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  1. Decorative Arrows JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Decorative Arrows JNL is a collection of twenty-six decorative arrows provided in right and left facing directions.
  2. Handsome by CastleType, $39.00
    A collection of over 30 antique style hands; the typeface includes the hands facing both right and left.
  3. Galactic by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A heavy bold serif face, packs great punch; excellent headline font. Can be used for many different applications.
  4. Bruce Belgina NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Patented in 1867, this face adds peaks and shadows to the Egyptian form so popular at the time.
  5. Montarsi by insigne, $32.00
    Montarsi is a typeface designed by Jeremy Dooley, inspired by Arabic calligraphy and contemporary design trends. The letters are fluid and graceful, inspired by the curves and swirls of Arabic script. Montarsi is a bold, contemporary calligraphic face with broad strokes and high contrast. It has a variety of styles and weights to give you an extensive range of design options. This font family, which includes eight weights, is ideal for producing brief texts for editorial, fashion, branding, magazine, television, window displays, and other media applications. Small caps, old-style figures, and width variations are also included. It's ideal for writing brief sentences because of the increased x-height. Montarsi is a classic spirit reinvented in a modern language, influenced by the delicate curves of letters and the way ink glides across paper. We especially thank Lucas Azevedo and ikern.
  6. Vinneta by Dima Pole, $27.00
    Vinneta is a direct italic font. Its contours and graceful, and precise. Vinneta has a huge number of alternative variations of the glyphs, 20 stylistic sets, it allows you to create a variety of compositions. In addition Vinneta has 17 OpenType features, including oldstyle numbers, swashes, contextual alternates, historical forms, standard ligatures, discretionary and contextual ligatures, localized forms, stylistic alternates, and more others. For convenience here are two faces, one with stylized capitals (they are different from swashes), in another - classic capitals. Vinneta has characters of all European and Slavic languages. "Vinneta" it is an ancient city of the Venedi (Wends), the legendary highly developed Slavic-Aryan people that lent its name to Venice city, lake Bodensee in southern Germany, the land of Wendland in Lower Saxony; and besides, Lithuanians and Estonians even today, this name referred to the Slavs (Veneja and Vene).
  7. Bathysphere by Kickingbird, $24.00
    This steam era typeface, created by Gustav Schroeder in 1884, found popular use on soap box labels and tobacco tins during its initial release. Then, later, a successful and stout revival of Gustav's face, named Othello, was carried out by Morris Fuller Benton in 1934, and the typeface's appeal widened to include items such as broadside posters featuring Boris Karloff's Frankenstein. After metal gave way to film type, Gustav's creation experienced a brief fashion moment in the 1960's, but then disappeared entirely, never re-surfacing as a full digital typeface. With the release of Bathysphere, the typeface comes full circle, having been completely redrawn from scratch using Gustav's original specimens. The new extended language support establishes the typeface firmly in the modern era, while Bathysphere's refinement of subtle blunt corners restores a deep-sea grace to this iron giant.
  8. Albrecht Durer Gothic by Scriptorium, $18.00
    While browsing through a sourcebook on historic calligraphy and antique type I came on an interesting sample of a gothic style attributed to the legendary artist Albrecht Durer. I had previously seen fonts based on the peculiar style of lettering Durer used on prints for his signature and some captions, but this style was radically different and much more characteristic of the lettering and early printed types of the 'Northern Renaissance' which Durer was a big part of. Whether it's authentically Durer's work or not is up in the air, but it's a very nice example of early gothic type. We've called the resulting font Albrecht Durer Gothic and it's a very striking face well suited to titles and other contemporary uses where you need something heavy and eye catching.
  9. Backspacer by Emigre, $39.00
    Years ago, by happenstance, designers Nancy Mazzei and Brian Kelly found an old decrepit typewriter in an abandoned lot with tall grass in Brooklyn. They kept it around their apartment for two years. Then one day they decided that it was time to move and they planned to throw the old typewriter away. But it was so beautiful they wanted to keep at least a part of it. So they decided on keeping the keys. They kept the keys in a brown bag until one fine day the keys were introduced to a camera. It was a match made in heaven that resulted in some beautiful quirky images of typewriter keys. These images were the inspiration for Backspacer. They were scanned, traced and turned into a working typeface by Zuzana Licko.
  10. Matcha by Los Andes, $59.00
    We decided to explore the concept of fitness, but from a more natural perspective. With so many people drinking detox drinks and eating raw food, we were inspired to create a font that mixes the ‘strength’ of sports and the organic nature of natural products. The result is ‘Matcha’: a strong and energetic typeface that also flows at the same time. Matcha consists of a stable, very friendly Slab face and a calligraphy Script with a handmade style: spontaneous and fickle with some reverse-contrast alternative characters. Can you guess who is the designer behind each style? The duo contains OpenType features and is perfect for labeling natural products, cookbooks, magazine photography, fashion & beauty magazines covers, health & fitness publications, and more. For both print and digital communication. Matcha: the new black coffee!
  11. Preface by Shinntype, $39.00
    Preface vs. Helvetica/Futura/Gill: a different strategy of text color. Whereas the established classes of sans serif typeface achieve a dynamic balance between stroke and space by combining a diversity of letterform with an evenness of fit, Preface switches the emphasis, driving out diagonals to create a dominant harmony of curves and perpendiculars, matched with a greater variety of inter-character space shapes—the result of extra width introduced in the “f” and “t”, and by the openness that accompanies the wide tails of the “ a” and “l”, the long ear of the “r”, and the serif of the “i”. En masse, and in keeping with the present trend in typography, Preface exhibits a coarser texture than the traditional sans serif faces, but one that is nonetheless even and precise. With tabular, oldstyle figures.
  12. Polygraph by PintassilgoPrints, $29.00
    Inspired on posters by the extraordinary polish artist Leszek Żebrowski, Polygraph is a highly unusual face. Packed with eccentric alternates, it is an all-caps font with four exchangeable variations for each letter. These alternates are programmed to cycle when the font is used in OpenType-savvy programs, creating a random effect on glyphs distribution. The resulting pieces are truly outstanding, with an audacious handmade twist. To achieve this, just turn on the contextual alternates feature and play – you can easily try different glyphs sequences by adding spaces before words. When you need a more well-behaved look, but still with a subtle hand-drawn flair, turn off the contextual alternates and set text in uppercase. Polygraph comes in two weights, for added flexibility. But be warned: it’s quite addictive!
  13. Hucks Serif by S6 Foundry, $25.00
    Hucks Serif is a contemporary serif typeface that seamlessly incorporates large open counters and gracefully curved and rounded forms, resulting in a glyph set that exudes a modern and elegant aesthetic. The pronounced contrast between thick and thin strokes imparts Hucks Serif with a harmonious and stylish appearance. Meticulously crafted to infuse letterforms with an inherent elegance, this font lends a distinctive style and atmosphere to every project it graces. Its versatile nature makes Hucks Serif particularly well-suited for many applications, including but not limited to editorial, headlines, large-format prints, brand identities, social media graphics, advertising materials, editorial designs, posters, magazines, logos, headings, and more. The adaptability of Hucks ensures it can effortlessly enhance the visual appeal and impact of a diverse range of creative projects.
  14. Kapelka New by ParaType, $30.00
    Kapelka New is a soft and friendly display face based on the principles of writing with a soft pointed brush. Kapelka is suitable for packaging design, children's books headlines and any other domestic and informal purposes. The typeface was designed by Zakhar Yaschin and released by ParaType in 2015. Inspired by the sweetie paper and soft pointed brush writing Zahar Yaschin designed the first version of Kapelka in 2001. It wasn’t on the shelf all these years and even served some time as a corporate identity of “Domashniy” TV channel. But with the benefit of hindsight the author decided to improve, modernize and extend Kapelka. The result was even better than you would expect. The font became even more soft and gentle and also gained some inward nobility due to more evident calligraphic base.
  15. Vinea by Greater Albion Typefounders, $12.00
    Vinea is a family of ten display faces that take us on an enjoyable excursion into the world of the retro-futuristic. Ideal for posters, book covers, and anything that needs the sort of futuristic feel that abounded in designs from the 30s to the fifties. The en faces have been designed with uniform metrics, to facilitate multi-coloured overlay effects.
  16. TS Kirt by Vitaliy Tsygankov, $19.00
    TS Kirt - variable sans-serif typeface with narrowed proportions. The font is suitable for titles, packaging, printing, websites, infographics, and advertising. The TS Kirt font family consists of 6 faces and as well as a variable version. The advantage of the font - the same width character in any style. When switching the face, the length of the line will not change.
  17. Prestige Elite M by URW Type Foundry, $35.99
    Prestige Elite is a word processor face which offers clear and monospaced type. The slanted versions have kept the same design as the roman font. The word Elite denoted a specific size of typewriter face. The Prestige Elite font family is easy to read, even in small sizes and is useful for tabular material with narrow columns, such as directories and lists.
  18. Griffith Initials by Celebrity Fontz, $19.99
    The Griffith Initials font was inspired by a set of highly stylized capital letters from the remarkable hand of one of Americas foremost penmen, dating back to 1927. They combine a large degree of accuracy, grace, strength, and freedom. This font includes one set of graceful A-Z initials conveniently assigned to both the upper and lower case alphabet characters.
  19. Allorette by Greater Albion Typefounders, $20.00
    Allorette is a display face inspired by the precepts of the ‘Arts and Crafts’ movement - it is both functional and beautiful, a good clear all capitals face with distinctive design touches, but immediately clear and legible. Especially suitable for poster and signage work. An extensive range of discretionary ligatures are included, readily giving the aspect of carefully thought out hand-drawn lettering.
  20. FranTique NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    The 1905 Barnhart Brothers & Spindler catalog featured an ultrawide face called "French Antique Extended". The letterforms have been faithfully rendered here, but this font’s kerning calls for a lot of overlapping and interlocking that the original cast-metal face wouldn't have been able to duplicate. Both versions of the font include 1252 Latin, 1250 CE (with localization for Romanian and Moldovan).
  21. Hebden by Lewis McGuffie Type, $34.99
    Hebden is a ‘Northern’ font. Inspired by the town Hebden Bridge in Yorkshire, the family is a mix of a grotesque and an incised serif. The grot is based on Victorian train station signage and the serif is style that can be spotted in and around the Yorkshire Dales region. Hebden has a nostalgic twist and is ideal for labelling, signage and memorable messages. The grotesque face with its robust angles and warm circular curves recalls the style of traditional English sans-serifs like Caslon’s 2-Line Egyptian. The incised face has strong but sophisticated and natural forms and is based on a wood carved style popular in the early 20th century. The weight of the two faces are are drawn to complement each other creating an evenly balanced combination. Both faces come with caps, lower caps across letters and numerals, and have Western, Central and Eastern European language support.
  22. Alverata PanEuropean by TypeTogether, $119.00
    Gerard Unger’s new typeface Alverata is a twenty-first-century type-face inspired by the shapes of Romanesque capitals in inscriptions of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, without being a close imitation of them. It is additionally based on the early twentieth-century model, but tweaked so as to prevent blandness and monotony. Alverata performs beautifully in both screen and on paper, delivering excellent legibility. Its letters are open and friendly in small sizes and lively and attractive in large sizes. They are robust, and show refinement in their detail. Unger’s Alverata is an extensive type family, with versions for both formal and informal applications, and with Greek and Cyrillic relatives. Alverata consists of three different fonts: Alverata, Alverata Irregular and Alverata Informal, that vary in form and width, but maintain the same spirit. The Irregular version is particularly inspired by the Insular letterforms, the uncials, and their constantly changing positioning. Alverata strikes a balance among Europe’s diversity of languages, combining contemporary typographical practices with features of medieval letterforms, from the time when Europe came into being. Visually, some written languages, such as Czech and Maltese, differ quite strongly from languages like English and German, notably because of their many accented characters. While other typefaces will show this difference, Alverata removes it. As a result, Alverata enables harmonious convergence of languages.  For the development of the Greek letterforms, Unger collaborated with Gerry Leonidas (University of Reading) and Irene Vlachou (Athens), and with Tom Grace on the Cyrillic letterforms.
  23. Courier 10 Pitch WGL by Bitstream, $49.00
    Another in the series of competent IBM serifed typewriter faces, this one from Howard Kettler in Lexington in 1956.
  24. Courier 10 Pitch by Bitstream, $29.99
    Another in the series of competent IBM serifed typewriter faces, this one from Howard Kettler in Lexington in 1956.
  25. Perpetuity by Zang-O-Fonts, $25.00
    Strict, strong and narrow, Perpetuity is clean and perfectly designed to be used as a more formal display face.
  26. Adelanto JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Adelanto JNL is a wood type revival featuring a condensed sans serif face with chamfered [rather than rounded] corners.
  27. Aeroko Variable by Monotype, $279.99
    Meet Aeroko, a slick variable typeface that evokes grit and speed, a dynamic play, a future–present competitive edge that evokes motorsport and all progressive brand design. This is a robust type system that creates memorable brand headlines. Powered by four display weights and three widths. Turbo-charged by a two-axes variable font. High performance brands can expect Aeroko to out-pace in every graphic condition. Aeroko is bold and assertive, it moves fast in headlines, it flexes when and where you need it. The forms are boxed and solid from Condensed to Wide, and they provide a distinct contrast when paired with rounder text fonts. Aeroko’s secondary power unit is harnessed from the ever adaptable variable font format. Variable font technology enables vast levels of typographic scale and expression, furthermore it allows Aeroko to react instantly in any digital space to maximize results. Aeroko evokes confidence, this is a typeface that actively encourages you to be courageous and daring with type in your own way. Brands demand distinct and robust typography, much in the same way that drivers demand pace. Aeroko meets these demands with ease, delivering assurance and weight across a valiant aesthetic. Aeroko is designed by Krista Radoeva and the Monotype Studio.
  28. Aeroko by Monotype, $49.99
    Meet Aeroko, a slick variable typeface that evokes grit and speed, a dynamic play, a future–present competitive edge that evokes motorsport and all progressive brand design. This is a robust type system that creates memorable brand headlines. Powered by four display weights and three widths. Turbo-charged by a two-axes variable font. High performance brands can expect Aeroko to out-pace in every graphic condition. Aeroko is bold and assertive, it moves fast in headlines, it flexes when and where you need it. The forms are boxed and solid from Condensed to Wide, and they provide a distinct contrast when paired with rounder text fonts. Aeroko’s secondary power unit is harnessed from the ever adaptable variable font format. Variable font technology enables vast levels of typographic scale and expression, furthermore it allows Aeroko to react instantly in any digital space to maximize results. Aeroko evokes confidence, this is a typeface that actively encourages you to be courageous and daring with type in your own way. Brands demand distinct and robust typography, much in the same way that drivers demand pace. Aeroko meets these demands with ease, delivering assurance and weight across a valiant aesthetic. Aeroko is designed by Krista Radoeva and the Monotype Studio.
  29. Gesture by Sinfa, $16.00
    A desire that is honored, a result that describes a gesture that combines script fonts with Signature to meet customer desires. The embodiment of the results that are more likely to be in a signature that is perfect for logos and branding, you determine it yourself .
  30. Whyst by Typotheticals, $2.20
    A nice basic square font, with an outline version that has multiples of uses. Whyst Standard 12 typefaces Whyst Outline 12 typefaces in outline form Whyst Sunrise 4 typefaces ** Whyst Sunrise can only be used as is, Any attempt to faux bold will result in poor results.
  31. Final Fantasy - Unknown license
  32. DB Frilly Paisley by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    DB Frilly Paisley is a collection of paisleys and lace that make a perfect addition to any digital scrapbooking project.
  33. Slim James JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Tall, condensed and square in shape... Slim James JNL balances well against bolder Deco-style sans or novelty type faces.
  34. Bernhard Bold Condensed by Bitstream, $29.99
    A freely drawn heading face prepared in 1912 by Lucian Bernhard for Bauer. The typeface enjoys a vogue in Europe.
  35. Cordin by Typotheticals, $8.00
    Cordin is a rough handdrawn face useful for scrapbooking and other craft-based ideas. There is a free version available.
  36. Crosshair by Burghal Design, $29.00
    Unfortunately, Crosshair was inspired by the youthful craze that's all the rage: on-campus shootings. Put the gun down, Junior.
  37. Broadstreet by Monotype, $29.99
    The Broadstreet font is one of the exciting display faces from designer Richard Yeend, who is based in Fourqueux, France.
  38. Handana by Ingrimayne Type, $9.95
    Handana is an informal face with a simple but distinctive calligraphic look in four weights: light, plain, medium, and bold.
  39. DB Floridity by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    DB Floridity is just plain adorable and the frilly lace theme adds a nice touch to your digital scrapbooking projects.
  40. Jayce by Michael Browers, $25.00
    Jayce is a hand-drawn, upbeat display font family featuring two fonts: a text face and a set of fleurons.
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