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  1. Aguero Serif by Craft Supply Co, $15.00
    Aguero Serif – Clean & Elegant Serif Font is a modern serif font family whose design refers us to the style of transitional serifs. The distinctive features of Aguero Serif – Clean & Elegant Serif Font are the relatively low contrast of strokes, the slightly squarish shapes of round characters and the emphasized businesslike nature.
  2. Afsoon by Naghi Naghachian, $104.00
    Afsoon is a decorative headline font designed by Naghi Naghashian.This font is a contribution to modernisation of Arabic typography, gives the font design of Arabic letters real modern arrangement und provides more typographic flexibility. Afsoon supports Arabic, Persian and Urdu. It also includes proportional and tabular numerals for the supported languages.
  3. Evil Laughter by Hanoded, $10.00
    I am working on my Halloween font collection and realised I did not have a ‘blood drip font’. So, I bought a second hand typewriter and typed all the glyphs. Then I made the blood drips using syrup, paper and gravity! The result is a halloween font with a twist!
  4. Alchemia Decorative by Struvictory.art, $19.00
    ALCHEMIA is a modern sans serif font with mystical motives. The font is created in classic proportions and decorated with celestial and boho decor. ALCHEMIA is represented by sans serif lowercase and ornate uppercase. The font is suitable for the design on the theme of astrology, mysticism, spirituality, witchcraft, magic, esotericism.
  5. Cesium by Hoefler & Co., $51.99
    An inline adaptation of a distinctive slab serif, Cesium is an unusually responsive display face that maintains its high energy across a range of different moods. The Cesium typeface was designed by Jonathan Hoefler in 2020. An energetic inline adaptation of Hoefler’s broad-shouldered Vitesse Black typeface (2000), Cesium is named for the fifty-fifth member of the periodic table of the elements, a volatile liquid metal that presents as a scintillating quicksilver. From the desk of the designer, Jonathan Hoefler: I always felt that our Vitesse typeface, an unusual species of slab serif, would take well to an inline. Vitesse is based not on the circle or the ellipse, but on a less familiar shape that has no common name, a variation on the ‘stadium’ that has two opposing flat edges, and two gently rounded sides. In place of sharp corners, Vitesse uses a continuously flowing stroke to manage the transition between upright and diagonal lines, most apparent on letters like M and N. A year of making this gesture with my wrist, both when drawing letterforms and miming their intentions during design critiques, left me thinking about a reduced version of the typeface, in which letters would be defined not by inside and outside contours, but by a single, fluid raceway. Like most straightforward ideas, this one proved challenging to execute, but its puzzles were immensely satisfying to solve. Adding an inline to a typeface is the quickest way to reveal its secrets. All the furtive adjustments in weight and size that a type designer makes — relieving congestion by thinning the center arm of a bold E, or lightening the intersecting strokes of a W — are instantly exposed with the addition of a centerline. Adapting an existing alphabet to accommodate this inline called for renovating every single character (down to the capital I, the period, and even the space), in some cases making small adjustments to reallocate weight, at other times redesigning whole parts of the character set. The longer we worked on the typeface, the more we discovered opportunities to turn these constraints into advantages, solving stubbornly complex characters like € and § by redefining how an inline should behave, and using these new patterns to reshape the rest of the alphabet. The New Typeface The outcome is a typeface we’re calling Cesium. It shares many of Vitesse’s qualities, its heartbeat an energetic thrum of motorsports and industry, and it will doubtless be welcome in both hardware stores and Hollywood. But we’ve been surprised by Cesium’s more reflective moods, its ability to be alert and softspoken at the same time. Much in the way that vibrant colors can animate a typeface, we’ve found that Cesium’s sensitivity to spacing most effectively changes its voice. Tighter leading and tracking turns up the heat, heightening Cesium’s sporty, high-tech associations, but with the addition of letterspacing it achieves an almost literary repose. This range of voices recommends Cesium not only to logos, book covers, and title sequences, but to projects that regularly must adjust their volume, such as identities, packaging, and editorial design. Read more about how to use Cesium. About the Name Cesium is a chemical element, one of only five metals that’s liquid at room temperature. Resembling quicksilver, cesium is typically stored in a glass ampule, where the tension between a sturdy outer vessel and its volatile contents is scintillating. The Cesium typeface hopes to capture this quality, its bright and insistent inline restrained by a strong and sinuous container. Cesium is one of only three H&Co typefaces whose name comes from the periodic table, a distinction it shares with Mercury and Tungsten. At a time when I considered a more sci-fi name for the typeface, I learned that these three elements have an unusual connection: they’re used together in the propulsion system of nasa’s Deep Space 1, the first interplanetary spacecraft powered by an ion drive. I found the association compelling, and adopted the name at once, with the hope that designers might employ the typeface in the same spirit of discovery, optimism, and invention. —JH Featured in: Best Fonts for Logos
  6. a Theme for murder - Personal use only
  7. Digs My Hart - Personal use only
  8. Selectric - Unknown license
  9. Eye Spy - Unknown license
  10. Dr. Eve L - Unknown license
  11. Eight Track program 3 - Personal use only
  12. Tetris Blocks - Unknown license
  13. Eight Track program 4 - Personal use only
  14. Aftermath (BRK) - Unknown license
  15. It's About Time - Unknown license
  16. Stencil Export - 100% free
  17. Eight Track program two - Personal use only
  18. a Theme for murder - Unknown license
  19. FD Textured - Personal use only
  20. FuzzySock - Unknown license
  21. Super Snorty Laughter - Unknown license
  22. Hula Skirt Girl - Unknown license
  23. Cthulhu Runes - Unknown license
  24. Damn the Man - Unknown license
  25. Ultra Supervixen Honeyed Out - Personal use only
  26. Safety Goggles by Ali Hamidi, $10.00
    Safety Goggles is a bold, strong, masculine display font. This font is perfect for SVG design, sticker, home decoration, quotes, headings, blogs, logos, invitations and more!
  27. Braniella by Arunatype, $15.00
    Braniella is a dainty, flowing handwritten font. Sweet and playful, this font is great for logos, titles, posters, magazines, books, comics, or any creative design project.
  28. Universal Mathematical Pi by Linotype, $29.00
    The Mathematical Pi font family contains six mathematical Pi fonts, with Greek, blackletter, script and open capitals, together with a range of mathematical signs and symbols.
  29. Dirchave by Rillatype, $15.00
    Introducing, Dirchave, dirchave is a vintage inspired display font that perfect for packaging, branding, headline, quotes, etc. Features: - Uppercase Font - Number - Punctuatuon - Stylistic Alternate - PUA encoded
  30. Aberforth by Brittney Murphy Design, $9.00
    Aberforth is clean, mixed-case font family. It's mono-height, so it pairs well with other fonts. Family includes regular, rough, outline, tiles, and italic versions.
  31. Tourist by Solotype, $19.95
    MacKeller, Smiths and Jordan had a font called Giraffe Wide which we liked, but like many Victorian display fonts it had no lowercase. We fixed that!
  32. Windstone by Variatype, $14.00
    Windstone is a Black Ultra Condensed display sans font published by Variatype, available in regular and italic. FONT FEATURES Additional Accents 66 Languages Kerning Alternates Ligatures
  33. Cross Stitch by Outside the Line, $19.00
    A great font for crafters and scrapbookers. This font can be used to design and layout samplers, or to just create that Home Sweet Home look.
  34. FT Supervisor by Fenotype, $29.95
    Supervisor is a compact and tough retro font. The font has small caps and plenty of automatic ligatures. Supervisor will rock your record covers and posters.
  35. Futhark by Deniart Systems, $10.00
    A font based on the Germanic rune divination system dating back to medieval times NOTE: this font comes with a comprehensive interpretation guide in pdf format.
  36. KG Summer Storm by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    An all-caps title font in a whimsical style. This font comes in 2 styles- a rough edged marker version and a smooth-edged clean version.
  37. Caora by Phoenix Group, $13.00
    Caora is a font with strong lines with a sweet and versatile border, this font has a minimalist theme and is perfect for clean design needs.
  38. Hatcher by Letterena Studios, $9.00
    Hatcher is a stylish and distinct serif font. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  39. Skuul by Typoforge Studio, $28.00
    The inspiration for the designing of the font Skuul was Letraset in 1981. Font Skuul, for each character has three alternative characters with their automatic replacement.
  40. Emanuela by TrueBlue, $32.00
    An elegant calligraphic font, ideal for any defined artworks. This font has an impressive set of characters and alternative forms and extensive set of OpenType features.
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