style. Tosca Pen script is perfectly suited for logos, signatures, stationery, posters, apparel, branding, wedding invitations, cards, taglines, layout designs, and much more.
  7. Anboug by ahweproject, $14.00
    Anboug is a gorgeous and bold handwritten font, crafted to give your headlines and logotype projects a retro touch. This font reads as strong, confident, and dynamic and can add tons of nostalgic character to your designs.
  8. Des Montilles by Supfonts, $18.00
    Des Montilles is a casual handwritten font. Perfect for greeting cards, wedding stationery, photographer watermarks logos, modern websites, apparel design and more. Des Montilles features handwritten ligatures, beginning and end swashes for lowercase letters and heart connections
  9. Amelaryas by Hishand Studio, $15.00
    Amelaryas is beautiful serif font with elegant and premium shape that can be used for logos, branding, invitations, stationery, wedding designs, social media posts, and much more. Complete with ligatures alternates regular italic icon kerning multilingual support
  10. This font is, like, totally inspired by the handwriting of, like, teenage girls. You’ll note that the [ ] keys are actually adorable little hearts! Totally rad! This font includes enough European characters to fill a loose leaf binder.
  11. Leitmotiv by GRIN3 (Nowak), $19.00
    Leitmotiv is a handwritten calligraphy font which can be used for invitations, greeting cards, posters, advertising, weddings, books, menus etc. Language support includes Western, Central and Eastern European character sets, as well as Baltic and Turkish languages.
  12. New Renaissance by Type Innovations, $39.00
    New Renaissance is a modernized old style design based on generous proportions and clean, crisp lines. A 'New Renaissance' for the 21st century, New Renaissance makes for easy reading and looks good in both text and display.
  13. Kallisto by Device, $39.00
    A robust rectangular sans with round corners and subtle rounded stroke terminals, Kallisto weds a rational, machine-made aesthetic with a certain warmth that derives from more familiar letter shapes found on diestamped or embossed boilerplate signs.
  14. Kailey Latief by Balpirick, $15.00
    Kailey Latief is a sweet, soft hand-lettered handwritten font. Fall in love with its authentic feel and use it to create gorgeous wedding invitations, beautiful stationary art, eye-catching social media posts, and cute greeting cards.
  15. Awesome Heather by Supfonts, $15.00
    Awesome Heather is a casual handwritten font. Perfect for greeting cards, wedding stationery, photographer watermarks logos, modern websites, apparel design and more. Awesome Heather features handwritten ligatures, beginning and end swashes for lowercase letters and heart connections
  16. Metal Pen by Khurasan, $8.00
    Introducing the Metal Pen script, a font that is very fresh and unique, handmade style. Metal Pen script is perfectly suited for logos, signatures, stationery, posters, apparel, branding, wedding invitations, cards, taglines, layout designs, and much more.
  17. Natural Garden by Balpirick, $15.00
    Natural Garden is a sweet, soft hand-lettered handwritten font. Fall in love with its authentic feel and use it to create gorgeous wedding invitations, beautiful stationary art, eye-catching social media posts, and cute greeting cards.
  18. Betterside Handmade by Lucky Type, $16.00
    Betterside Handmade font is a brand new handwritten font that brings a fancy and eye-catching style to modern logos, websites, social media quotes, wedding stationery and more. identity and others. Thank you very much for viewing.
  19. KG Neatly Printed by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    This neat, handwritten font is intended for educators who create teaching resources for children. It is highly legible for new readers and is thin enough to be used for the body of text on student-read documents.
  20. Jushley Shine by Ergibi Studio, $19.00
    Jushley Shine is a brush font made from handwriting. It contains lowercase, uppercase, symbols, and also support for multiple languages. Jushley Shine also works well on posters, branding, packaging, beautiful fashion design, wedding invitations and handwritten quotes.
  21. MPI Bodoni Ultra by mpressInteractive, $5.00
    Old Style is an example of classic roman type design. It has little contrast in stroke weight, small rounded serifs, open characters, and is very easy to read. It is based on wood type of unknown origin.
  22. Bubble float by Fox7, $10.00
    Bubble Float is a cute, easy-to-read, and jolly display font. You can use this font in various projects, such as blog posts, logos, branding, ads, invitations, greeting cards, planners, photo albums, decorations, and much more.
  23. Laila by Nissa Nana, $19.00
    Laila is a beautiful script font. It has a classy, elegant, and modern look which can be used for logos, branding, invitations, stationary, wedding designs, social media posts, and every other design that needs a handwritten touch.
  24. Brightsome by FHFont, $18.00
    Brightsome is a hand-lettered brush script with OpenType features. It is suitable for design, weddings, events, t-shirts, logos, badges, stickers, and more to make your work awesome. Features: - OpenType Features - PUA Encoded - Multi-Language Support
  25. Adelyne by Good Java Studio, $20.00
    Adelyne is a modern hand-lettering font make from handwriting ideas in font design. This font includes full Alphabetical glyphs, Numerals, and punctuation. Adelyne is perfect for invitations, monograms, wedding, fashion, branding, labels, hand-lettering or logotype.
  26. 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.
  27. 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.
  28. Thursday Routine by Crumphand, $12.50
    Hello, introducing the new font Thursday Routine. Thursday Routine is a Bold Friendly font. The font is available on Italic too. Good reading, Readability 100%. Perfect for your graphic. What's Included ? Uppercase Lowercase Symbols Numerals Multilingual Support
  29. Barbie Doll by Yoga Letter, $18.00
    "Barbie Doll" is a cute and lovely handwritten font. This font is equipped with uppercase, lowercase, numerals, punctuation, ligatures, and multilingual support. It is suitable for promotion, social media, business branding, Barbie, weddings, engagements, birthdays, and others.
  30. Silver Pen by Khurasan, $8.00
    Introducing the Silver Pen script, a font that is very fresh and unique style handmade. Silver Pen script is perfectly suited to logos, signature, stationery, posters, apparel, branding, wedding invitations, cards, tagline, layout design, and much more.
  31. Best Strong by Yoga Letter, $18.00
    "Best Strong" is an elegant and professional blackletter font. This font is equipped with uppercase, lowercase, numerals, punctuation, and multilingual support. Very suitable for invitations, weddings, engagements, certificates, Christmas, Valentine's, winter, posters, tattoos, stickers, posters, and others.
  32. Curly Valentine by Yoga Letter, $20.00
    "Curly Valentine" is a beautiful and unique curly display font. Equipped with uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numerals, punctuation, and multilingual support. Very suitable for posters, banners, valentines, weddings, gifts, invitations, branding, stickers, Christmas, spring, winter, and others.
  33. Maritime Champion Stencil by Kyle Wayne Benson, $6.00
    Make no mistake, Maritime Champion is not simply seaworthy. This peacoat grubbing, all hands on decking, accordion serenading font is not for the faint of heart. He’s all caps all the time. Even the lightest of his six weights is enough to anchor a Man-o-War in any Caribbean maelstrom. This stencil set includes four weights to accompany the existing four shoreline styles and six regular weights. It’s an all caps family that includes lots of language options and opentype fractions.
  34. Maritime Champion by Kyle Wayne Benson, $8.00
    Make no mistake, Maritime Champion is not simply seaworthy. This peacoat-grubbing, all-hands-on-decking, accordion-serenading font is not for the faint of heart. He’s all caps all the time. Even the lightest of his six weights is enough to anchor a man-o-war in any Caribbean maelstrom. This 10-font family includes six weights and a Shoreline style that comes in four weights. It’s an all-caps family that includes lots of language options and OpenType fractions.
  35. Figgins Antique by HiH, $12.00
    “Hey, look at me!” cried the new advertising typefaces. With the nineteenth century and the industrial revolution came an esthetic revolution in type design. Brash, loud, fat display faces elbowed their way into the crowd of book faces, demanding attention. Those who admired traditional book types harumphed and complained. Robert Thorne had fired the opening round with his Fatface. With the cutting of Figgins Antique, the battle was well and truly joined. Job printing came into its own and it seemed like everything changed. The world of printing had been turned upside down and the gentile book-type aficionados recoiled in horror much as the rural landed gentry recoiled at the upstart middle class shopkeepers and manufacturers. William Savage, approvingly quoted by Daniel Berkeley Updike over a hundred years later, described the new display faces as “a barbarous extreme.” These were exciting times. According to Geoffrey Dowding in his An Introduction To The History Of Printing Types, “The types which we know by the name of Egyptian were first shown by Vincent Figgins in his specimen book of 1815, under the name Antique.” Of course, dating the design is not quite as simple as that. Nicolete Gray points out that Figgins used the same “1815” title page on his specimen books from 1815 to 1821, adding pages as needed without regard to archival issues. As a result, there are different versions of the 1815 specimen book. In those copies that include the new Antique, that specific specimen is printed on paper with an 1817 watermark. The design is dated by the 1817 watermark rather than the 1815 title page. Figgins Antique ML is an all-cap font. This typeface is for bold statements. Don't waste it on wimpy whispers of hesitant whimsies. And please don't use it for extended text -- it will only give someone a headache. Think boldly. Use it boldly. Set it tight. Go ahead and run the serifs together. Solid and stolid, this face is very, very English. FIGGINS ANTIQIE ML represents a major extension of the original release, with the following changes: 1. Added glyphs for the 1250 Central Europe, the 1252 Turkish and the 1257 Baltic Code Pages. Added glyphs to complete standard 1252 Western Europe Code Page. Special glyphs relocated and assigned Unicode codepoints, some in Private Use area. Total of 331 glyphs. 2. Added OpenType GSUB layout features: liga and pnum. 3. Added 86 kerning pairs. 4. Revised vertical metrics for improved cross-platform line spacing. 5. Redesigned mathamatical operators. 6. Included of both tabular (standard) & proportional numbers (optional). 7. Refined various glyph outlines.
  36. 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.
  37. 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.
  38. Rotterdam Demo - Personal use only
  39. Adlanta - Unknown license
  40. Sunday Market by Melonaqua, $12.00
    Sunday Market is a casual and playful sans serif font family. It is a family of six that supports multilingual languages. The font family is suited for any project.
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