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  1. Pekora by Typoforge Studio, $15.00
    To design the font Pekora I was inspired by a You And Me Monthly published by National Magazines Publisher RSW Prasa that appeared from May 1960 till December 1973 in Poland.
  2. Ligeia by Scriptorium, $18.00
    Ligeia is an original font released in honor of the Halloween season. It's quirky and a bit creepy and works great for decorative titles, programs, flyers and other necessary seasonal uses.
  3. Antique Wells Expanded by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century, suitable for text, expanded, unusual Antique, with unique features in lower case design, g, k, y, a.
  4. Quibble Rough by Scrowleyfonts, $20.00
    Quibble Rough is a quirky, individual, original font with a rough, chiselled quality. It makes a bold design statement at display sizes and also works well in short blocks of text.
  5. Bubblegum Cartoon by WAP Type, $20.00
    Bubblegum is a font made in styles: With its nice and sweet appeal, it is perfect for scrapbooking, print design, stationery, blog header, greeting cards, posters, blog header and art quote.
  6. Arabela by Aqeela Studio, $15.00
    Arabela is a modern and beautiful calligraphy script, ideal for use in elegant designs. This font has a dancing look and adds a lot of femininity to all types of projects.
  7. Remaglide by Mabhal Studio, $18.00
    Remaglide is a Brush Handwritten Font. It has several swash and several alternative styles that can be used as needed. Remaglide will do great on invitations, in quotes, ads, and more.
  8. P22 Spooky by IHOF, $24.95
    Spooky is a chilling font that is evocative of the type used in horror films and posters. It’s creepy, it’s kooky...it’s spooky. Perfect for invitations, banners or other ghastly uses.
  9. Cloister by URW Type Foundry, $35.99
    Cloister was designed in 1914 by Morris F. Benton. The characters of the Cloister font family have a small body and are suitable for texts where economy of space is desired.
  10. KAH by MADType, $21.00
    KAH is a font which is based on a strict LCD-style grid. KAH is perfect for mocking up LCD screens or to create a technological/futuristic aesthetic in your design.
  11. Camden Queen by Asterisk, $33.00
    The font design is inspired by the long autumn evenings in London. Those "fast brown foxes" ran along the streets. Camden smelled delicious. And she was as beautiful as a queen.
  12. Duesenberg by Zang-O-Fonts, $25.00
    Duesenberg was designed to be similar to turn of the century fonts used primarily in newspapers. It has roman characteristics, yet is clearly not, and really doesn't fall under any category.
  13. Bellissimo Brushed by Make Media Co, $12.00
    Say Ciao to Bellissimo Brushed! A trendy, hand-brushed font, designed with branding in mind. Bellissimo Brushed looks gorgeous on logos, websites, invitations, greeting cards, magazines, business cards, packaging and more!
  14. Kardelen by HakanPolatovic, $10.00
    KARDELEN means,snowdrop flower in Turkish BEAUTY Kardelen font is created for expression of pure beauty GEOMETRY Every glyph on kardelen has a ratio to one another,which makes it rational
  15. Earthbound - 100% free
  16. Wood Type Grotesk JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Wood Type Grotesk JNL was re-drawn from a set of vintage wood type purchased from a closed rubber stamp shop. Although the style of lettering is referred to in old type catalogs as a "grotesk" face, in truth the lettering has charm and effectively gets the printed point across to the reader. This typeface is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  17. Blackbarry NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Deutsch Black, designed by Barry Deutsch for VGC in 1966, provided the inspiration for this extrabold exercise in heavy ink coverage. A number of variants, in lowercase slots, were added to offer flexibility to your headline designs. Both versions include the complete Latin 1252, Central European 1250 and Turkish 1254 character sets, as well as localization for Moldovan and Romanian.
  18. Steamship JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    While viewing a YouTube video of film footage in and around New York in the mid-1930s, one scene showed some people “window shopping” by the storefront office of the French Line, an international steamship service. A screen capture allowed the storefront sign to be recreated as the digital typeface Steamship JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  19. Arazatí by TipoType, $9.99
    Arazatí was inspired by Edward Johnston’s typefaces, although its design is not based on a literal reconstruction. It has 48 variants of 422 glyphs each. In addition, it offers two monospaced variants for free. Arazatí is the name of the place where Johnston was born in 1872, located in San José, Uruguay. This typeface is a tribute to his birthplace.
  20. Electrica by Scannerlicker, $33.00
    Electrica is a contemporary monospaced typeface family; a tribute to classic typewriters, while designed for today’s needs and media. In spite of taking inspirations from several typefaces used in typewriters (most notably the IBM Selectric), Electrica is far from a revival: it’s a typeface on its own, winking to the past while standing its ground confidently in a contemporary environment.
  21. Kenosha Antique NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    The inspiration for this elegant, willowy typeface was found in the 1903 type specimen catalog of Barnhard Brothers & Spindler. The original version was named "Racine"; this version takes its name from another town in Wisconsin. The Postscript and Truetype versions contain a complete Latin language character set (Unicode 1252); in addition, the Opentype version supports Unicode 1250 (Central European) languages as well.
  22. Hayride JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Based in part on the hand-lettered title for a piece of vintage sheet music, Hayride JNL gets both its inspiration and name from Michael Todd's 1948 production "Mexican Hayride". The original design was in outline form, and the letters with straight-lined shapes had slight curves to them. For Hayride JNL, those lines were straightened and the letters made solid in appearance.
  23. Baker Signet by ParaType, $25.00
    Bitsream version of Baker Signet typeface designed by well-known calligrapher Arthur Baker in 1965 for Visual Graphic Corporation (VGC). A design on classical lines with subtle but effective calligraphic touches and flare stroke terminals. For use in advertising and display typography as well as for headlines and small texts. Cyrillic version was developed by Eugene Sadko and released by ParaType in 2008.
  24. Courtroom JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Erle Stanley Gardner’s beloved lawyer “Perry Mason” first appeared on screen in a series of six films with Warren Williams starring in four of them. The hand lettered opening title for 1935’s “The Case of the Lucky Legs” is a classic Art Deco sans serif design, and is now available as Courtroom JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  25. Gio by Fenotype, $20.00
    Gio is a wedge serif with robust geometric features and subtle details. Available in two widths and seven styles each, Gio boasts a generous x-height and straight endings, maintaining generally consistent proportions. This creates an elegant ensemble, ideal for captivating display purposes. Gio excels in magazine layouts, headlines, as a logotype, or in any display use, imparting a sophisticated modern feel.
  26. Junge Holiday Cuts NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    A charming series of 26 holiday “type warmers” based on the works of Carl S. Junge for the Barnhart Brothers & Spindler type foundry in the 1920s. Single-color cuts are in the uppercase positions, while 13 of the cuts suitable for two-color usage occupy the lowercase in adjacent pairs; e.g., a and b, c and d, and so on.
  27. Eckhardt Trilinear JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Eckhardt Trilinear JNL was inspired by [and modeled from] a pen-drawn alphabet found in a 1960 edition of the Speedball® lettering textbook. As with many other "sign painter-oriented" typefaces by Jeff Levine, it is named in honor of Jeff's good friend -- the late Albert Eckhardt, Jr. Al ran Allied Signs in Miami, Florida from 1959 until his passing.
  28. Topographic Sans JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A 1940s-era book from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers entitled "Topographic Drafting" features a page for "lettering construction and spacing" in the process of map making. The letters and numbers were formed on grids using that mechanical drafting process for uniformity in stroke width. This was the basis for Topographic Sans JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  29. Arazatí by Underground, $9.99
    Arazatí was inspired by Edward Johnston’s typefaces, although its design is not based on a literal reconstruction. It has 48 variants of 422 glyphs each. In addition, it offers two monospaced variants for free. Arazatí is the name of the place where Johnston was born in 1872, located in San José, Uruguay. This typeface is a tribute to his birthplace.
  30. Bazhanov by ParaType, $30.00
    PT Bazhanov™ was designed at Polygraphmash type design bureau in 1961 by Michael Rovensky (1902-1996). Based on the lettering by Moscow book designer Dmitry Bazhanov (1902-1945). Old-fashioned flavor of this design recreates the Soviet hand-lettering style of the 1940s. For use in title and display typography. The digital version was developed for ParaType in 2001 by Lyubov Kuznetsova.
  31. Miller Display by Carter & Cone Type Inc., $35.00
    Miller, designed by Matthew Carter, is a “Scotch Roman,” a class of sturdy, general purpose types of Scottish origin, widely used in the US in the last century, but neglected since & overdue for revival. Miller is faithful to the Scotch style though not to any one historical example — and authentic in having both roman & italic small caps, a feature of the originals.
  32. FUD Grotesk by Ilya Bazhanov, $50.00
    A narrow sans serif, FUD Grotesk was inspired by brutalist architecture and modernist typography. There is a subtle stroke contrast, many inktraps, and even some microserifs (look for them in the main strokes!). Note the closed bowl apertures, exaggerated in the alternate forms, which result in a dense, ornate typeset. Five weights (from Light to Bold), and a large set of discretionary ligatures.
  33. La Paz by Underground, $24.90
    La Paz is a typeface created to emulate handwriting. It consists of three different alphabets which are interleaved to provide variations in height, weight and inclination, typical of handwriting. In addition it has tens of ligatures, ornaments and opentype programming that help to recreate human gestures. It's ideal for use in small sizes for designs with a warm imprint and with manual gestures.
  34. Chancy JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A short-lived TV game show from 1977 called “Second Chance” has its logo lettered in a bold, block type style with slightly chamfered corners. This inspired Chancy JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions. While “Second Chance” only lasted one season, the show was re-tooled - and debuted in 1983 as “Press Your Luck” – which ran until 1986.
  35. Divina by Sudtipos, $35.00
    Divina is a Latinized digitization of one of German calligraphy master Rudolph Koch's typefaces. The original typeface, Kurrent, was designed in 1927 and cut in 1935. Its shapes are a variant of the German script to be used as a model for writing in schools at the time. This is the first time Koch's rendition of this particular blackletter calligraphy was ever digitized.
  36. Stymie by Linotype, $40.99
    In 1931, Morris Fuller Benton created the Stymie typeface for the American Type Founders (ATF). Stymie is a reworking of a slab serif type that was popular in Europe at that time, Memphis. For the past one hundred fifty years, slab serif types (sometimes called Egyptian or Egyptienne-style faces) have been a popular choice for headline text in newspapers, magazines, and advertising.
  37. Synopsis by Vasava Fonts, $45.00
    Synopsis draws inspiration on the classic proportions and letterforms of old romans. In addition to this a new modern twist has been infused to it, giving it a dimensional double stroke or virtual inline that makes the round parts twist in and out. Specially gorgeous in big sizes it brings the best from the past merging it with new ideas.
  38. CF Santiago by Contrafonts, $28.00
    This alphabet has only capital and small caps. With several alternative characters (A, R, Y) in different style groups. The capitals are even more flexible, with alternatives for Uncial inspiration. In addition to ligatures symbols and various groups of numbers. Of course we use Opentype for a expanded use in modern software for layout and graphic design. Compatible with mac and PC.
  39. Is This The End by Intellecta Design, $19.90
    Is This the End has three different ornamental endpieces ready to use in end chapters, final pages in books, magazines and several artistic representations. Each endpiece may be used in different languages like German, Bulgarian, Croatian, Danish, Spanish, Finnish, French, Dutch, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, English and Portuguese. Intellecta Design researched these endpieces from the very rare Richard Gans type catalogue from 1882.
  40. Trade Paper JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    In the March 16, 1936 edition of “The Film Daily” (a trade publication for the film industry) the magazine ran an ad for its Year Book. The ad was set in a slab serif typeface similar to popular designs such as Karnak, Stymie, Beton and the like. Redrawn digitally as Trade Paper JNL, it is available in both regular and oblique versions.
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