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  1. Dragonwick - Unknown license
  2. PiratesTwo - Unknown license
  3. Durer Gothic - Unknown license
  4. Fontasia V2.0: The Revenge - Unknown license
  5. Goudy Lombardy by CastleType, $19.00
    Based on drawings of Medieval versals (capitals used at beginning of verses in manuscripts) by Frederic W. Goudy. Works beautifully as initials with Goudy Text Oldstyle. Uppercase only, no numerals or punctuation; several letters have alternates. Framed, inversed caps are also included. This version of Lombardy Capitals is purposely less regular and clean-cut than some available to maintain a more hand-drawn look similar to the irregularities that would be found in a Medieval manuscript. The alternates help contribute to that look.
  6. Tempest - Unknown license
  7. Lunaquête by Erwin Krump, $27.00
    The Lunaquête family is a collection of Serif fonts with 6 styles and true Italics. It was designed for book typography. Especially Regular and Text are suitable for this purpose. Medium, Semibold and Bold can be used for text highlighting. Light and Light Italic are suitable for headlines.
  8. Palmilla by RodrigoTypo, $25.00
    Palmilla is a very gestural Sans font that contains 7 fonts (Thin, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Black as well as a set of dingbats, it is perfect for informal or children's titles, it contains many Alternatives such as Ligatures, to have more options at the time of writing.
  9. Carrosserie by Letterwerk, $27.00
    Carrosserie is made for display use, inspired by the shapes of the ’30s. It is a capital letter font with alternate characters and special domain symbols (check the PDF in the gallery for details). The font is now available in thin, extra light, light, regular, medium, bold & fat. Enjoy!
  10. Spumoni LP by LetterPerfect, $39.00
    Spumoni plays freely off of the typeface Bodoni . Though commercial lettering is becoming a disappearing craft, Spumoni provides this hand-drawn quality in a digital medium. Its bouncy, playful letters infuse a sense of humor into headlines, titles and blurbs of text in need of a merry touch
  11. The Hills by Mans Greback, $59.00
    The Hills is a script typeface, perfect for logotypes. Designed by Måns Grebäck during 2017, this high quality lettering brings you to the sunny fifties. It is well balanced and has a nice medium weight. The font contains 350 glyphs and has support for a wide range of languages.
  12. Visage LP by LetterPerfect, $39.00
    Visage is a contemporary text family designed by Garrett Boge in 1988. Its delicate serifs, subtly tapered stems, and generous proportions offer both distinction and readability to the text at any size. The family consists of five weights - Light, Book, Medium, Bold and Black, with corresponding oblique styles.
  13. Wendy LP by LetterPerfect, $39.00
    The Wendy family is a cursive script provided in three weights -- Light, Medium and Bold. The design is an upright, casual handwriting style, with natural joins and connecting strokes. Wendy, in her various modes, projects a friendly persona, adding an approachable quality to headlines and short runs of text.
  14. Nameplate JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Two attractive cast metal door signs reading "Men" and "Ladies" from back in the Art Deco era inspired the idea for Nameplate JNL. The left parenthesis key starts the border decoration, and the right parenthesis key closes it off. Nameplate JNL has just a basic A-Z and numeral set; the letters "floating" within the parallel lines of the border to form complete nameplates, apartment numbers or any similarly encased words. A period, comma, apostrophe and dash are on their respective keys. A small blank space is on the left bracket key, a medium space is on the right bracket key and a large space is on the left brace key. There is a small, complete frame on the right brace key. For names such as "MacDonald" or "McIntyre", the small "ac" is on the colon key and the small "c" is on the semicolon key. No kerning has been applied in order to give the type more of an antique, "mechanically assembled" look.
  15. PR8 Charade - Unknown license
  16. Codo Mono by wearecolt, $9.99
    Codo Mono Modern monospace typeface Standard and italic styles, 6 weights + variable weight versions. Codo Mono is a carefully crafted monospaced typeface featuring stylistic alternatives to help make your design or branding stand out. Codo Mono Family: Codo Mono Thin Codo Mono Extra Light Codo Mono Light Codo Mono Regular Codo Mono Medium Codo Mono Bold Codo Mono Italic Thin Codo Mono Italic Extra Light Codo Mono Italic Light Codo Mono Italic Regular Codo Mono Italic Medium Codo Mono Italic Bold Plus: Codo Mono Variable weight Codo Mono Italic Variable weight This font has extensive Latin language support for Western, Central, and South-Eastern European. Designed to have great legibility with a modern feel, Codo Mono is well suited to branding, magazines, editorial copy, packaging, and more.
  17. Shaking by La Boîte Graphique, $17.00
    Designed by Ewen Prigent, Shaking is a set of four expressive hand-crafted titling typefaces ideal for packaging, posters, children's books… and many other media! Shaking one, two, three and four!
  18. Wofisty by Jadatype, $15.00
    Wofisty is a display font that comes with Retro-Fun Style. suitable for tshirt, branding, social media, and so on. contains standard English letters, numbers, punctuation, and several accents that support multilingualism. Can be installed on applications such as adobe family, affinity, or Ms. Office.
  19. Bonjour Sydney by Reyrey Blue Std, $14.00
    Bonjour Sidney. A stylish, modern and feminine font that will look awesome on logos, branding materials, wedding and event stationery, social media overlays, cards and so on. Bonjour Sidney includes full set of lovely uppercase and lowercase letters, multilingual symbols, numerals, punctuation, ligatures and swashes.
  20. Beralissa by Jadatype, $15.00
    Beralissa is a script font with a calligraphy style. suitable for social media, logotype, products, advertisements, and so on. contains standard English letters, numbers, punctuation, alternates and several accents that support multilingualism.
  21. P22 Canterbury by IHOF, $49.95
    Canterbury is a late Medieval Gothic font with a rough edge. This blackletter face is available with four different types of Capital initial letters or combined into one Opentype Pro font with all variations plus historic ligatures, alternates and even a few ornaments.
  22. Dragon Drop by Elemeno, $25.00
    Thick, wide and medieval, Dragon Drop would feel at home in Arthurian times. The name is an obvious play on words that the designer saved for a long time before creating the right font to use with it. Looks best at larger sizes.
  23. Pumpkinseed by Three Islands Press, $19.00
    The tale of Pumpkinseed began with a bit of hand-printing I noticed on the dinner menu at a local restaurant. I took a menu home for future reference. Several months later, some similar hand-lettering on another dinner menu caught my eye. I became a sort of connoisseur of hand-done menu lettering. After tweaking and adjusting a few of these menu-inspired (uppercase) characters, I placed them -- along with some other designs -- in an online Type in Progress survey. They won. So I finished the caps, drew out the lower case from scratch, created three weights and oblique styles. The result: Pumpkinseed, a full-featured casual hand-lettering face. Comes in Light, Medium, and Heavy.
  24. Naville by Letterhend, $16.00
    Introducing, Naville Sans, the all caps font family. This family has 6 weights - extra light, light, reguler, medium, semibold and bold. The clean and simplicity look of the font suitable for wide range of graphic needs especially for headline, title, sign board, information board, billboard and for UI/UX design.
  25. SF Mettle by Sultan Fonts, $19.99
    Mettle Bilingual Arabic font, Latin-Arabic for print and web. The Mettle font family contains four weights: thin, normal, medium, and broad. This font supports Arabic, Latin, Persian, Urdu, and Kurdish languages. The digital designer can use the variable Mettle font to access wider options in working with the text.
  26. Charme by Linotype, $29.99
    In 1957, Helmut Matheis designed Charme for the Ludwig and Mayer type foundry, located in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. This informal script is of medium weight and has some variation of color. The caps are flowing and the lower case letters are close fitting. Their is a bold companion, called Slogan.
  27. Lieur by inkstypia, $3.00
    Lieur is a minimalist, geometric, sans serif font suitable for logos, label designs, or even just plain body text. It comes with 2 styles, Normal and Italic, and includes Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, and Black weights to give you great possibility to harmonize the look and feel of your text.
  28. Brightag by Gerobuck, $18.00
    Brightag, a serif display font with two modes, medium and italic. The Brightag font's shape adapts the cursive style, thus showing a combination of the two styles to be more unique and decorative, very suitable for use in vintage or floral style designs. Alternate features are available and supports multiligual.
  29. Blog by BA Graphics, $45.00
    Blog has a new distinctive look and comes in four weights light, regular, medium and bold. It can be seen as quite elegant in the light weights while looking masculine in the heavy weight. Its unique look lends to so many different applications. Blog works well for both headline and text.
  30. Astringe by Twinletter, $12.00
    Atringe is our newest handwriting script font that has its own charm if it is displayed in various promotional design media or product labels, and has a harmonious nature in its arrangement. This font is designed with a natural touch of handwriting which is refined to create a portion and composition that suits your needs. So this font is suitable for craft, children's writing, adventure posters, food banner titles, wedding invitations, product packaging logos, quotes, social media page covers, furniture banner headlines, book covers, and much more.
  31. Santup by Jadatype, $15.00
    Santup is a display font that comes with a playful style. suitable for posters, tshirt, branding, social media, and so on. contains standard English letters, numbers, punctuation, and several accents that support multilingualism.
  32. Cybestpunk by Jadatype, $15.00
    Cybestpunk is a display font that comes with a cyber tech style. suitable for tshirt, branding, social media, and so on. contains standard English letters, numbers, punctuation, and several accents that support multilingualism.
  33. Scrouble Outline by Jadatype, $12.00
    Scrouble is a display font that comes with a playful scribble style. suitable for tshirt, branding, social media, and so on. contains standard English letters, numbers, punctuation, and several accents that support multilingualism.
  34. Downtown by Aboutype, $24.99
    Mono-weight extra condensed display face. Lowercase sits on a floating baseline. Downtown was designed for all media and works best at 24 point and above. Downtown requires subjective display kerning and compensation.
  35. Vinque by Typodermic, $-
    Vinque is an interpretation of a nineteenth century Arts & Crafts revival of medieval lettering. British type designer William Morris completed Troy in 1891—a splendid blackletter typeface in the medieval style. It’s beautiful but some modern uses like UI and video game text require a less ornate gothic appearance. Vinque is simple. It avoids strong vertical blackletter strokes which can present problems for contemporary readers. The end result is an uncomplicated, crisp typeface that successfully conveys medievalness to the reader. Vinque was released in 2002 in one style: Regular. In 2019, Vinque was expanded to seven weights and italics. Language support was bolstered to support most current Latin based languages as well as Greek and Cyrillic. OpenType fractions, f-ligatures and old-style numerals are supported.
  36. P22 Tyndale by IHOF, $24.95
    Quill-formed roman/gothic with an olde-worlde flavor. Some background in the designer's own words: "A series of fonts came to mind which would be rooted in the medieval era -for me, a period of intense interest. Prior to Gutenberg's development of commercial printing with type on paper in the mid-1400s, books were still being written out by hand, on vellum. At that time, a Bible cost more than a common workman could hope to earn in his entire lifetime. Men like William Tyndale devoted their energies to translating the Scriptures for the benefit of ordinary people in their own language, and were burned to death at the stake for doing so. Those in authority correctly recognized a terminal threat to the fabric of feudal society, which revolved around the church. "This religious metamorphosis was reflected in letterforms: which, like buildings, reflect the mood of the period in which they take shape. The medieval era produced the Gothic cathedrals; their strong vertical emphasis was expressive of the vertical relationship then existing between man and God. The rich tracery to be seen in the interstices and vaulted ceilings typified the complex social dynamics of feudalism. Parallels could be clearly seen in Gothic type, with its vertical strokes and decorated capitals. Taken as a whole, Gothicism represented a mystical approach to life, filled with symbolism and imagery. To the common man, letters and words were like other sacred icons: too high for his own understanding, but belonging to God, and worthy of respect. "Roman type, soon adopted in preference to Gothic by contemporary printer-publishers (whose primary market was the scholarly class) represented a more democratic, urbane approach to life, where the words were merely the vehicle for the idea, and letters merely a necessary convenience for making words. The common man could read, consider and debate what was printed, without having the least reverence for the image. In fact, the less the medium interfered with the message, the better. The most successful typefaces were like the Roman legions of old; machine-like in their ordered functionality and anonymity. Meanwhile, Gutenberg's Gothic letterform, in which the greatest technological revolution of history had first been clothed, soon became relegated to a Germanic anachronism, limited to a declining sphere of influence. "An interesting Bible in my possession dating from 1610 perfectly illustrates this duality of function and form. The text is set in Gothic black-letter type, while the side-notes appear in Roman. Thus the complex pattern of the text retains the mystical, sacred quality of the hand-scripted manuscript (often rendered in Latin, which a cleric would read aloud to others), while the clear, open side-notes are designed to supplement a personal Bible study. "Tyndale is one of a series of fonts in process which explore the transition between Gothic and Roman forms. The hybrid letters have more of the idiosyncrasies of the pen (and thus, the human hand) about them, rather than the anonymity imbued by the engraving machine. They are an attempt to achieve the mystery and wonder of the Gothic era while retaining the legibility and clarity best revealed in the Roman form. "Reformers such as Tyndale were consumed with a passion to make the gospel available and understood to the masses of pilgrims who, in search of a religious experience, thronged into the soaring, gilded cathedrals. Centuries later, our need for communion with God remains the same, in spite of all our technology and sophistication. How can our finite minds, our human logic, comprehend the transcendent mystery of God's great sacrifice, his love beyond understanding? Tyndale suffered martyrdom that the Bible, through the medium of printing, might be brought to our hands, our hearts and our minds. It is a privilege for me to dedicate my typeface in his memory."
  37. P22 Founders by IHOF, $24.95
    Based on turn-of-the-century advertising type. A condensed, fat-faced display font with a touch of the medieval. The influence of art nouveau is also present in the high-waisted caps and flowing lines, putting the face into the early 20th century.
  38. Zakosten by Jadatype, $12.00
    Zakosten is a display corporate font that comes with a Monospaced Style. suitable for product, branding, social media, logotype and so on. contains standard English letters, numbers, punctuation, and several accents that support multilingualism.
  39. Socilo by Jadatype, $15.00
    Socilo is a display font that comes with a rounded square style. suitable for posters, tshirt, branding, social media, and so on. contains standard English letters, numbers, punctuation, and several accents that support multilingualism.
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