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  1. Pea Randa - Unknown license
  2. Pea Elizabeth - Unknown license
  3. Pea Kari - Unknown license
  4. Pea Kristy - Unknown license
  5. Pea Sara - Unknown license
  6. Pea Alesa - Unknown license
  7. HVD Comic Serif - Unknown license
  8. Static Cling - Unknown license
  9. DS Kork - Unknown license
  10. Fire Wood - Unknown license
  11. DS Eraser2 - Unknown license
  12. Kirsty - Unknown license
  13. Archipelago - Unknown license
  14. Pea Girly Girls Print - Unknown license
  15. Anime Eyes - Unknown license
  16. Pea Courtney - Personal use only
  17. Pea XOXO from Karen - Personal use only
  18. Inversi by Hanken Design Co., $30.00
    Inversi is a reverse-stress typeface that may be used as a display or text-face font for a wide range of subjects. Compared to other reverse-stress/reverse-contrast typefaces, Inversi's linear contrast is much lower which, at lower sizes, makes it a good options for text or captions. It has good language support, unique design, fractions, and three different widths. Inversi pairs well with HK Requisite. Use the narrow or condensed style when mixing with HK Requisite to give more contrast to the composition.
  19. Realistic Harvest by Timurtype, $14.00
    Introduced by Timurtype Studio! Realistic Harvest is a Handwritten Script Font this font Captivates with elegance Handwritten font, where every curve reveals a story of elegance and every detail is a brushstroke of luxury. A visual symphony for those who appreciate the art of beauty. Realistic Harvest Font also supports multilingualism. Enhance your designs with our original fonts, feel free to comment or provide feedback, Enjoy the fonts Thank You
  20. Declaration Of Independence by Celebrity Fontz, $17.99
    The Signers of the Declaration of Independence font is a collection of all 56 signatures that appeared on America's Declaration of Independence. A must-have for autograph collectors, desktop publishers, lovers of history, or anyone who has ever dreamed of sending a letter, card, or e-mail to a friend or family member "signed" as if by one of the signers of America's Declaration of Independence. This unique font puts every signature on that history-altering document at your fingertips in the form of a high-quality Open Type font. Our fonts behave exactly like any other font on your system and are installed and selected the same way. No special software is needed. Each signature contained in our fonts is mapped to a regular character on your keyboard. Just as with any True Type or Open Type font, you can resize the signature, change its color, etc. Open any Windows application, select the installed font, and type a letter, and you will see the President's signature appear right there on your page where you placed your cursor. Painstaking craftsmanship and an incredible collection of hard-to-find signatures go into this one-of-a-kind font. We're confident you will enjoy it. Please note that this font is intended for entertainment purposes only.
  21. Slantblaze Pro by Campotype, $25.00
    We Redesigned this Slantblaze-Pro. Slantblaze Pro is an exteme slanted display script with characteristics: Simple, Thick, Contrast, and Dynamic. First launched in 2011, and now we present it again in a new version to provide the best user experience. As italics (default), Slantblaze Pro has aloof challenge as a display font. It was designed as an alternative for headline, title in any purpose such as header, brands, packaging, identity, automotive logo, etc. What’s new and changed: This version 2.02 comes in a True Type OT-flavor version. The outline were designed to be smoother than before. Redesign of ‘C’, ‘E’, ‘F’, ‘G’, ‘T’, and some changes to all other smallcases Removed: question.sc, questiondown.sc, exclam.sc and exclamdown.sc assuming they will never be used Rewrite the features structure and adding some new related to all changes New swashed glyphs: A-Z The writing system of numbers is completed with the old-style version and each tabular and proportional method New contextual (calt) to an alternative look of “A" when combined with all lowercase. Also in this feature we have another way to access Ornaments is more interactive by combining dlig and calt features. Another new glyph may be access only in feature (salt)
  22. Truth FB by Font Bureau, $40.00
    In 1994, Apple® Computer, Inc., asked David Berlow for “a future gothic” to replace Chicago®, their system font. Now called Charcoal®, the design was released with Mac® OS 8 in 1996. Through operating system bundles it found its way into every form of design. Released from constraint, Berlow designed Truth FB, a radical series with a spectrum of seven weights. Like its forbear, Truth FB opens new design avenues; FB 2005
  23. Quad Light - 100% free
  24. Quad Ultra - 100% free
  25. Quad Black - 100% free
  26. Alyrak by Konstantine Studio, $16.00
    ALYRAK is born from the anxiety of the future dystopia of the human race. The fear of Artificial Intelligence, robots, and technology that potentially invade living things. Represented in a font and visual to emulate the vibe every time you type it from your keyboard.
  27. Kestrel Script by Alan Meeks, $45.00
    Originally designed in 1985 and released by Letraset for dry transfer Lettering, Kestrel has, until now, never been digitized. The face now has been completely re-drawn and digitized for all formats. It is a heavy formal script similar in form to Commercial Script.
  28. TT Tsars by TypeType, $39.00
    TT Tsars useful links: Specimen | Graphic presentation | Customization options The TT Tsars font family is a collection of serif display titling fonts that are stylized to resemble the fonts of the beginning, the middle and the end of the XVIII century. The project is based on title fonts, that is, the fonts that were used to design book title pages. The idea for the project TT Tsars was born after a small study of the historical development of the Cyrillic type and is also based on Abram Shchitsgal’s book "Russian Civil Type". At the very beginning of the project, we had developed a basic universal skeleton for the forms of all characters in all subfamilies of the family, and later on, we added styles, visual features, artifacts and other nuances typical of the given period onto the skeleton. Yes, from the historical accuracy point of view it might be that such an approach is not always justified, but we have achieved our goal and as a result, we have created perfectly combinable serifs that can be used to style an inscription for a certain time period. The TT Tsars font family consists of 20 fonts: 5 separate subfamilies, each of which consists of 4 fonts. Each font contains 580 glyphs, except for the TT Tsars E subfamily, in which each font consists of 464 characters. Instead of lowercase characters in the typeface, small capitals are used, which also suggests that the typeface is rather a display than text one. In TT Tsars you can find a large number of ligatures (for Latin and Cyrillic alphabets), arrows and many useful OpenType features, such as: frac, ordn, sinf, sups, numr, dnom, case, onum, tnum, pnum, lnum, salt (ss01), dlig. Time-related characteristics of the subfamilies are distributed as follows: • TT Tsars A—the beginning of the 18th century (Latin and Cyrillic) • TT Tsars B—the beginning of the 18th century (Latin and Cyrillic) • TT Tsars C—the middle of the 18th century (Latin and Cyrillic) • TT Tsars D—the end of the 18th century (Latin and Cyrillic) • TT Tsars E—conditionally the beginning of the 18th century (only Latin) TT Tsars A and TT Tsars B families (both the beginning of the 18th century) have different starting points: for TT Tsars A it is Latin, for TT Tsars B it is Cyrillic. The development of the TT Tsars A family began in Latin, the font is based on the royal serif Romain du Roi. The Cyrillic alphabet is harmoniously matched to the Latin. The development of the TT Tsars B family began in Cyrillic, which is based on a Russian civil type. Characteristic elements are the curved one-sided serifs of triangular characters (A, X, Y), drops appear in the letter ?, the middle strokes ? and P are adjacent to the main stroke. Latin was drawn to pair with Cyrillic. It is still based on the royal serif, but somewhat changed: the letters B and P are closed and the upper bar of the letter A rose. This was done for the visual combination of Cyrillic and Latin and at the same time to make a distinction between TT Tsars A and TT Tsars B. TT Tsars C is now the middle of the 18th century. Cyrillic alphabet itself did not stand still and evolved, and by the middle of the 18th century, its forms have changed and become to look the way they are shown in this font family. Latin forms are following the Cyrillic. The figures are also slightly modified and adapted to the type design. In TT Tsars C, Cyrillic and Latin characters are created in parallel. A distinctive feature of the Cyrillic alphabet in TT Tsars C is the residual influence of the flat pen. This is noticeable in such signs as ?, ?, K. The shape of the letters ?, ?, ?, ? is very characteristic of the period. In the Latin alphabet, a characteristic leg appears at the letter R. For both languages, there is a typical C characterized by an upper serif and the appearance of large, even somewhat bolding serifs on horizontals (T, E, ?, L). TT Tsars D is already the end of the 18th century when with the development of printing, the forms of some Cyrillic characters had changed and turned into new skeletons of letters that we transposed into Latin. The figures were also stylized. In this font, both Cyrillic and Latin are stylistically executed with different serifs and are thus logically separated. The end of the century is characterized by the reduction of decorative elements. Straight, blueprint-like legs of the letters ?, R, K, ?. Serifs are very pronounced and triangular. E and ? are one-sided on the middle horizontal line. A very characteristic C with two serifs appears in the Latin alphabet. TT Tsars E is a steampunk fantasy typeface, its theme is a Latinized Russian ?ivil type (also referred to as Grazhdansky type which emerged after Peter the Great’s language reform), which includes only the Latin alphabet. There is no historical analog to this typeface, it is exclusively our reflections on the topic of what would have happened if the civil font had developed further and received a Latin counterpart. We imagined such a situation in which the civil type was exported to Europe and began to live its own life.
  29. Janda Swirlygirl - Personal use only
  30. Janda Curlygirl Pop - Personal use only
  31. Janda Rosalie - Personal use only
  32. Janda Curlygirl Serif - Personal use only
  33. Basic Map - Personal use only
  34. KG Mullally - Personal use only
  35. Janda Curlygirl Chunky - Personal use only
  36. Pea Bethany's Doodles - Unknown license
  37. Hexa - Personal use only
  38. Coming Home - Personal use only
  39. Just Realize - Personal use only
  40. HVD Bodedo - Unknown license
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