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  1. Darlington by Fenotype, $19.95
    Darlington is an extra sweet monoline script font. Combine all three weights for maximum cute results.
  2. Ballpill by bb-bureau, $60.00
    BallPill — a trapless typeface in 5 weights alternates: ss01 ss02 ss03 – language: all latin glyphs and
  3. Equator by Tour De Force, $25.00
    Equator is modern angular typeface available in two weights ready for traveling all over the world.
  4. Stana by Wirtu, $9.00
    Stana is all caps, clean and tall display font. There are more than 150 glyphs included.
  5. Welcome by Solotype, $19.95
    This is another of those early 20th century, post art nouveau types from Europe. Probably German.
  6. Hebrew Sefirot by Samtype, $49.00
    The beautiful and elegant typeface is excellent use in wedding invitations, art, posters, and small texts.
  7. Boulette by RMU, $30.00
    Boulette is a gorgeous pop art-style display font for kids, cartoons, comics and much more.
  8. Flasher by BLV Supply, $10.00
    Flasher is a display font, all caps, traditional tattoo style, simple doodle line with vintage feels,
  9. Gidley JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Gidley JNL is an original design from Jeff Levine that strongly shows an Art Deco influence.
  10. Movie House JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Double Feature JNL reworks the classic Huxley Vertical into an elegant trilinear Art Deco display face.
  11. Southbeach by URW Type Foundry, $35.99
    Southbeach is a 21 century art déco font. The bigger it gets, the better it looks.
  12. Afarsemon MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    High legible and rounded font family to serve all your need from short text to signage.
  13. Squarefix by Michael Browers, $25.00
    Squarefix is an all-uppercase grunge outline typeface featuring Latin, Extended Latin and Cyrillic character sets.
  14. Government Issue JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Atten-shun! Use Government Issue JNL for all of your military-style type jobs! At ease!
  15. Dark Fox by Pedro Teixeira, $16.00
    Dark Fox is a cute, high-contrast versatile font, good for logos and all display needs.
  16. Bedaax - Personal use only
  17. roinert - Personal use only
  18. pixcoose - Personal use only
  19. wmxyo - Personal use only
  20. renvem - Personal use only
  21. Garbageschrift, a font that is as unique and eclectic as its name suggests, takes typography on an adventurous journey, challenging the traditional boundaries of design and readability. The genesis o...
  22. Ah, Argillites by RockboyStudio - the font that sounds like it could be a long-lost dinosaur species or an ancient mineral coveted by trendy interior designers! But no, it’s neither. It’s something f...
  23. Onick by Wordshape, $-
    While researching the history of Onitsuka Tiger's branding and graphic design, I came across an odd, yet highly appealing piece of custom lettering on the company's ONICK ski boots from the 1970s. Reminiscent of aspects of the typeface Black-Out by Eli Carrico (released by my type foundry Wordshape), yet vertically compressed with razor-sliced counters and odd stencil element that makes up one of the legs of the "K", the ONICK lettering is a potential source for an intriguing modular font. I immediately thought of Ryoichi Tsunekawa as a potential collaborator to bring this piece of lettering to full-fledged life in the contemporary context. Based in Nagoya, Tsunekawa runs an independent type foundry called Dharma Type, including three specialized foundry sub-labels: Flat-It, devoted to display lettering; Prop-A-Ganda, a series of fonts inspired by and based on retro propaganda posters, movie posters, retail sign lettering & advertisements in the early 20th century; and Holiday Type, a series of decorative and retro scripts for holiday use. The past year has seen a flurry of notice of his work abroad, having been featured in both MyFonts' "Creative Characters" and YouWorkForThem's newsletter. As the work of most Japanese type designers is almost wholly unnoticed abroad, for Tsunekawa to be interviewed by two of the most popular type distribution companies in the world is definitely something beyond the norm. Perhaps it is because he works independently, or perhaps it is due to the charm and friendliness with which his typefaces are infused. Either way, this attention is both welcome and appreciated. Beyond mere charm, Tsunekawa's work is nuanced, detailed, and accessible due to its high level of finish. His fonts stand apart from his contemporaries in Latin typeface design in Japan due to his fascination with pop, vernacular and historical lettering from "non-pure" sources- whereas type designers like Kunihiko Okano and Akira Kobayashi have spent years analyzing the essence of Western letterform construction and unlocking the essence of Latin forms, Tsunekawa views surface and the awkward nature of his sources as being of value, as well. His irreverence for the formal doctrines of history imbue his typeface designs with a rugged inventiveness that would be missed by most- glyphs without source designs are guessed at and approximated, often in a manner wildly divergent from what Western eyes would assume. It is in these moments that I find sheer delight in Tsunekawa’s work and what make me most pleased to invite him aboard Neojaponisme and Onitsuka Tiger’s type development project. His assorted typefaces show an eclecticism in finish and as holistic systems- Tsunekawa's return email to me about the proposed type project showed a digital sketch of how a completed typeface family from the source lettering might look, rendered with an effortlessness and dedication to detail that belies a skilled craftsperson. Further development showed Tsunekawa’s rigor- the typeface in development rapidly featured glyphs ignored by many: a full set of fractions, Eastern European diacritics and accents, superior and inferior numerals, alternate characters, and custom ligatures - all designed with regulated, detailed spacing. ONICK is a typeface Tsunekawa should be proud of- an homage to a moment in history rendered in the absolute best fashion. We are proud to present it to the world! --Ian Lynam
  24. Haarlemmer by Monotype, $29.00
    Haarlemmer is a recreation of a never-produced Jan Van Krimpen typeface that goes one step beyond authentic: it shows how he wanted it to be designed in the first place. The original, drawn in the late 1930s, was created for the Dutch Society for the Art of Printing and Books and was to be used to set a new edition of the Bible, using Monotype typesetting. Hence the problem: fonts for metal typesetting machines like the Linotype and Monotype had to be created within a crude system of predetermined character width values. Every letter had to fit within and have its spacing determined by a grid of only 18 units. Often, the italic characters had to share the same widths as those in the roman design. Van Krimpen believed this severely impaired the design process. The invasion of Holland in World War II halted all work on the Bible project, and the original Haarlemmer never went into production. Flash forward about sixty years. Frank E. Blokland, of The Dutch Type Library, wanted to revive the original Haarlemmer, but this time as Van Krimpen would have intended. Blokland reinterpreted the original drawings and created a typeface that matched, as much as possible, Van Krimpen's initial concept. While Van Krimpen's hand could no longer be on the tiller, a thorough study of his work made up for his absence. The result is an exceptional text family of three weights, with complementary italic designs and a full suite of small caps and old style figures. Van Krimpen would be proud.
  25. Oh, Little Days! This font by West Wind Fonts is like a delightful journey back to those carefree days of childhood. Imagine the gentle, playful essence of a sunlit afternoon, the laughter of friends...
  26. Signerica Fat - Personal use only
  27. Shit Happens - Personal use only
  28. Ornamental Versals - Personal use only
  29. LAZYTOWN - Personal use only
  30. Compostable - Personal use only
  31. Janda Everyday Casual - Personal use only
  32. Dem Bones - Personal use only
  33. The Hands of Deaf - Personal use only
  34. River Avenue - Unknown license
  35. Battleforce 5 - Personal use only
  36. COWABUNGA - Personal use only
  37. btd Cart-O-Grapher (bitmap) - Unknown license
  38. Lady Ice - Condensed - Unknown license
  39. Lady Ice - Extra Light - Unknown license
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