English HU Dear Molly is a headline font for the title, and it is a cute typeface that is close to a round circle. Coolly stretched strokes create an interesting sense of rhythm. There is 1 weight of HU Dear Molly : Regular Greek Το HU Dear Molly είναι μια επικεφαλίδα γραμματοσειρά για τον τίτλο και είναι μια χαριτωμένη γραμματοσειρά που βρίσκεται κοντά σε έναν στρογγυλό κύκλο. Οι δροσερές πινελιές δημιουργούν μια ενδιαφέρουσα αίσθηση ρυθμού. Υπάρχουν 1 βάρη του HU Dear Molly: Regular Cyrillic HU Dear Molly - это шрифт заголовка для заголовка, симпатичный шрифт, расположенный рядом с круглым кругом. Крутые штрихи создают интересное чувство ритма. HU Dear Molly имеет 1 толщины : Regular
New Molly is a modern script.This font looks fresh, stylish, elegant and natural. This font is great for logo branding & invitations, wedding design, photography, quotes, posters, watermark, special events and much more.
Dirty Money SRF is a novelty font with a limited character set emulating the lettering found on U.S. currency. The typeface was designed by Brad O. Nelson of the Brain Eaters Font Company. The net profits from my font sales help defer medical expenses for my siblings, who both suffer with Cystic Fibrosis and diabetes. Thank you.
The 1920s Art Nouveau movement spawned a number of beautiful hand lettered pieces of sheet music from that era. Attractive and narrow, the characters found on the title page of one such piece of music was the inspiration for Easy Money JNL.
WIP Money Maker depicts the handwriting of man with verve, strength of purpose and resoluteness. The (lower case) characters are joined as it is usual in German speaking countries. Originally designed in 1995 the font has been extended by a lot of new characters such as accented characters, punctuation, symbols and currency symbols.
Take The Money is a wonky all caps font, made with a Sharpie pen. The name was inspired by something I read in the newspaper: apparently a Danish artist received €72.000 from a museum to create two works of art. The works of art should depict the average income of someone from Austria and someone from Denmark - in real money. The museum then loaned him the €72.000 and told him he'd receive €3.300 for his work. The artist decided that €3.300 would merely cover the costs, so he delivered two empty canvases and called the work: Take The Money And Run.