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  1. The MerryCouple Demo San Serif font, crafted by Katario Studio, is a delightful embodiment of joy and celebration. Its design reflects a playful yet elegant aesthetic, making it an ideal choice for i...
  2. The font Roughwork Demo is an intriguing typographic creation by David F. Nalle, a designer known for his eclectic and often historical-inspired typefaces. As suggested by its name, Roughwork exudes ...
  3. Ghino by Fontmachine, $3.00
    The Ghino family of "modern geometric sans" consists of 20 fonts. All the family's fonts contain 370 glyphs and are equipped with many typographic features. Ghino Text is designed for those who prefer to use single-coded fonts not only in coding but also in many different environments of graphic design. The idea came from creating a font with single-spaced aesthetics, without breaking the single-spaced fonts. Ghino is a geometric sans single-spaced font with all typographic features except spacing and character spacing.
  4. Adventura by me55enjah, $14.00
    Handmade typeface inspired by permanent marker strokes. Simple, bold and casual shape strokes make this typeface easy to read event in a bunch of text. This can be useful for title, quotes, label, etc. Simple, casual and playful. All caps family comes with different style: Title, Outline and Stripes. Including handwritten style, Adventura Letter with uppercase & lowercase characters, make you have more option to create catchy design. All support basic multi language. Add Adventura Catchwords and Emo icons can gives more personal touch to your design.
  5. Genova by Graphicxell, $14.00
    Genova is a sans serif type family with 4 variables namely Thin, Regular, Medium and Black. This font has a harmonious and beautiful shape that makes it perfect for all your needs for long text, branding, logotypes, print designs and more. This font is made in detail and measured by using geometric details to make this font look balanced and minimalist. This font is dedicated to the use of all needs in 2023, and will be the most popular and best selling font of the year.
  6. Loppemarked by PizzaDude.dk, $17.00
    Loppemarked is Flea market in danish, and that’s where I got the inspiration to do these fonts from! Headline - chunky serifs here and there, and some are missing! No attempt to get it right…anywhere! Text - The letters are scribbled quickly, leaving not much attention to accuracy. Sans - With this font, there has been some effort to hit the same width of strokes, but it is still off here and there. All in all, the sweet innocence in these letters…I love it! <3</p>
  7. Hadriel by Letterara, $12.00
    Hadriel is a beautiful light handwritten font with a unique feel and looks stunning. This fantastic handwritten font is best suited for headlines of all sizes, as well as for blocks of text. Whether it’s for web, print, moving images, or anything else. It will add a luxury spark to any design project! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the amazing glyphs and swashes with ease! It also features a wealth of special features including alternate glyphs and ligatures.
  8. Traction by Schriftlabor, $36.99
    Traction was originally conceived and designed by Swiss astronomer Christian Thalmann. Schriftlabor designers Chiara Mattersdorfer and Miriam Surányi expanded, completed and produced the font family. This typeface sports signature serifs, soft edges and a fluid, organic design. Enlarged, the organic letters are reminiscent of the profiles of ­off-road tyres and hiking boots. In text sizes, it is the humanistic forms that set the tone to ensure fluid legibility. Totalling at 18 styles in nine weights, all fonts come with small capitals and all possible numerical variations.
  9. Moguine Serif by Mans Greback, $69.00
    Moguine Serif is a neo-classic serif typeface. With disappearing hair thin lines and weighted vertical strokes, this modern font family is the perfect lettering for a headline. Why not use Moguine Serif for a short poem or quote that requires a neutral but beautifully clean look. Created with pride and care, this type has the optimal appearance of a classic vintage logo but for a modern setting. The font family consists of the styles Regular and Italic. The font is built with advanced OpenType functionality and has a guaranteed top-notch quality, containing stylistic and contextual alternates, ligatures and more features; all to give you full control and customizability. It has extensive lingual support, covering all Latin-based languages, from Northern Europe to South Africa, from America to South-East Asia. It contains all characters and symbols you'll ever need, including all punctuation and numbers.
  10. Karlie by DearType, $40.00
    Karlie is a neat combination of a friendly script & a modern all-caps serif in five widths. The font family is extremely versatile and is perfect for high-end logotypes and magazine headlines, let alone greeting cards, invitations, posters, book covers, ads and the various web and screen usages. The combination of two different font styles (script and serif) also performs very well on product packaging. As for the technical side, the Karlie family has extensive language support and includes a handful of ligatures, stylistic sets and swashes that add visual interest to every letter. We've also included some extras with ready-made words and symbols for more design freedom. The Karlie Font Family in a nutshell: - Karlie - a dancing baseline script with connecting letters - Karlie Alt - similar feel to Karlie, but with disconnected letters - Karlie Serif - a set of five serifs with different widths for a different impact - Karlie Extras - a set of additional designs that will add up to the family’s charm. The overall feel of the family is a combination of casual and sophisticated, thus making it perfect for modern-day applications.
  11. Heirloom Artcraft by Baseline Fonts, $29.00
    Presenting Heirloom Artcraft-- by Baseline Fonts within the Grit History B series. Like an auntie who insists on baking cookies from scratch every time you visit, Heirloom Artcraft is a beacon of tradition and consistent delight with every letterform. Gentleness and subtlety keep this font far away from kitsch. This font sincerely says "ma'am" and "sir" and is perfect for business cards, custom stamps, coffeetable books, letterhead, invitations and anywhere you or your client wish to make an extremely well mannered and charming statement. There are many alternate ligatures available within the font including capital alternates for T, A, P, B, D, and N. It also boasts a full symbol set and the most darling little swashes scattered tastefully throughout the character map you ever did key. Heirloom Artcraft is available in Thin, Thin Italic, Book, Book Italic, Demi Italic, Black, and Black Italic. It also features Metrics and Optical kerning - metrics displays characters with letterpress-traditional spacing that is pleasantly askew, or more rigid optical kerning which displays characters at identical distances for times when the importance of readability exceeds that of stylistic merit.
  12. Madurai Slab by insigne, $24.00
    Chennai’s market-tested type styles have taken new form once again. The geometric forms of Chennai and its derivant Madurai, both successful in web-based applications and logotypes, have now been adapted for the superfamily Madurai Slab, a potent, square slab serif ideal for headlines and posters. Under the surface of Madurai Slab’s straightforward geometric structure, the font’s exaggerated vertical serifs provide the face with an extra chunk that commands the reader’s attention and gives the font more impact in its heavier styles. The extra-fortified forms are anything but monotonous, though. The bolder structure of the slab is instead rational, diligently thought-out, with minimally contrasting strokes, making the sturdier look particularly legible in shorter textual content blocks. This child of Madurai contains a comprehensive range of nine weights--slender to black--and features condensed and extender selections for a complete set of fifty-four fonts. All users of the Madurai Slab collection can access numerous OpenType alternates. Madurai Slab is furnished for experienced typographers, together with alternates, compact caps and many alts like “normalized” capitals and lowercase letters that come with stems. The typeface also contains a range of numeral sets, together with fractions, old-style and lining figures with superiors and inferiors. OpenType-capable programs including Quark or the Adobe suite allow quick changes to ligatures and alternates. Previews of these options can be found in the .pdf brochure. Madurai Slab also features the glyphs to enable all Central, Eastern and Western European languages. In all, Madurai Slab supports around forty languages that utilize the prolonged Latin script, making it an excellent option for multi-lingual publications and packaging. This richness of options makes this the best slab serif family for websites as well as for print, motion graphics, logos, t-shirts and the like. Madurai Slab is a great choice when looking for a Neo-Grotesque slab serif font. In the hands of a learned designer, this new slab offers the potential for beautiful and well-blended layouts. With its widths adjusting to compact and extended content blocks, this typeface is perfect for the headings, captions and other brief, immediate messages that you need to drive your message home.
  13. Business Lunch JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Business Lunch JNL is an extra bold hairline serif font based on Monotype’s Falstaff, which in turn was greatly influenced by Bodoni Extra Bold. Great for posters, menu headers and other forms of headlining, Business Lunch JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  14. Azbuka by Monotype, $29.99
    The Azbuka™ typeface family has its roots in a fairly pedestrian source. “The idea came in part from an old sign in London that read ‘SPRINKLER STOP VALVE’,” says Dave Farey, designer of the typeface. Like all good sign spotters, Farey took a photograph of the sign and filed it away for possible use in a lettering or typeface design project. In Prague a number of years later, the street signs reminded Farey of the London signage - and his camera came out again. Comparing the two back in his studio, he realized that the signs from London and Prague were not as similar as he initially thought. However, they were enough alike to serve as the foundation for a no-frills, 21st century sans serif typeface family. “I wanted to draw a wide range of weights, italic and condensed designs all in one go,” recalls Farey, “rather than add on to the family later.” His goal was to create a family that could be used for text and display copy, with sufficient weights to provide a broad typographic palette. Indeed, the completed design, created in collaboration with fellow type designer Richard Dawson, consists of twenty typefaces in eight weights ranging from extra light to extra black. The five mid-range designs have complementary italics. Seven condensed designs round out the family. Azbuka’s lighter weights perform remarkably well in blocks of text composition. “They’re clean and legible - and perhaps a little boring,” says Farey, “but they are perfect for copy with a down-to-earth, yet contemporary flavor.” The heavier weights are equally well suited for a variety of display uses. The designs are authoritative but not overbearing and will readily make a strong statement without calling attention to themselves. The condensed weights of Azbuka are ideal for those instances where you have a lot to say - and not much room to say it. The name Azbuka? It’s Russian for “alphabet.” And what more appropriate name could there be for this utilitarian, industrial-strength type family than alphabet? The Azbuka family is available as a suite of OpenType Pro fonts. Graphic communicators can now work with this versatile design while taking advantage of OpenType’s capabilities. The Azbuka Pro fonts also offer an extended character set that supports most Central European and many Eastern European languages
  15. Modern MT for Dior CS by Monotype, $29.99
    Cut by Monotype between 1900 and 1902, the Monotype Modern font family was based on Miller & Richards News 23 and 28; slightly condensed news text types of the 1890s. Monotype Modern is a lively typeface, with long, fine hairlines and well rounded letterforms, representing the best of nineteenth century modern face design. A classic text face, and typical of the moderns that were produced in the United Kingdom at that time, being less extreme in its rendering than some of the models of purer form being produced elsewhere. Monotype Modern is an excellent text face for magazines, newspapers and books, the heavier and more condensed versions are useful in headlines and display.
  16. Ruzicka Freehand by Linotype, $29.99
    In 1935, Rudolph Ruzicka approached W.A. Dwiggins at Linotype in the USA and handed him six typeface design sketches. These later led to the typeface family now known as Fairfield. The sketch called Script’ was forgotten until 1993, when sketches and designs were found in Ruzicka’s archives. Ruzicka Freehand was originally a more flowing calligraphy typeface which Ruzicka later developed into this strong and unusual form. The typeface is designed in two weights and their matching italics. The figures are clear, only just indicating the handwritten style in the italic forms, and combine into light and harmonic lines of text. Ruzicka Freehand gives texts a private and personal character and is suitable for middle length texts and headlines.
  17. Monotype Modern Display by Monotype, $29.99
    Cut by Monotype between 1900 and 1902, the Monotype Modern font family was based on Miller & Richards News 23 and 28; slightly condensed news text types of the 1890s. Monotype Modern is a lively typeface, with long, fine hairlines and well rounded letterforms, representing the best of nineteenth century modern face design. A classic text face, and typical of the moderns that were produced in the United Kingdom at that time, being less extreme in its rendering than some of the models of purer form being produced elsewhere. Monotype Modern is an excellent text face for magazines, newspapers and books, the heavier and more condensed versions are useful in headlines and display.
  18. Nimrod Paneuropean by Monotype, $92.99
    Nimrod was released by Monotype in 1980. Designed for current newspaper technology, the Nimrod font family evolved as a result of extensive examination of newspaper industry needs. Nimrod retains many of the features of the traditional newspaper Ionics, but some of the fussier detailing has been replaced by the more sober forms of the old styles, such as Plantin. A highly legible font family, especially in smaller sizes, its clear unambiguous character shapes make easily readable blocks of text. Nimrod also withstands the degradation encountered in newspaper production and printing. First used for body text in the Leicester Mercury newspaper, the Nimrod font family has subsequently become a popular choice in newspapers for text and headlines.
  19. Roby Soho by Alit Design, $14.00
    Introducing Roby Soho Typeface The Roby Soho font is inspired by today's simple styles, the Roby Soho font is a serif typeface with alternative support that can make your designs more interesting and unique than others. In addition, the Roby Soho font also has multi-language that is easy to use. This is a versatile font that works great in both small and large sizes, for body text or header text. The Roby Soho font is also supported with a variety of families from thin version to Black version. It is suitable for editorial design projects, logo designs, branding, product packaging, magazine covers, Instagram posts, social media text stories, and so on.
  20. Filosofia by Emigre, $69.00
    The Filosofia Regular family is designed for text applications. It is somewhat rugged with reduced contrast to withstand the reduction to text sizes. The Filosofia Grand family is intended for display applications and is therefore more delicate and refined. An additional variant, included in the Grand package, is a Unicase version which uses a single height for characters that are otherwise separated into upper and lower case. This is similar to Bradbury Thompson’s Alphabet 26, except that Thompson’s goal was to create a text alphabet free of such redundancies as the two different forms which represent the character “a” or “A”, whereas Filosofia Unicase does have stylistic variants to provide flexibility for headline use.
  21. Airam by Linotype, $29.99
    Maria Martina Schmitt was born in Vienna, Austria in 1950. Since 1998, she has been working as a freelance designer, focusing on cultural collateral, economic publications, illustration, type design, and logo design. Airam blends contemporary legibility with historic blackletter forms, creating a contemporary text face that speaks to the old European past. Airam certainly appears darker than most other contemporary text faces. Airam’s letterforms are slightly broken, too. They display angled joints in lieu of smooth curves. This “broken” aspect actually aids legibility at smaller point sizes. While Airam may not be suitable for setting whole books or newspapers, this font will add a splendid touch to short tracts of small text. Additionally, Airam looks superb in large headlines.
  22. Modern MT for Dior JP by Monotype, $29.99
    Cut by Monotype between 1900 and 1902, the Monotype Modern font family was based on Miller & Richards News 23 and 28; slightly condensed news text types of the 1890s. Monotype Modern is a lively typeface, with long, fine hairlines and well rounded letterforms, representing the best of nineteenth century modern face design. A classic text face, and typical of the moderns that were produced in the United Kingdom at that time, being less extreme in its rendering than some of the models of purer form being produced elsewhere. Monotype Modern is an excellent text face for magazines, newspapers and books, the heavier and more condensed versions are useful in headlines and display.
  23. Holgada by Graviton, $24.00
    Holgada font family has been designed for Graviton Font Foundry by Pablo Balcells in 2020. It is a geometric sans serif typeface with refined rounded endings that provide a soft and friendly appearance. Its generic shapes make it suitable for any kind of project, text length and size. Thanks to its clear legibility, it can be used in long body texts in very small sizes, in big size headlines and everything in between. The rounded endings not only provide a particular softness when used in body text, but also a distinctive touch when used in display situations such as logos and headlines. Holgada consists of 12 styles, each containing small caps and glyph coverage for several languages.
  24. Modern MT for Dior KO by Monotype, $29.99
    Cut by Monotype between 1900 and 1902, the Monotype Modern font family was based on Miller & Richards News 23 and 28; slightly condensed news text types of the 1890s. Monotype Modern is a lively typeface, with long, fine hairlines and well rounded letterforms, representing the best of nineteenth century modern face design. A classic text face, and typical of the moderns that were produced in the United Kingdom at that time, being less extreme in its rendering than some of the models of purer form being produced elsewhere. Monotype Modern is an excellent text face for magazines, newspapers and books, the heavier and more condensed versions are useful in headlines and display.
  25. Festo by La Boîte Graphique, $29.00
    Festo is a hand made font ideal for your graphic project. Usage recommendations: Title, short text, children's book, poster, book cover, brochure.
  26. Nephrite by Nine Font, $29.00
    Nephrite is a clean and soft family of 14 styles, 7 weights and italics. Recommended for text, magazine, book, logo and brandings.
  27. Angular by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A very contemporary design can be used in any application from headlines to text. Angular serifs give this design a strong base.
  28. Blurt by Robert Petrick, $19.95
    Blurt is a bold, versatile, spunky easy to read letter form that will let your product and your text message be noticed.
  29. PR Dim Sum by PR Fonts, $8.00
    Hand lettered with a pointed brush, this font strives to be evocative yet remain readable, even for medium length passages of text.
  30. Zar Brush Gothic by SzarDesign, $19.95
    ZarBrush Gothic is a "speedball" font inspired by showcard lettering done with a loaded red sable brush. Perfect for text and headlines.
  31. Shooma MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Ever wondered how your great text will look like as if it just came out of an ATM machine? Here it is!
  32. Jubilant by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Jubilant is an extended, geometric, curveless sans serif font. The font is ideal for headlines, titles, branding or small blocks of text.
  33. P22 Mercian by IHOF, $24.95
    P22 Mercian is a Roman font with distinctively angled stub serifs. Comparatively even in weight and color. Designed for continuous text setting.
  34. GHEA Narek Serif by Edik Ghabuzyan, $65.00
    This font family can be used as Display as well as text font. The font family includes Armenian, Cyrillic and Latin alphabets.
  35. FG Carola by YOFF, $13.95
    FG Carola is bold and easy to read; the lowercase has an even appearance, so it looks really neat in block text.
  36. JH Farid by JH Fonts, $100.00
    JH Farid font is designed based on Naskh calligraphy; it is typical for book covers including spine, headlines, short text paragraphs, poetry…..
  37. Ten Ton Truck by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Ten Ton Truck is a heavy, but very legible font. Works very well with massive text, as well as headlines and such.
  38. Cafe Aroma by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A great looking script can be used for many applications; it even works extremely well as text. Has a old fashioned charm.
  39. Abandon by Suomi, $35.00
    A Sans font family of five weight for headline and text use, with old style numerals and small caps, and extensive kerning.
  40. Corpid by LucasFonts, $49.00
    The name Corpid derives from “Corporate Identity” — which is what this family of low-contrast sans-serifs was made for. Corpid was originally commissioned by Studio Dumbar in the Netherlands as a corporate typeface for the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature Management and Fishing. The font was designed to replace the existing standard typeface (a well-known business-like sans-serif) to provide the organization with a unique and strong identity. Although it was designed to fit strict technical requirements, Corpid has a personality all of its own. This was in part a result of what Luc(as) calls “creating tension” between the inner and outer curves of each character. “I tend to put a little more diagonal contrast into fonts than is the case in most neutral sans serif fonts. This brings a certain humanistic touch to the typeface. Much more subtle here than in Thesis – but although it is almost invisible, it is still palpable.” Corpid was gradually expanded into a five-weight, three-width family. The new Corpid SemiCondensed has double functionality. It is a no-frills, compact headline font that offers optimum legibility in sizes from small to huge. It is also a great space-saving text typeface for magazines, newsletters or annual reports: economic, versatile, and provided with several different numeral sets. In this OpenType type version, all weights come with Small Caps. With its wealth of numeral styles and complete character sets (including Central European) the Corpid family is now well equipped to tackle the most complex of typographic tasks.
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