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  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. FS Truman by Fontsmith, $80.00
    Beyond broadcast Like Truman Burbank, the star of The Truman Show, FS Truman was born for TV. You’ll know it from Sky One’s on-screen trails and announcements, but it’s just as at home in other media. Its starting point was the skeleton of a highly legible, space-saving, corporate font with some of FS Dillon’s geometric discipline built in. Its distinctive tone of voice and “ownability” are in its boxy but friendly shapes, and characters with hybrid features. FS Truman’s weights and widths were honed to work at TV screen resolutions. A face for TV it may have been, but this is a font that works on every level, on screen, in print, in headlines, in listings, in longer text, in tight corners and open spaces. The space-saver Compact, condensed but crystal clear, FS Truman comes into its own where a lot needs to be said in not a lot of space. Its letter spacing allows the type room to breathe, even at small sizes, while its fulsome x-height and diminutive descenders pave the way for tighter leading. A natural for headlines and titles over three or four lines. “Hybrid” features With every font, Fontsmith look for crafty new ways to imbue letterforms with a consistent character. The idea with FS Truman was to introduce “hybrid” features. In open letters such as “c” and “s”, for example, the top terminals have straight, vertical cuts while their lower terminals have a more angular, cursive finish. Boxy, spacious forms with unusual curves and angles create not just highly legible and efficient letters but strongly distinctive ones, too.
  4. Janda Swirlygirl - Personal use only
  5. Janda Curlygirl Pop - Personal use only
  6. Janda Rosalie - Personal use only
  7. Janda Curlygirl Serif - Personal use only
  8. Basic Map - Personal use only
  9. KG Mullally - Personal use only
  10. Janda Curlygirl Chunky - Personal use only
  11. Pea Bethany's Doodles - Unknown license
  12. Hexa - Personal use only
  13. Coming Home - Personal use only
  14. Ultras Liberi - Unknown license
  15. Just Realize - Personal use only
  16. HVD Bodedo - Unknown license
  17. Pea Stacy's Doodles - Unknown license
  18. Zekton - Unknown license
  19. DS Hiline - Unknown license
  20. HardQuestions - Personal use only
  21. Pea Jean Script - Personal use only
  22. Pea Jane In A Hurry - Unknown license
  23. Pea Katie Shea - Unknown license
  24. DS Sofachrome - Unknown license
  25. Pea Johanna Script - Unknown license
  26. Pea Sara Script - Unknown license
  27. Pea Carrie Script - Unknown license
  28. Pea Happy Girl - Unknown license
  29. Kirsty - Unknown license
  30. Teen - Unknown license
  31. Pea Gretchie Print - Unknown license
  32. Pea Lou Who - Unknown license
  33. Pea Jenny Script - Unknown license
  34. Pea Yar Yar - Unknown license
  35. Pea Jeannie Script - Unknown license
  36. Pea Luv-2-Scrapbook - Unknown license
  37. DS Ayaks - Unknown license
  38. Weiss Lapidar - Unknown license
  39. Dearest - Unknown license
  40. DS Init - Unknown license
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