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  1. Free Form Retro JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The titles and credits from the 1960 French film “Le Passage Du Rhin” (English release title: “Tomorrow is My Turn”)” are hand made in a free form bold alphabet resembling both cut paper and quickly sketched lettering. This avant garde style inspired the digital type revival, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  2. Desk Clerk JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Sometimes a font idea can come from the most unlikely place. While watching a DVD of the 1950's TV Sitcom "My Little Margie", Jeff Levine spotted some unusual deco-styled numbers on the floor indicator of the apartment house elevator. Expanding this into a full character set, Desk Clerk JNL is the result.
  3. Caramel Moments by Supfonts, $18.00
    Caramel Moments is a casual handwritten font. Perfect for greeting cards, wedding stationery, photographer watermarks logos, modern websites, apparel design and more. Caramel Moments features handwritten ligatures, beginning and end swashes for lowercase letters and heart connections Thanks so much for checking out my shop, and please get in touch if you have any questions!
  4. Antiques by Fantasy Inspirations, $9.75
    With my dingbats and your favorite software, you can create elegant web graphics in minutes! All these fonts were created with the web designer in mind. Each font consists on 26 original shapes with endless possibilities: virtual jewelry, buttons, framing, interfaces, etc. For examples of what you can do with these fonts: Click Now!
  5. Mama Bear by Hanoded, $15.00
    Mama Bear is a playful, neat, children's book typeface. It is cute and happy, very legible and comes with extensive language support, including the 'schwa' glyph found in a handful of languages. Mama Bear was inspired by my 16 month old son, who loves his fluffy bear and likes to play hide and seek.
  6. The Brothers by ZetDesign, $15.00
    This font was inspired by carvings and ornament models that I found a lot in my daily life. it's a pleasure to be able to present this font as part of an awesome design work. this font include italic style.This font is perfect for traditional, cultural,social and natural theme designs hope you enjoy ....
  7. Statendam by Hanoded, $15.00
    Statendam is an all caps Art Deco font. It reminds me of the bold lettering used for cruise ship posters from the interbellum, especially those used for the Holland America Line (HAL) ads. It is not a recreation of a particular typeface; merely my salute to a bygone era. Statendam comes with all diacritics.
  8. Grendel Regular by Robert Petrick, $19.95
    “Grendel Regular” Evolved out of a hand lettering piece I designed for a record album (Royal Crescent Mob). Inspired by old gothic forms, my intention was to create a playful letter form that could be used in an antique as well as a modern context such as food product packaging or fun video projects, etc.
  9. Brigitte by Supfonts, $10.00
    This font is a classic modern calligraphy featuring a floating baseline, ligatures, swashes and multilingual support. Brigitte will look beautiful on holiday invitations, wedding invites and stationery, logos, and more. Test it out below to see how it could look for your next project! Check out my blogs: https://www.instagram.com/zloillev https://www.pinterest.com/dmitriychirkov7
  10. Jewelry by Fantasy Inspirations, $8.00
    With my dingbats and your favorite software, you can create elegant web graphics in minutes! All these fonts were created with the web designer in mind. Each font consists on 26 original shapes with endless possibilities: virtual jewelry, buttons, framing, interfaces, etc. For examples of what you can do with these fonts: Click Now!
  11. Autumn Voyage by Hanoded, $15.00
    Autumn is my favourite time of the year: I love the colors in the forest, the colder temperature and the stormy winds. Autumn Voyage is a very nice set of hand made fonts: a fat one, a thin one and a lovely autumn leaves doodle pack. Comes with a heap of diacritics as well.
  12. Vivian Script by Vástago Studio, $19.95
    Vivian Script was designed from the study of typeface references like Doyald Young. It has optical adjustment in the details and funny contrasts to get an amazing result. It can used to be applied on different commercial topics like street wear, food and traveling for tourism. This is Vivian Script, the love of my life.
  13. Dashy Danger by Bogstav, $17.00
    There is nothing dangerous about this font, but indeed something dashy! That may not make much sense, and that's the same with the font - unless you want to do something eye-catching and organic looking for kids! Dashy Danger is my laid back, kinda wild, legible but unpredictable kids font - with an organic twist!
  14. Hisav by Flawlessandco, $9.00
    Hisav is a modern elegant serif, with some connected letters that are perfect for branding materials, t-shirt, logo, poster, photography, quotes, and many more. Modern serif font type to complete your display creation such as wedding invitation card, etc. If you need help, just write me! Thanks so much for checking out my shop!
  15. Reading And Writing Doodles by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Reading & Writing Doodles is just that. 27 low-tech illustrations of books, pens, pencils and paper. Along with some hand lettered phrases, "My Book", "Ex Libris" and "From The Desk Of:" A fresh approach for Save a Date Cards and From The Desk Of notepads. An absolute must for bookplates and your book club graphics.
  16. Monotes by Aqeela Studio, $15.00
    Monotes is an upper and lower serif font with balanced curves. Like all of my fonts inspired by letters from the good old days, but still has a strong modern look. A variety of alternative styles allow for versatile design options and work perfectly for headlines, logos, posters, packaging, T-shirts, postcards and more.
  17. Speed Test by Kaer, $20.00
    Hey! I'm happy to introduce to you my new font in fast speed style. Dry brush stroke with grunge lines and dots. Perfect for Taxi logo, Race poster, Sport identity, etc. You’ll get: * Uppercase (lowercase glyphs are the same) * Numbers * Symbols Please feel free to request any help you need: kaer.pro@gmail.com Best, Roman.
  18. Strawn by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Strawn is my Wobbly and curvy funk font with bouncy serifs. Watch it bounce its way down the street, or into your next project - you know, that one that needs a fresh breath of fun! Comes with both fi and fl ligatures! You will need to use OpenType supporting applications to use the autoligatures.
  19. Radar.one by Srdjan Kuzmanovic, $50.00
    I started creating this font at my university while studying graphic design. It's constructed using nails in different sizes and various parts of floppy-disks. It's a highly decorative font and the best way of using it is for posters, flyers and ads. It can also be used for your own website; see example below.
  20. Brskovo by TypeClassHeroes, $14.00
    Introducing Brskovo is a modern uppercase serif, use this font for any branding, product packaging, invitation, quotes, t-shirt, label, poster, logo etc. Feature - Uppercase & Lowercase - Number & Symbol - International Glyphs - Multilingual support - Alternative - Ligature Feel free to drop us a message any time and follow my shop for upcoming updates Hope you enjoy it.
  21. Grocers Script by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    I discovered GrocersScript on the market Cours Saleya in Nice. I always buy my foodstuff there when I am in the area. I developed the whole font from some fragments. If you ever come to Nice, you must absolutely visit that market as well as the one in Cannes. Yours very hungry Gert Wiescher
  22. SailorsTattoo Waves by Otto Maurer, $19.00
    Sailors Tattoo Waves is a modifikation of my Font Sailors Tattoo. This Fonts are made for best oldschool or traditional Tattoodesigns. You can color the half-version with the full-version. Take a graphic app like Affinity Photo or Affinity Designer and use the layers. Drop the colored full-version under the black half-version.
  23. Bijoute Sans by Struvictory.art, $16.00
    Bijouté is a modern sans serif font with bohemian motives. The font is created in classic proportions and decorated with elegant decor. The font is suitable for the design on the theme of mysticism, esotericism, fashion and style. This font is based on my Nomad Bohemian Sans: https://www.myfonts.com/collections/nomad-decorative-font-struvictory-art
  24. Quickstep Sans by Holland Fonts, $30.00
    A 'quick' font, originally made for the 25th anniversary of SSP Printing Co. in Amsterdam. First used for an intro spread in Wired Magazine (#3.05, May 1995): "The problem with computers is that they don't have enough Africa in them. What's pissing me off is that they use so little of my body" (Brian Eno).
  25. Freich Monsta by Nasir Udin, $15.00
    Trick or treat! The spookiest time of the year will be here soon! Spread the Halloween spirit with this chilling, creepy, and scary typeface, Freich Monsta! Freich Monsta is an evolution of my previous font - Freich. It's mutated from a clean, strong, and bold font to a spooky display font with a vintage horror twist.
  26. Roelle by Supfonts, $12.00
    Roelle will look beautiful on holiday invitations, wedding invites and stationery, logos, and more. Test it out below and watch the posters to see how it could look for your next project! Includes: Opentype SVG with ligatures Uppercase and lowercase Numbers and punctuation Foreign language support Check out my blog: www.instagram.com/zloillev pinterest.com/dmitriychirkov7
  27. Sailor Marie by Otto Maurer, $23.00
    Sailor Marie is dedicated to my little lovely Daughter Marie. Sailor-Marie is an Oldschool Tattoo-Style Font, made for all Tattooartists of the world. The Tattoos of the 50th like Sailor Jerry are always designed with Fonts like this. The Font comes with many Opentype Feature and an GraphicFontfile wit Banner and more.
  28. KG Defying Gravity by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Use the [ and ] key to create a unique flag ending on your words. Use alternating lowercase and uppercase with the Bounce version to create a bouncy look. To create a solid space instead of an empty space, use the bar key | which shares a key with the \ backslash on my keyboard. Your keyboard may vary.
  29. Drakoheart Revofit Sans by G3 Typefaces, $-
    Drakoheart Revofit is an initiative to make sans fonts. It’s one of my personal favorites, in fact. In its first release, this font had a cool appearance but was improved with better kerning and a cool look in this new release. Perfect to write some digital texts as in web articles, blogs and branding.
  30. Bemsod Decker by madeDeduk, $14.00
    Introducing Bemsod Decker is a casual handwritten font and will be perfect for book, title branding, product packaging, invitation, quotes, label, poster, logo etc. Feature Uppercase & Lowercase Number & Symbol International Glyphs Multilingual support Alternative Ligature Feel free to drop us a message any time and follow my shop for upcoming updates Hope you enjoy it.
  31. Vendetta by Emigre, $69.00
    The famous roman type cut in Venice by Nicolas Jenson, and used in 1470 for his printing of the tract, De Evangelica Praeparatione, Eusebius, has usually been declared the seminal and definitive representative of a class of types known as Venetian Old Style. The Jenson type is thought to have been the primary model for types that immediately followed. Subsequent 15th-century Venetian Old Style types, cut by other punchcutters in Venice and elsewhere in Italy, are also worthy of study, but have been largely neglected by 20th-century type designers. There were many versions of Venetian Old Style types produced in the final quarter of the quattrocento. The exact number is unknown, but numerous printed examples survive, though the actual types, matrices, and punches are long gone. All these types are not, however, conspicuously Jensonian in character. Each shows a liberal amount of individuality, inconsistency, and eccentricity. My fascination with these historical types began in the 1970s and eventually led to the production of my first text typeface, Iowan Old Style (Bitstream, 1991). Sometime in the early 1990s, I started doodling letters for another Venetian typeface. The letters were pieced together from sections of circles and squares. The n, a standard lowercase control character in a text typeface, came first. Its most unusual feature was its head serif, a bisected quadrant of a circle. My aim was to see if its sharp beak would work with blunt, rectangular, foot serifs. Next, I wanted to see if I could construct a set of capital letters by following a similar design system. Rectangular serifs, or what we today call "slab serifs," were common in early roman printing types, particularly text types cut in Italy before 1500. Slab serifs are evident on both lowercase and uppercase characters in roman types of the Incunabula period, but they are seen mainly at the feet of the lowercase letters. The head serifs on lowercase letters of early roman types were usually angled. They were not arched, like mine. Oddly, there seems to be no actual historical precedent for my approach. Another characteristic of my arched serif is that the side opposite the arch is flat, not concave. Arched, concave serifs were used extensively in early italic types, a genre which first appeared more than a quarter century after roman types. Their forms followed humanistic cursive writing, common in Italy since before movable type was used there. Initially, italic characters were all lowercase, set with upright capitals (a practice I much admire and would like to see revived). Sloped italic capitals were not introduced until the middle of the sixteenth century, and they have very little to do with the evolution of humanist scripts. In contrast to the cursive writing on which italic types were based, formal book hands used by humanist scholars to transcribe classical texts served as a source of inspiration for the lowercase letters of the first roman types cut in Italy. While book hands were not as informal as cursive scripts, they still had features which could be said to be more calligraphic than geometric in detail. Over time, though, the copied vestiges of calligraphy virtually disappeared from roman fonts, and type became more rational. This profound change in the way type developed was also due in part to popular interest in the classical inscriptions of Roman antiquity. Imperial Roman letters, or majuscules, became models for the capital letters in nearly all early roman printing types. So it was, that the first letters in my typeface arose from pondering how shapes of lowercase letters and capital letters relate to one another in terms of classical ideals and geometric proportions, two pinnacles in a range of artistic notions which emerged during the Italian Renaissance. Indeed, such ideas are interesting to explore, but in the field of type design they often lead to dead ends. It is generally acknowledged, for instance, that pure geometry, as a strict approach to type design, has limitations. No roman alphabet, based solely on the circle and square, has ever been ideal for continuous reading. This much, I knew from the start. In the course of developing my typeface for text, innumerable compromises were made. Even though the finished letterforms retain a measure of geometric structure, they were modified again and again to improve their performance en masse. Each modification caused further deviation from my original scheme, and gave every font a slightly different direction. In the lower case letters especially, I made countless variations, and diverged significantly from my original plan. For example, not all the arcs remained radial, and they were designed to vary from font to font. Such variety added to the individuality of each style. The counters of many letters are described by intersecting arcs or angled facets, and the bowls are not round. In the capitals, angular bracketing was used practically everywhere stems and serifs meet, accentuating the terseness of the characters. As a result of all my tinkering, the entire family took on a kind of rich, familiar, coarseness - akin to roman types of the late 1400s. In his book, Printing Types D. B. Updike wrote: "Almost all Italian roman fonts in the last half of the fifteenth century had an air of "security" and generous ease extremely agreeable to the eye. Indeed, there is nothing better than fine Italian roman type in the whole history of typography." It does seem a shame that only in the 20th century have revivals of these beautiful types found acceptance in the English language. For four centuries (circa 1500 - circa 1900) Venetian Old Style faces were definitely not in favor in any living language. Recently, though, reinterpretations of early Italian printing types have been returning with a vengeance. The name Vendetta, which as an Italian sound I like, struck me as being a word that could be taken to signifiy a comeback of types designed in the Venetian style. In closing, I should add that a large measure of Vendetta's overall character comes from a synthesis of ideas, old and new. Hallmarks of roman type design from the Incunabula period are blended with contemporary concerns for the optimal display of letterforms on computer screens. Vendetta is thus not a historical revival. It is instead an indirect but personal digital homage to the roman types of punchcutters whose work was influenced by the example Jenson set in 1470. John Downer.
  32. Corbert Condensed by The Northern Block, $-
    A condensed sans serif designed as an additional companion to the Corbert font family. Incorporating the key characteristics from the original family with influences drawn strongly from the Bauhaus and modernist era. This condensed version is 15% closer than the normal family improving economy of space across design layouts. Used in conjunction with the regular widths Corbert becomes a functional and versatile font system ideally suited for large complex design projects. Details include 9 weights with italics, 540 characters with alternative lowercase a, e and g, 5 variations of numerals, manually edited kerning and Opentype features.
  33. Handwritten Note JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The movie poster promoting the 1962 James Cagney comedy "One, Two Three" had it's text done in free-style hand lettering. Starting with an auto-trace in order to have an isolated version of the black letters separated from the red poster background, the tracing kept the basic forms intact, but with limited accuracy. Cleaning up and digitally reshaping the letters manually to form a more correct version [closer to the original movie poster], additional figures, foreign characters, accents and punctuation were drawn from scratch. This is now available as Handwritten Note JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  34. Centrale Sans Condensed by Typedepot, $29.00
    Centrale Sans Condensed is not just a "squished" version of our Centrale Sans family, it's designed as a stand alone typeface with the family characteristics in mind. It bears all the qualities of the normal width being even friendlier because of the closer relation it has with the humanist model. The condensed width is with 15% narrower than its normal sibling, which makes it precious space-saving tool. Centrale Sans Condensed also have 9 weights from Hairline to Extra Bold plus their matching italics. It includes Some OpenType features like discretional ligatures, tabular figures and stylistic alternatives.
  35. Ring Slab by Ochakov, $9.00
    Hope I made the world a little better. It's a great honor for me to be here. I'm super excited to present the next set of the Ring font family - Ring Slab. Ring Slab is a geometric slab serif typeface based on the original Ring font and inspired by classical writers. Ring Slab comes in 16 styles, ranging from Thin to Black. Fonts of the Ring Family is the perfect choice for headlines, logos, branding, packaging, publications, and websites. Ring Slab is still ready to take any decisions. The future of the big font family has come closer!
  36. Compass Next by TipografiaRamis, $35.00
    Compass Next is a third edition of Compass TRF designed in 2002. The first time Compass TRF has been conceived was as a “geometric” Didone – all letters literally were drawn with a ruler and a compass. Second edition (2009) got additional styles – Flourish Initials and Small Caps. This time, the objective was to bring overall extreme geometrical expression closer to traditional letterform style of its “modern style” typeface category (Didone). All glyphs were redrawn including in alternative Decorative style, and additional Bold weight has been added. Typeface is released in OpenType format with extended support for most Latin languages.
  37. CA Segundo by Cape Arcona Type Foundry, $29.00
    The inspiration for this font came from a wall-writing in Cuba. At first glance we thought: "There is something wrong with the wall-writing." But a closer look revealed, that it just mixed up different stroke-styles. That "feature" became the designing principle behind CA Segundo: Round characters like O, U or C are available either with a fat or a thin stroke, whereas other characters with orthogonal lines come in two different styles – uppercase characters emphasize the vertical strokes, while lower cases emphasize the horizontal strokes. This gives you the opportunity to design just while you type.
  38. Copperplate Gothic by Linotype, $40.99
    This American original was designed in 1901 by Frederic W. Goudy for the American Type Founders in Jersey City. Copperplate Gothic is an all caps font which looks like a sans serif at first glance. But closer examination reveals tiny, pointy serifs which almost seem to round off the letters. Designers rely on this font’s lofty and sublime impression and it is often seen in advertisements, but it has also made a place for itself in private and business correspondence and corporate design. The AB and BC designations in the style names refer to the relative sizes of the capitals and small capitals.
  39. Ds Hand by CozyFonts, $25.00
    Ds Hand Font Family is a handwritten font designed by Tom Nikosey, based on Danielle Nikosey’s printing style. Tom is an American Graphic Designer specializing in Typographic Design and Illustration. Ds Hand is available in Regular & Bold weights CozyFonts Foundry is Tom's intro into the world of font design. Ds Hand Family is a tribute and gift to his daughter. Ds Hand, at first glance, gives a hand drawn aesthetic feel but on closer inspection, when set as text, this font gives off a cool, organized, legibly organic read. Also available in Bold. This is the 5th Hand Drawn Font Family from CozyFonts!
  40. Sondela by Scholtz Fonts, $19.00
    Sondela is a gently rounded, informal font, whose name means "welcome" or "come closer". It echoes the openhearted tradition of the Zulu people, where all who come are welcome. The font is available in regular and display (Pizazz) versions. Sondela Pizazz incorporates the zig-zag pattern that has been used in traditional Zulu beadwork for generations. It is highly effective when used in conjunction with the unadorned Sondela regular. The numerals are mono-spaced so that they will line up correctly in columns of figures. The letters of the alphabet are correctly kerned so that they appear correctly in text.
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