6,800 search results (0.023 seconds)
  1. <El&Font! Brush> - Unknown license
  2. 84 Rock! - Personal use only
  3. Forever Black - Unknown license
  4. Spyced - Personal use only
  5. Tasmin Reference - Unknown license
  6. Last N Line - 100% free
  7. Bohemia - Personal use only
  8. Belta Bold - Personal use only
  9. Advanced Pixel-7 - Personal use only
  10. ZalamanderCaps - Unknown license
  11. LT Nutshell Library - Personal use only
  12. Savia Filled Shadow - Personal use only
  13. Legitimate Crystal Display - Personal use only
  14. Problematic Piercer - Personal use only
  15. Gommogravure - Unknown license
  16. Culita - Personal use only
  17. La Rosa Muerta - Unknown license
  18. Tasmin Ref - Unknown license
  19. Clink Outlined - Personal use only
  20. Kremlin Minister - Unknown license
  21. Future Imperfect - Unknown license
  22. DBE-Lithium - Personal use only
  23. faucet - Personal use only
  24. DekoBrett - Unknown license
  25. Charriot Deluxe - Unknown license
  26. LT Flode Neue News - 100% free
  27. Selectric Pyramid by Indian Summer Studio, $45.00
    Selectric Pyramid is a typewriter font. Egyptian slab serif · Geometric slab serif Pyramid is version of Memphis (1929) by Dr. Rudolf Wolf. The part of the large project on revival and further development (by drawing many additional glyphs, sometimes over 1000) of the 20th century’s typewriters’ fonts.
  28. Margoth by Asterisk, $33.00
    Margot font family, has more than 1000 + glyphs in each font. The font includes advanced language support, fractions, table shapes, ligatures, and more. Perfect for graphic design and any display use. It can easily work for websites, signage, corporate, and editorial design. documents and folders, mobile interface.
  29. Sweet Sans by Sweet, $59.00
    The engraver’s sans serif—strikingly similar to drafting alphabets of the early 1900s—has been one of the most widely used stationer’s lettering styles since about 1900. Its open, simple forms offer legibility at very small sizes. While there are digital fonts based on this style (such as Burin Sans™ and Sackers Gothic™, among others), few offer the range of styles and weights possible, with the versatility designers perhaps expect from digital type families. Sweet Sans fills that void. The family is based on antique engraver’s lettering templates called “masterplates.” Professional stationers use a pantograph to manually transfer letters from these masterplates to a piece of copper or steel that is then etched to serve as a plate or die. This demanding technique is rare today given that most engravers now use a photographic process to make plates, where just about any font will do. But the lettering styles engravers popularized during the first half of the twentieth century—especially the engraver’s sans—are still quite familiar and appealing. Referencing various masterplates—which typically offer the alphabet, figures, an ampersand, and little else—Mark van Bronkhorst has drawn a comprehensive toolkit of nine weights, each offering upper- and lowercase forms, small caps, true italics, arbitrary fractions, and various figure sets designed to harmonize with text, small caps, and all-caps. The fonts are available as basic, Standard character sets, and as Pro character sets offering a variety of typographic features and full support for Western and Central European languages. Though rich in history, Sweet Sans is made for contemporary use. It is a handsome and functional tribute to the spirit of unsung craftsmanship. Burin Sans and Sackers Gothic are trademarks of Monotype Imaging.
  30. Sweet Sans Pro by Sweet, $79.00
    The engraver’s sans serif—strikingly similar to drafting alphabets of the early 1900s—has been one of the most widely used stationer’s lettering styles since about 1900. Its open, simple forms offer legibility at very small sizes. While there are digital fonts based on this style (such as Burin Sans™ and Sackers Gothic™, among others), few offer the range of styles and weights possible, with the versatility designers perhaps expect from digital type families. Sweet Sans fills that void. The family is based on antique engraver’s lettering templates called “masterplates.” Professional stationers use a pantograph to manually transfer letters from these masterplates to a piece of copper or steel that is then etched to serve as a plate or die. This demanding technique is rare today given that most engravers now use a photographic process to make plates, where just about any font will do. But the lettering styles engravers popularized during the first half of the twentieth century—especially the engraver’s sans—are still quite familiar and appealing. Referencing various masterplates—which typically offer the alphabet, figures, an ampersand, and little else—Mark van Bronkhorst has drawn a comprehensive toolkit of nine weights, each offering upper- and lowercase forms, small caps, true italics, arbitrary fractions, and various figure sets designed to harmonize with text, small caps, and all-caps. The fonts are available as basic, Standard character sets, and as Pro character sets offering a variety of typographic features and full support for Western and Central European languages. Though rich in history, Sweet Sans is made for contemporary use. It is a handsome and functional tribute to the spirit of unsung craftsmanship. Burin Sans and Sackers Gothic are trademarks of Monotype Imaging.
  31. Yorktown - Personal use only
  32. derail - Personal use only
  33. LondonTwo - Unknown license
  34. Pamela - Personal use only
  35. ETIAW v3 - 100% free
  36. Hoedown - Personal use only
  37. Gelatina Elemente - Personal use only
  38. Forelle - Personal use only
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