10,000 search results (0.029 seconds)
  1. Kingthings Xander Outline - Unknown license
  2. Seritta by Rashatype, $10.00
    Seritta is a sweet and friendly handwritten font. Its natural and unique style makes it incredibly fitting to a large pool of designs. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all glyphs and swashes with ease!
  3. Ageitha by Sakha Design, $14.00
    Ageitha is a modern and luxurious handwritten font. Elegant and stylish, this font will become your top choice in no time. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  4. Oliver Quin by Gittype, $20.00
    Oliver Quin, a beautiful and stylish low italic script handwriting font. Oliver Quin offers a harmonious pen movement for a diversity of design projects, including logos and branding, wedding designs, social media posts, advertisements, poster, watermark photography, and more.
  5. Kadya by TM Type, $12.00
    Kadya is a very detailed and thin lettered script font. Get inspired by its beautiful style and use it to create lovely designs. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all the glyphs and sweeps easily!
  6. Black Blast by Blankids, $9.00
    Introducing of our new product the name is Black Blast a Bold Comic Font, Black Blast inspired by playful style with a fun theme very good for kids theme design. FEATURES : Uppercase Lowercase Number Punctuation Multilingual PUA Encode Opentype
  7. Razkes Brush by Rvandtype, $11.00
    Razkes Brush is a cool urban style font. Its elegant and cool look makes it the perfect choice for logos, branding, invitations, stationery, wedding designs, social media posts, and so much more. Features : Numbers and punctuation Multilingual PUA encoded
  8. Cavergiz by Rvandtype, $9.00
    Cavergiz Serif is a cool, thick lettered and assertive display font. Featuring the perfect amount of trendiness, this font will make your designs come to life. Cavergiz is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs.
  9. Allison Style by Sarid Ezra, $13.00
    Allison Style is my newest font duo. Contain two fonts, the delicate serif and a free hand writing script. This font duo also support multilingual, number and symbol, end swash and many ligatures. Also this font already PUA Encoded.
  10. Kubikajiri by Hanoded, $15.00
    Kubikajiri is a scary, scratchy font, hand-made using India ink and a sharp, old-fashioned pen. You can use it for a variety of projects, like ads, posters and websites. Just be careful you don't lose your head...
  11. White Mellow by Stringlabs Creative Studio, $25.00
    White Mellow is a modern, fun script font, created by using an authentic handwritten pen. Clean and a little bit quirky, this font is the perfect fit for all of your logos, branding, social media, and crafty DIY projects.
  12. Maknoe by ahweproject, $14.00
    Maknoe is a classic serif typeface. This beautiful serif font is suitable for logo, headline, cover book, magazine, and many more. Maknoe font is PUA encoded, which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  13. Hay Ghost by Letterafandi Studio, $16.00
    Hay Ghost is a thick-lettered and spooky display font. It is perfectly suitable for any Halloween-related project or crafty idea! This font is PUA encoded, which means that you can access all of the glyphs with ease!
  14. Andilay by Rezastudio, $9.00
    Andilay is a lovely and timeless handwritten font. It is the best choice for creating eye catching logos, branding and quotes. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  15. Ballerose by Nissa Nana, $27.00
    Ballerose is an elegant and flowing handwritten font. It is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease! Fall in love with this font and bring your projects to the highest levels!
  16. Behila by Letterena Studios, $9.00
    Behila is a classic serif font. Add it to your most creative ideas and notice how it makes them come alive! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  17. Amsterdam Belmonteria by Letterena Studios, $9.00
    Amsterdam Belmonteria is a delicate and cursive handwritten font. This gentle font will look gorgeous on a variety of design ideas. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  18. Florals Bright by Letterena Studios, $10.00
    Florals Bright is a chic and trendy looking serif font. It is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease! Add it confidently to your projects, and you will love the results.
  19. Slimpick by IbeyDesign, $15.00
    Slimpick Brush Stroke Font results out of a stunning pairing of a brush pen and pencil that makes it look incredibly endearing and authentic. Use this gorgeous and unique this handwritten font to bring any DIY project to life!
  20. Bunnyheart by Letterafandi Studio, $16.00
    Bunnyheart is a modern handwritten font. Whether you’re using it for crafting, digital designing, presentations, or greeting card making, it’s perfect! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  21. Cape Horn by Palmer Type Company, $30.00
    Cape Horn is a typeface inspired by seafarers who have perished by navigating the treacherous seas surrounding Cape Horn, which is at the southern-most tip of South America. A-Z Numbers Multi-language support Symbols Special Characters Uppercase
  22. Halloween Script by AEN Creative Studio, $15.00
    Halloween Script is a cool and spooky handwritten font. It is perfectly suitable for any Halloween-related project or crafty idea! It is also PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  23. Danity by Sesa Grafika, $35.00
    Danity is a gorgeous and retro styled display font. Add it confidently to your projects, and you will love the results. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  24. Semrawut by Andrey Font Design, $9.00
    Semrawut is a lovely and timeless handwritten font. It is the best choice for creating eye catching logos, branding and quotes. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  25. Madisson by Ditatype, $29.00
    Madisson is a modern signature font. With a classy and natural style, it brings a classy and chic typeface. Madisson best used for weddings, branding, logotype, invitation, and quotes. Features: - Beautiful Ligatures - PUA Encoded - Multilingual Support - Numerals and Punctuation
  26. Star Blast by Blankids, $19.00
    Introducing of our new product the name is Star Blast a Playful Cartoon Font, Star Blast inspired by playful style with a fun theme very good for kids theme design. FEATURES : Uppercase Lowercase Number Punctuation Multilingual PUA Encode Opentype
  27. Rolanda by Letterena Studios, $9.00
    Rolanda feels equally charming and elegant. It looks stunning on wedding invitations, thank you cards, quotes, greeting cards, logos, business cards and more. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all glyphs and swashes with ease!
  28. Delgos by Typebae, $10.00
    Delgos is a display font family. It is very suitable for logos, headlines, posters and various other designs that require an assertive touch. What's Included? 20 Font, 9 Weight Slanted & Outline All Caps, Numbers & Punctuation Multilingual Support PUA Encoded
  29. Targa Pro by Zetafonts, $39.00
    For many years license plates in Italy have been using a quite peculiar sans serif monospace typeface with slightly rounded corners and a geometric, condensed skeleton. These letterforms have been used by Cosimo Lorenzo Pancini as an inspiration for Targa, published as the first-ever Zetafonts typeface in 2003. Almost twenty years later, Francesco Canovaro has brought the project under scrutiny for a complete redesign, keeping its inventions, solving its issues, and making it into a versatile multi-weight typeface. The original type family has been developed in two subfamilies: Targa Pro Mono (which keeps the original monospace widths) and Targa Pro Roman (with proportional widths), both in five weights plus italics. The original family also included the handmade version Targa Hand which has been paired with a new Targa Pro Stencil to allow for more versatility and choice for display use. All weights of Targa Pro feature an extended latin character set covering over 200 languages, as well as a full set of Open Type features including positional numbers, alternates and stylistic sets. Halfway between postmodern appropriation of utilitarian design and rationalist design, Targa Pro sits comfortably at the crossroads between artificial nostalgia and modernist functionality, ready to surprise the user with its versatility and quirky Italian flavour.
  30. American Revolution by Celebrity Fontz, $24.99
    American Revolution is a unique collection of signatures of 84 key personalities from both sides of the American Revolutionary War, one of the supreme dramas in history. A must-have for autograph collectors, desktop publishers, history buffs, or anyone who has ever dreamed of sending a letter, card, or e-mail “signed” as if by one of these famous Revolionary War figures. This font includes signatures from the following American Revolutionary War personalities, from both sides: Ethan Allen, Charles T. Armand, John Armstrong, Benedict Arnold, Pudhomme de Borre, John Cadwalader, George Rogers Clark, George Clinton, James Clinton, Thomas Conway, William Davidson, Philippe du Coudray, The Chevalier Louis Lebegue dePresle Duportail, Chistopher Gadsden, Horatio Gates, Moses Hazen, John Glover, Mordecai Gist, Nathaniel Greene, William Heath, Edward Hand, John E. Howard, Robert Howe, Isaac Huger, William Irvine, Henry Knox, Baron Johann de Kalb, Tadeusz Kosciuszko, Marquis de Lafayette, Charles Lee, Henry Lee, Andrew Lewis, William Maxwell, Benjamin Lincoln, Francis Marion, James Moore, Daniel Morgan, William Moultrie, Peter Muhlenberg, Alexander McDougall, Lewis Nicola, Lachlan McIntosh, John Nixon, Hugh Mercer, Samuel H. Parsons, Thomas Mifflin, John Paterson, Richard Montgomery, Andrew Pickens, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, Enoch Poor, Count Casimir Pulaski, Israel Putnam, Joseph Reed, Elisha Sheldon, Arthur St. Clair, William Smallwood, Philip Schuyler, John Stark, Charles Scott, Adam Stephen, John Sullivan, Jethro Sumner, Thomas Sumter, James Varnum, Baron Friedrich Wilhelm August Heinrich Ferdinand von Steuben, Lord Stirling, Artemas Ward, Joseph Warren, George Washington, Anthony Wayne, James Wilkinson, Otho H. Williams, John Paul Jones, William Woodford, David Wooster, John Burgoyne, Sir Guy Carleton, Charles Cornwallis, Sir Henry Clinton, Sir Thomas Gage, Richard, Earl Howe, Sir William Howe, Sir Banastre Tarleton. This font behaves exactly like any other font. Each signature is mapped to a regular character on your keyboard. Open any Windows application, select the installed font, and type a letter, and the signature will appear at that point on the page. Painstaking craftsmanship and an incredible collection of hard-to-find signatures go into this one-of-a-kind font. Comes with a character map.
  31. Uniform Pro by Miller Type Foundry, $29.00
    THE SPARK Uniform started as a spark of inspiration one day while I was shopping at the store. I was looking at some typography on a can of dog food and the idea popped into my head, “What if there was a geometric typeface with a circular O that when condensed, the O became straight sided, instead of becoming an oval?” I quickly sketched out the concept of Uniform and liked what I saw, the only problem was I was working full time as a graphic designer, and as a newly married husband, I didn’t have any time to make the extensive typeface. LETDOWN A year and a half later, shortly after the birth of my first child, my boss cut my hours in half. Although stressful, I saw this event as an opportunity to finally have time to complete the typeface I had in my head. I spent a couple months putting together a Kickstarter campaign, thinking it would be a smashing success, and I would be able to live off the donations long enough to complete the typeface. Wrong! The campaign was a flop and I was left discouraged and dejected, thinking that the great idea I had in my head would never become a reality... PERSEVERANCE At the end of the year, in December 2013, I decided to go for it and make this new type family no matter what it took. I began waking up a few hours before work each morning (getting only four hours of sleep each night) carefully crafting each individual glyph day by day. After nine months of hard work (and just about killing myself in the process!) in October 2014, I finally had a finished product ready to be released to the public! THE PINNACLE Fast forward a few years and now Uniform has reached it's pinnacle, Uniform Pro. Uniform Pro now offers extended language support including Cyrillic and Greek character sets, integrated italic styles, additional weights, and additional OpenType features.
  32. Antique by Storm Type Foundry, $26.00
    The concept of the Baroque Roman type face is something which is remote from us. Ungrateful theorists gave Baroque type faces the ill-sounding attribute "Transitional", as if the Baroque Roman type face wilfully diverted from the tradition and at the same time did not manage to mature. This "transition" was originally meant as an intermediate stage between the Aldine/Garamond Roman face of the Renaissance, and its modern counterpart, as represented by Bodoni or Didot. Otherwise there was also a "transition" from a slanted axis of the shadow to a perpendicular one. What a petty detail led to the pejorative designation of Baroque type faces! If a bookseller were to tell his customers that they are about to choose a book which is set in some sort of transitional type face, he would probably go bust. After all, a reader, for his money, would not put up with some typographical experimentation. He wants to read a book without losing his eyesight while doing so. Nevertheless, it was Baroque typography which gave the world the most legible type faces. In those days the craft of punch-cutting was gradually separating itself from that of book-printing, but also from publishing and bookselling. Previously all these activities could be performed by a single person. The punch-cutter, who at that time was already fully occupied with the production of letters, achieved better results than he would have achieved if his creative talents were to be diffused in a printing office or a bookseller's shop. Thus it was possible that for example the printer John Baskerville did not cut a single letter in his entire lifetime, for he used the services of the accomplished punch-cutter John Handy. It became the custom that one type founder supplied type to multiple printing offices, so that the same type faces appeared in various parts of the world. The type face was losing its national character. In the Renaissance period it is still quite easy to distinguish for example a French Roman type face from a Venetian one; in the Baroque period this could be achieved only with great difficulties. Imagination and variety of shapes, which so far have been reserved only to the fine arts, now come into play. Thanks to technological progress, book printers are now able to reproduce hairstrokes and imitate calligraphic type faces. Scripts and elaborate ornaments are no longer the privilege of copper-engravers. Also the appearance of the basic, body design is slowly undergoing a change. The Renaissance canonical stiffness is now replaced with colour and contrast. The page of the book is suddenly darker, its lay-out more varied and its lines more compact. For Baroque type designers made a simple, yet ingenious discovery - they enlarged the x-height and reduced the ascenders to the cap-height. The type face thus became seemingly larger, and hence more legible, but at the same time more economical in composition; the type area was increasing to the detriment of the margins. Paper was expensive, and the aim of all the publishers was, therefore, to sell as many ideas in as small a book block as possible. A narrowed, bold majuscule, designed for use on the title page, appeared for the first time in the Late Baroque period. Also the title page was laid out with the highest possible economy. It comprised as a rule the brief contents of the book and the address of the bookseller, i.e. roughly that which is now placed on the flaps and in the imprint lines. Bold upper-case letters in the first line dramatically give way to the more subtle italics, the third line is highlighted with vermilion; a few words set in lower-case letters are scattered in-between, and then vermilion appears again. Somewhere in the middle there is an ornament, a monogram or an engraving as a kind of climax of the drama, while at the foot of the title-page all this din is quietened by a line with the name of the printer and the year expressed in Roman numerals, set in 8-point body size. Every Baroque title-page could well pass muster as a striking poster. The pride of every book printer was the publication of a type specimen book - a typographical manual. Among these manuals the one published by Fournier stands out - also as regards the selection of the texts for the specimen type matter. It reveals the scope of knowledge and education of the master typographers of that period. The same Fournier established a system of typographical measurement which, revised by Didot, is still used today. Baskerville introduced the smoothing of paper by a hot steel roller, in order that he could print astonishingly sharp letters, etc. ... In other words - Baroque typography deserves anything else but the attribute "transitional". In the first half of the 18th century, besides persons whose names are prominent and well-known up to the present, as was Caslon, there were many type founders who did not manage to publish their manuals or forgot to become famous in some other way. They often imitated the type faces of their more experienced contemporaries, but many of them arrived at a quite strange, even weird originality, which ran completely outside the mainstream of typographical art. The prints from which we have drawn inspiration for these six digital designs come from Paris, Vienna and Prague, from the period around 1750. The transcription of letters in their intact form is our firm principle. Does it mean, therefore, that the task of the digital restorer is to copy meticulously the outline of the letter with all inadequacies of the particular imprint? No. The type face should not to evoke the rustic atmosphere of letterpress after printing, but to analyze the appearance of the punches before they are imprinted. It is also necessary to take account of the size of the type face and to avoid excessive enlargement or reduction. Let us keep in mind that every size requires its own design. The longer we work on the computer where a change in size is child's play, the more we are convinced that the appearance of a letter is tied to its proportions, and therefore, to a fixed size. We are also aware of the fact that the computer is a straightjacket of the type face and that the dictate of mathematical vectors effectively kills any hint of naturalness. That is why we strive to preserve in these six alphabets the numerous anomalies to which later no type designer ever returned due to their obvious eccentricity. Please accept this PostScript study as an attempt (possibly futile, possibly inspirational) to brush up the warm magic of Baroque prints. Hopefully it will give pleasure in today's modern type designer's nihilism.
  33. Cimero Pro - 100% free
  34. Walt Disney Script - Personal use only
  35. Copperplate Alt by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    Copperplate Alt is the sister font to Copperplate Wide. The »Alt« version stands for alternative and has lowercase letters that are slightly smaller than the uppercase. It gives you another possibility to use this elegant typeface. Your forever inventive type designer - Gert Wiescher
  36. LDJ Doodaddles by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    The letters of this TrueType font are decked out with holiday star ornaments for a festive and slightly quirky look. Your Christmas messages will sparkle and shine. Try it on your annual family newsletter or as a title for Christmas eve scrapbook pages.
  37. Bulaa by Biroakakarati, $9.00
    A good font for your comics! The font is entirely hand-drawn letter by letter. It's completed of Basic and advanced Latin characters set. Randomly there are letters with different weight for a dynamic and original look. Especially for comics, cartoons and posters.
  38. Eureka Antique by Solotype, $19.95
    You may be familiar with a caps and small caps type called Cruickshank. In Germany the same face was called Eureka. We took the small caps, which are not so overblown as the caps, and designed a lowercase to harmonize with it.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing