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  1. Lorenzo by Canada Type, $24.95
    The lifetime of Lorenzo de Medici (1449-1492) coincides with the rise of metal type as it displaced broad pen calligraphy for the production of books. This revolution marked the end of formal Western calligraphy, as the industry employed metalworkers who designed type according to geometric measurement while calligraphers were forced to become secretaries who practiced handwriting systems. Renaissance Florence should have witnessed the marriage of calligraphy and typography, just as all the other arts and sciences flourished as classical learning was applied to technical advances; but the metalworkers and geometricians measured, dissected and recast the calligraphic letters by crude indirect methods, and in the end took all the life out of them. Here they languished until digital type has made it possible to render the precise motion of the broad pen stroke into type. Lorenzo is a confluence of many strains from the Middle Ages, brought together within the classical harmony of the capitals. It attempts to bypass metal type, using calligraphic means to achieve the precision of type while retaining the life of the stroke: a classical font that would be familiar to Lorenzo himself as well as to the modern eye. The Lorenzo family comes in four weights, ranging from light to bold. Two sets of italics, one with swashed caps and ascenders, complement each weight. The family boasts extensive language support and an offering of over fifty calligraphic ornaments/flourishes included within the character set.
  2. Actium by Type Mafia, $45.00
    Actium is a contemporary multilingual sans serif typeface developed to help perfect typography automatically. Type Mafia has focussed on words with odd combinations of capital letters and numbers, such as product names and postal codes such as WD40 and H1N5, jump out of the text. They sit awkwardly together as the numerals have been designed to work with the lowercase, not the uppercase letters – affecting readability.To fix this Type Mafia invented Smart Capo™. Smart Capo™ Smart Capo is a feature that automatically activates once you type an uppercase letter together with a number. When a capital letter is sat next to a numeral, Smart Capo converts the letter to a mid-cap — a contemporary alternative to small caps — and the default old-style numeral to a lining numeral. Actium’s mid-caps and lining numerals have been designed with the same height (between cap and x-height) so they sit comfortably next to each other and fit more harmoniously into text. Smart Capo applies equal attention to capitalised words without any numbers, such as NAVO and USA, and are also automatically set into mid-capitals. Working on its own, Smart Capo saves time and money for the typographer — taking the pain out of text formatting — and makes it a more pleasurable experience for the reader. This feature is made possible by the use of ‘contextual alternates’, an OpenType feature used in modern font software, working with a set of characters specially designed at mid-cap height. By default these changes automatically take place so it doesn't need to be switched on, it will just work. Actium Actium’s design has an unusual diagonal contrast — much more common in a serifed face than in a sans serif — giving it more bite. The typeface looks elegant when set in large sizes and remains very legible when shown in small sizes. The family consists of six weights in two styles, making a dozen fonts. Weights range from light to black in roman and true italic. All fonts are fully loaded with functional elements. Actium boasts an extended Latin character set and with Greek. This means a wide range of Western languages are supported: perfect for use in bilingual publications and packaging. For numerals, each font includes old-style and lining figures in both proportional and tabular widths, with superiors and inferiors. These allow you to select the right set of numbers for the right task.
  3. Aspire - Unknown license
  4. Kryptonian - Unknown license
  5. VTBulletin - Unknown license
  6. ImperatorSmallCaps - Unknown license
  7. TwyliteZone - Unknown license
  8. Imperator - Unknown license
  9. Blazing - Unknown license
  10. Baby Blocks - Unknown license
  11. Final Fantasy - Unknown license
  12. Stormbringer - Personal use only
  13. Pessimistic Lines - Unknown license
  14. Estrogen-Wall - Unknown license
  15. Estrogen-Pill - Unknown license
  16. Paddington - Unknown license
  17. Xeroprint - Unknown license
  18. Zoloft - Unknown license
  19. Mister Sinister - Unknown license
  20. Zoloft - Unknown license
  21. Elric - Unknown license
  22. Sales Book JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Sales Book JNL was recreated from sample letters found in the wood type section of an old printer's supply catalog.
  23. Sidewinder JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Sidewinder JNL is based on ultra-compressed serif wood type and is perfect for fitting long copy into limited space.
  24. Slim James JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Tall, condensed and square in shape... Slim James JNL balances well against bolder Deco-style sans or novelty type faces.
  25. Bruce 1065 by Intellecta Design, $28.90
    Bruce 1065 is a digitization of the Bruce's Typefoundry font n. 1065 in your classical catalogue of types from 1886
  26. Knofedt by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    Comicbook letters with a laid back slightly wobbly look! 4 different lowercase letters, which automatically cycle as you type! Wow!
  27. Grotesque Bold Italic by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    Based on a revival of one of the popular type fonts of the 19th century, suitable for display, or text.
  28. Roman Tyres by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    An original design, based on a very early turn-of-the-century typeface from the defunct Keystone Type Foundry, Philadelphia.
  29. LDJ Boxed Flirt by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    Enjoy this great font and watch your digital scrapbook pages take on a unique look, something that's all your own.
  30. Gothic Tuscan Condensed by Wooden Type Fonts, $25.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century, a very useful design for display.
  31. Tuscan Egyptian by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century. Suitable for posters and display applications.
  32. Rolling Ball Cursive by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Rolling Ball Cursive simulates a handwritten style executed with one of the many types of rolling ball pens now available.
  33. Gothic Tuscan by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century; a very useful design for display.
  34. Notification JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Notification JNL is another condensed sanserif design loosely based on one of the many variations of wood type headline fonts.
  35. Oxblood No1 by wearecolt, $13.99
    Oxblood No1, an uppercase only display font. Each glyph is hand drawn, taking inspiration from vintage tattoo lettering and signage.
  36. LD Chaplin by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    Put some style in your layouts—with LD Chaplin. Guaranteed to take you back to a simpler place and time!
  37. Deriva by BRtype, $21.90
    Deriva was created taking as inspiration the manuscripts of a homeless person live in the city of São Paulo, Brazil.
  38. TB Matrix by TrueBlue, $10.00
    A creative dot matrix font with more likeable and funny types of dots. Also contains an extended set of characters.
  39. Prat MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    The famous favorite of the sign makers. Great for display type as well as headlines for fashion, theater TV etc.
  40. Generis Slab by Linotype, $29.00
    The idea for the Generis type system came to Erik Faulhaber while he was traveling in the USA. Seeing typefaces mixed together in a business district motivated him to create a new type system with interrelated forms. The first design scheme came about in 1997, following the space saving model of these American Gothics. Faulhaber then examined the demands of legibility and various communications media before finally developing the plan behind this type system. Generis’s design includes two individually designed styles; each of with is available with and without serifs, giving the type system four separate families. Each includes at least four basic weights: Light, Regular, Medium, and Bold. Further weights, small caps, old style figures, and true italics were added to each family where needed. The Generis type system is designed to meet both optical criteria and the highest possible measure of technical precision. Harmony, rhythm, legibility, and formal restraint make up the foreground. Generis combines aesthetic, technical, and economic advantages, which purposefully and efficiently cover the whole range of corporate communication needs. The unified basic form and the individual peculiarity of the styles lead to Generis’ systematic, total-package concept. The clear formal language of the Generis type system resides beneath the information, bringing appropriate typographic expression to high-level corporate identity systems, both in print and on screen. The condensed and aspiring nature of the letterforms allows for the efficient setting of body copy, and the economic use of the page. A range of accented characters allows text to be set in 48 Latin-based languages, offering maximal typographic free range. This previously unknown level of technical and design execution helps create higher quality typography in all areas of corporate communication. Optimal combinations within the type system: Generis Serif or Generis Slab with Generis Sans or Generis Simple.
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