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  1. Bitterlove by Letterafandi Studio, $14.00
    Bitterlove is a romantic and graceful calligraphy typeface with characters that dance along the baseline. It can be used for various purposes such as logos, wedding invitations, headings, t-shirts, letterhead, signage, labels, news, posters, badges and so much more. Bitterlove is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  2. Puffy Fluffy by me55enjah, $12.00
    Puffy Fluffy is a casual handwritting typeface. This handmade monoline brush-strokes create a fun casual doodle typeface. This typeface can add more fun and happiness in your design. This typeface can be perfect for your greeting cards, birthday invitations, and event for a storybook, poster, quotes, etc.. Enjoy to create more cute-awesome projects with this typeface.
  3. Romantic by Sealoung, $17.00
    Husband Romantic is a lovely and elegant duo font (script and serif). It can easily be matched to an incredibly large set of projects, so add it to your creative ideas and notice how it makes them stand out! Husband Romantic is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  4. Magic Branch by GuseType, $15.00
    Magic Branch is a beautiful display fancy elegant font. This font can be used in a various of designs such as headlines, branding, cover, poster, logo, product tag and many more. Magic branch have a special character/alternate and ligature features that can be stylize your word and other font features like uppercase, lowercase, numeral, punctuation marks, multilingual support.
  5. Caxtonian Black by URW Type Foundry, $49.99
    Coen Hofmann has rediscovered Blackletter font design and enriches URW’s FontForum with two new and very beautiful fonts: Caxtonian Black and Holland Gothic. Caxtonian Black is a remarkable classical Fraktur inspriced inspired from the fonts used by the famous first English printer William Caxton. Coen Hofmann digitally re-mastered and completed the font for usage with modern technology.
  6. NEON Love by Qaratype, $16.00
    NEON love is a typeface inspired by real world neon light signs. You can create wall art prints, greeting cards, snapchat geofilter designs, invitation designs, t-shirts, and more. This font is perfect for adding your own glowing light effects or can be used to actually design real world neon signs. … Main Features: Uppercase & Lowercase letters Numbering and Punctuation
  7. Ungap Blocks Variable by Pedro Teixeira, $25.00
    This font was designed by blocks, square glyphs. Terminals/crossbars of some glyphs can be extended in a way that you can customize the text of your design by using the selection bars in "variable font" button. That button will appear in the text editor of your program, if such option is available, like in recente illustrator and photoshop.
  8. Armenicha by Anomali Creative, $9.99
    This versatile script typeface includes many different alternates for each lowercase letter. It's extremely fun to use as each word can be transformed to your liking. Armenicha works really well for Logos and Apparel Design. It's also great for creating Prints or Merchandise, as you can use the illustrative qualities of the shapes to create an art piece.
  9. Gulfs Display by Studio Sun, $10.00
    Gulfs Display Inspired by the 90's playful cartoon & comic books. This playful font comes in six widths; condensed, semi condensed, normal, semi expanded, expanded and extra expanded. This font can be used for modern and vintage designs, also can be easily paired with some graphic elements (Illustration, Photography) this font perfect for, Logotype, Branding, Title, and Packaging.
  10. Love Valentina by Andrey Font Design, $14.00
    Love Valentina is a romantic and sweet calligraphy typeface with characters that dance along the baseline. It can be used for various purposes such as logos, wedding invitations, headings, t-shirts, letterhead, signage, labels, news, posters, badges and so much more. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  11. Alywita Love by Letterafandi Studio, $14.00
    Alywita Love is a lovely Handwritten font with characters that dance along the baseline. It can be used for various purposes such as logos, wedding invitations, headings, t-shirts, letterhead, signage, labels, news, posters, badges and so much more. Alywita Love is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  12. Stay Tuned by Sarid Ezra, $14.00
    Introducing, Stay Tuned! Stay Tuned is a traditional brush font. Including different lowercase and uppercase that you can use randomly. You can combine the uppercase and lowercase in a word that will make your design looks more natural and handmade. Use the underline for dramatic looks. Number, symbol, and another punctuation also included in this fonts. Support multilingual!
  13. Limit Breaking by Letterara, $12.00
    Limit Breaking is natural dry brush font. this font has a striking look and a good flow font that can add style to your designs. It’s perfect for logos, quotes, posters, clothing, advertising, packaging, and every other design which needs a unique touch. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs with ease!
  14. Kochire by Grontype, $10.00
    About the Product : Richest is a very attractive display font, each Fonts has its own uniqueness, is made with great care to produce a good work. Richest font can be used to make flyer banners title, logo, Book or magazine header. it also can be used for product branding Features : Kochire All Character Ligature Alternate Character Multilingual Support
  15. Qbig by Roman Cernohous Typotime, $10.00
    Qbig was originally designed as a typeface for an amateur sci-fi movie in 2006. The basic style can be complemented with two types of shadows (Block and Superblock) which leads to 3D effect. The "Shadow" styles can also be used individually for example to create various graphic structures. This typeface is determined for use in larger sizes.
  16. Karlisbad by Ingrimayne Type, $9.95
    Karlisbad is a monospaced font in which lines expand and contract to form letters. The No-Lines styles can be used alone but it was their use in layers that inspired their creation. They can be used to give the letters a different color than the lines or to create an outline or hollow-letter effect.
  17. RealBook Pen by NorFonts, $37.50
    RealBook Pen are handwritten fonts with a unique lefty bounded shape, and can be used with any word processing program for text and display use, print and web projects, apps and ePub, Comic Books, graphic identities, branding, editorial, advertising, scrapbooking, cards, and invitations … or even just for fun! RealBook Pen can be also used for Comics and Casual lettering.
  18. Fd Twist by Fortunes Co, $9.00
    The Twist font is a bold typeface with a playful appearance. I tried to combine 2 fonts inspired by TV broadcasts, mid-century storybooks. It is suitable for broadcast, labels, logos, magazines, clothing and other commercial purposes. You can choose from three styles, regular, round, and rough, so you can get the retro/modern look you want
  19. Baron by Juraj Chrastina, $39.00
    After Baronessa - funny but not crazy cartoon style font, Baron is an other handmade typeface, warm and friendly but not excessively childish. If Baronessa is a little feminine, Baron is neutral and it's funny and serious at the same time. Baron can tell jokes without smiling. Because a joke can be funny even if the teller doesn't smile.
  20. AT Nezue by Amera Type, $10.00
    Nezue is our first font family consisting of neat and elegant lowercase and uppercase letters, comes with 9 styles (Thin, Extra Light, Light, Regular, Medium, Semi Bold, Bold, Extra Bold, and Black) Formed in a modern style that can help your visual branding look younger, detailed letterforms for optical contrast can make this font even more attractive
  21. The Brayland by Akifatype, $14.00
    The Brayland is a soft and sweet script font. It has a casual and elegant touch and it can be used for various purposes such as logos, wedding invitations, headings, t-shirts, letterheads, signage, labels, news, posters, badges and more. The Brayland is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  22. Firstlove by Letterafandi Studio, $10.00
    Firstlove is a romantic and graceful calligraphy typeface with characters that dance along the baseline. It can be used for various purposes such as logos, wedding invitations, headings, t-shirts, letterhead, signage, labels, news, posters, badges and so much more. Firstlove is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  23. Bodwars by Sarid Ezra, $17.00
    Bodwars is a sans based font with unique shape that will make your design looks hi-tech and modern. You can use this font for any purpose, especially to make logotype and sci-fi movie poster. You can mix and match the uppercase and lowercase to make your logo more stand out. This font also support multi language.
  24. Migel by Eotype, $14.00
    Migel is a thick display typeface that has rounded edge and soft characteristics. This font can give your designs a playful and friendly impression. You can use this font for retro, vintage and urban designs. This font comes with alternative style and ligature features which are suitable for various projects such as logos, product labels, posters and many more.
  25. Shine Himawari by Andrey Font Design, $14.00
    Shine Himawari is a romantic, beautiful and light script font. It can be used for each of your favorite creations, such as wedding invitation, birthday cards, thank you cards, or pretty much any design that requires a customized touch. This font is PUA encoded, which means you can access all of the glyphs and swashes with ease!
  26. Jazz Copyist by NorFonts, $29.95
    Jazz Copyist fonts are handwritten fonts with a unique bounded shape, and can be used with any word processing program for text and display use, print and web projects, apps and ePub, Comic Books, graphic identities, branding, editorial, advertising, scrapbooking, cards and invitations … or even just for fun! Jazz Copyist can be used for Comics and Casual lettering.
  27. Typist Slab Mono by VanderKeur, $25.00
    The typeface Typist originated during an extensive research on the origin and development of typewriter typestyles. The first commercially manufactured typewriter came on the market in 1878 by Remington. The typestyles on these machines were only possible in capitals, the combination of capitals and lowercase came available around the end of the nineteenth century. Apart from a few exceptions, most typestyles had a fixed letter width and a more or less unambiguous design that resembled a thread-like structure. A lot of this mechanical structure was due to the method the typestyles were produced. Looking at type-specimens for print before the first typewriters were good enough to came on the market we can see that in 1853 and in 1882 Bruce’s Type Foundry already had printing type that had a structure of the typewriter typestyles. Of course printing types were proportional designed as typewriter typestyles had a fixed width. So it is possible that except from the method of production for typewriter typestyles, the design of printing types were copied. In the design of the Typist, the purpose was – next to the monospace feature – to include some of the features of the early typewriter typestyles. Features such as the ball terminals and the remarkable design of the letter Q. This new typeface lacks the mechanical and cold look of the early typewriter typestyles. The Typist comes in six weights with matching italics in two versions. One that resembled the early typewriter typestyles (Typist Slab) and a version designed with coding programmers in mind (Typist Code).
  28. Typist Code Mono by VanderKeur, $25.00
    The typeface Typist originated during an extensive research on the origin and development of typewriter typestyles. The first commercially manufactured typewriter came on the market in 1878 by Remington. The typestyles on these machines were only possible in capitals, the combination of capitals and lowercase came available around the end of the nineteenth century. Apart from a few exceptions, most typestyles had a fixed letter width and a more or less unambiguous design that resembled a thread-like structure. A lot of this mechanical structure was due to the method the typestyles were produced. Looking at type-specimens for print before the first typewriters were good enough to came on the market we can see that in 1853 and in 1882 Bruce’s Type Foundry already had printing type that had a structure of the typewriter typestyles. Of course printing types were proportional designed as typewriter typestyles had a fixed width. So it is possible that except from the method of production for typewriter typestyles, the design of printing types were copied. In the design of the Typist, the purpose was – next to the monospace feature – to include some of the features of the early typewriter typestyles. Features such as the ball terminals and the remarkable design of the letter Q. This new typeface laks the mechanical and cold look of the early typewriter typestyles. The Typist comes in six weights with matching italics in two versions. One that resembled the early typewriter typestyles (Typist Slab) and a version designed with coding programmers in mind (Typist Code).
  29. Alfie by Monotype, $29.99
    Alfie™ is lively, friendly, inviting and easy on the eyes. What more could you want in a script? How about four flavors of the same design? Alfie Script is a delightful connecting script with a touch of comfortable elegance. Use it for everything from social announcements to headlines and packaging. Alfie Casual is a little more laid-back with letters standing on their own. It works great in short blocks of text copy, subheads and navigational links. Alfie Informal has spirited serifs and its own demeanor, while Alfie Small Caps does a fine job of supporting its other siblings. There’s an immediacy to words and messages set in these lighthearted confections. Jim Ford was practicing drawing with a new brush pen when the inspiration for Alfie came to him. He had filled several pages in a notebook with letters and, at one point, realized that there might be a typeface among them. As it turned out, there were four. The process, however, wasn’t choosing one design and modifying it. The makings of all the designs were on the pages. It was just a matter of culling out the right collection of characters to build the foundations for the four flavors of Alfie. Because they share the same family roots, each design in the Alfie family can be paired and intermixed. Ford admits that there’s a hint of Emil Klumpp’s 1950s Murray Hill typeface (https://www.myfonts.com/fonts/bitstream/murray-hill/) in the Alfie family. Just enough to give the design a 50s vibe. (Some fashions never go out of style.)
  30. Whomp by Sudtipos, $59.00
    Whomp takes its inspiration from the work of an American master in sign painting and alphabet manipulation: Alf Becker . In 1932, Becker began designing a series of alphabets to be published in Signs of the Times magazine at the rate of one alphabet per month. Nine years later, 100 of those alphabets were compiled in one book that became an enormous success among sign painters. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, many Alf Becker alphabets were digitized with blurbs that falsely credit an “Alf Becker typeface”. Alf Becker was not really a typeface kind of guy. He was more of a calligrapher and sign painter. His alphabets were either incomplete or full of variations on different letters, and didn't become typefaces until the digital era. This particular Becker alphabet was quite incomplete. In fact, it wasn't a showing of an alphabet, but words on a poster. Alejandro Paul took the challenge of drawing, digitizing, restructuring, and finally building a complete usable typeface from that partial alphabet. He then extended his pleasure by once again playing with the wonderful possibilities of OpenType. Whomp comes with more than 100 alternates, tons of swashy endings and ligatures, all built into the font and accessible through OpenType palettes in programs that support such features. This is the in-your-face kind of font that stands among other Becker-based alphabets as paying most homage to the vision of this great American artist who saw letters as live ever-changing beings. Whomp is right at home when used on packaging, signage, posters, and entertainment related products.
  31. Swarha by Gumpita Rahayu, $18.00
    Built in 1930 - 1935 by Dutch architect Wolff Schoemaker, the Swarha Islamic Building was originally used as a lodging for the honoured guest country and the journalists for Asia-Africa Conference in 1955. This building has an important role as one of Bandung historical art deco heritage, with the art deco typefaces styles on it's singage in this building, giving it a more classic west and east taste. Wolff Schoemaker was trying to combine the elements between eastern and western culture in design. One of his works was the Swarha Islamic Building in a circular design with rounded and high dynamic angle. Unfortunately the Swarha Islamic Building has been abandoned and and less attentioned by the local people itself to preserve this historic building. So I'm trying to raise the value of the historical heritage by creating this typefaces. This typefaces was inspired by the Swarha Building characteristic itself with its solid construction and dynamic, by adding classic taste on each characters. Available in two styles, Neue and Rounded represents the classic architectural Swarha Islamic Building styles with tropical Bandung Art Deco taste. This typeface is highly usable as a display type for your designs, and will fit with movie titles, magazines, your classic shops logo and signage designs, or you can use this typefaces as your web pages headlines. The characters of this typefaces are only in uppercase style, but it built with small caps on the lowercase featured, and additional Opentype Features were loaded, some stylistic alternates, accessible catchwords in the discretionary ligatures, and standard ligatures.
  32. Hispania Script by HiH, $10.00
    Hispania Script is a distinctive and distinctly nineteenth century script. It was released by Schelter & Giesecke of Leipzig, Germany around 1890. Particularly noteworthy are the sharply-pointed legs of the upper case ‘K’ & ‘R’ that seem to be characteristic of the period. Similar strokes, often with a slight curve, may be seen in typefaces like Alt-Romanish and Tinteretto by Schelter & Giesecke, Artistic and Lateinsch by Bauer and Berthold and the poster lettering of Edward Penfield. The angle of this script (approximately 24 degrees) and the sharp delicate points must have made the manufacture of this face in metal type a challenge. The resulting type was probably quite fragile and subject to accidental damage. Additionally, the sharp points would be subject to wear. With digital type, these concerns are eliminated. As far as I know, no one has ever dropped a digital letter on the floor. Nonetheless, creating a digital outline for a typeface like Hispania Script, with many crossing strokes, can be quite time-consuming. Even with an accurate scan of a good quality original, it is usually necessary to construct each crossing stroke separately and then remove the overlap in order to obtain a sharp and convincing intersection. Steep internal angles are often defined with two points, rather than one, to minimize ink or toner fill that can muddy the rendering in smaller sizes. Like all formal scripts, Hispania Script is always useful for announcements and invitations. However, the distinctiveness of of this design strongly suggests that there are other applications that may benefit from its use. Step outside the box and try it in some unexpected places. It is the unexpected that often draws a person’s eye.
  33. Text Tile by Tetradtype, $25.00
    TextTile is a system of heavy sans titling faces which can be utilized to carry a repeating chromatic pattern across words and letters. It stands apart from other chromatic faces, where layered effects typically interact only within each letter and do not carry through from one letter to another. The pattern repetition across letters of varying widths is achieved through OpenType substitution, using conditional alternates for each successive letter to allow for a seamless appearance across words, regardless of letter combinations. Though the pattern exists on a strict grid and the letters' widths and spacing must be highly regular in order to preserve the pattern repeat, the letterforms themselves are not rigid; rather, they appear organic, lively. The initial release includes patterns inspired by a classic buffalo plaid, separated into its horizontal and vertical components to maximize the creative possibilities for layering one-, two-, three-, and even four-color plaid patterns. Kits are available to produce the plaid pattern in detail—with overlapping diagonal hatching fully visible—or as a simplified version in which transparency can be used to simulate plaid or to create a checkered or striped effect. The TextTile family of fonts is a flexible canvas for mixing and matching a broad array of patterns to create a unique look. Check back for more pattern releases and take a look at the online specimen to see what is possible with the current offerings. Usage Notes For best results use an OpenType aware program. Enabling Contextual Alternates will ensure pattern alignment. For patterns that are made up of vertical stripes or columns using the Stylistic Alternate/Stylistic Set 1 will shift the columns. Stylistic Set 2 will change 1-0 into blocks of patterns.
  34. FF Info Pict by FontFont, $62.99
    Erik Spiekermann, working in collaboration with Ole Schäfer, originally designed FF Info® Display for use in the context of wayfinding systems. The variants FF Info™ Text and FF Info™ Correspondence were developed later for text setting and office communication. FF Info Display The sober and clear forms of the sans serif FF Info Display have been deliberately molded to make them perfect for use on wayfinding systems. The font by Ole Schäfer and Erik Spiekermann not only takes the problem of lack of space into account - it is some 15% narrower than comparable typefaces - the characters have also been designed to ensure they remain legible even in adverse conditions for reading. As text on signs often contains words with which readers are unfamiliar and which are thus deciphered letter for letter rather than perceived as whole words, it is essential to provide for a clear differentiation between glyphs. Additional serifs on the lowercase "i" and uppercase "I" and a small arch on the terminal of the lowercase "l" ensure that it is possible to readily discriminate between these particularly problematic letters. Moreover, sharp corners on glyphs can also make it difficult to read signs with backlighting or when driving past. The rounded corners of FF Info Display counteract this effect and make sure that the character forms remain well defined.FF Info Display is available in five carefully coordinated weights, from Regular to Bold. In the corresponding italic variants, the letters appear overall more rounded while the lowercase "a" has a closed form and the "f" has a descender. Also included among the glyphs of FF Info Display are several ligatures and arrow symbols. Pictograms with different themes that complement the typeface are also available in four weights. FF Info Text Thanks to his know-how gained through designing other typefaces, Erik Spiekermann became aware that fonts created for use in problematic environments can be used in many different situations. In smaller point sizes, FF Info Display cuts a fine figure when used to set longer texts. So Spiekermann carefully reworked FF Info Display to produce FF Info Text, a font perfected for use in this context. Not only can the characters be more generously proportioned, certain features, such as additional serifs to aid with the differentiation of problematic letters, are also no longer necessary in textual surroundings. The upright styles have a double-story "g" while Spiekermann has added oldstyle figures and small caps. FF Info Correspondence FF Info Correspondence has also been designed for setting block text although it recalls the style of old typewriter characters and is specifically intended for use in office communication. The characters of this third member of the family are thus more formal, without rounded terminals but with rectangular punctuation marks. The narrower letters are provided with large serifs to give them more space although, at the same time, this reduces the differences in terms of letter width among the alphabet. In contrast with its two siblings, FF Info Correspondence has only three weights, each with corresponding italic.The three styles of the FF Info super family cover an extensive range of potential applications. If the different kerning is adjusted manually, the three styles harmonize happily with each other and can be readily used in combination to set, for example, headlines and texts and also creative display options.
  35. Fromes Industrial by Jehansyah, $10.00
    fromes industrial this is a natural but very charming font design, elegant impression and does not leave a clear and firm concept into it, this design too, can create a neat impression to be used as a wall decoration or your poster design project, very suitable for all types of designs, and several other printed works, such as posters, book thumbnails, films, magazines, and many more, there are several alternate letters that you can use and combine into them, and are supported by PUA Encode which means you can easily access all flying machines, include : numeric punctuation alternate latin Thank You Very Much
  36. Boudoir by Juraj Chrastina, $29.00
    Come into the boudoir. This simple hand-drawn sans tries to invoke the same feelings as its name - and not to be overluscious. Boudoir is sweet and sensual like women, but it’s at the same time uncluttered and masculinely straightforward. The font borrows some playful capital shapes from the all caps Baronessa and draws inspiration for others from old classics. Thanks to the bolder weights, it can also be used in smaller sizes, you can combine different weights for different sizes to obtain a more balanced look, or you can just give emphasis using different weights.
  37. Japanese Emperor by Putracetol, $28.00
    Japanese Emperor is a font inspired Japanese style and the only fonts with shapes and styles that exactly resemble the Japanese characters & this font is easy to read and can be applied to all media and all can use this font without exception This font is suitable for your projects such as logos, wedding invitations, branding, landing pages, apparel, posters, headlines, greeting cards, invitation cards, social media, crafting, quote and more. This font can be used and supported in various programs and OS, such as procreate, cricut, windows, macOS and others. This font is also support multi language.
  38. Kaizena by MaxnorType, $12.00
    Kaizena is a modern script font with alternates, final form, stylistic sets, including front and back swashes. It can be used for various purposes, and suitable for logo design, branding, greeting cards, stationery, wedding invitations and much more. The design of Kaizena nuanced Japanese style, but it is very feasible to use in modern themed designs. Kaizena uses OpenType Features, so designers can access alternate glyphs easily with graphic design softwares. Besides that, these alternate glyphs are located in Private Use Area, so they can be accessed easily with Character Map, Babel Map, or font manager softwares.
  39. Mathilda Script by Selotype, $12.00
    Mathilda Script is a beautiful calligraphy design, including Regular.This font can be used for various purposes such as logos, product packaging, wedding invitations, branding, titles, signs, labels, signatures, book covers, posters, quotes, and more. Mathilda Script is coded with Unicode PUA, which allows access to all features without special design software. Mac users can use the Letter Book, and Windows users can use Character Maps to view and copy additional characters to paste into your favorite text editor / application. If you need help or have questions, let me know or send an email "SelotypeStudio@gmail.com" I'm happy to help :) Thank you & Happy Design!
  40. Noricks by Arterfak Project, $27.00
    Introducing Noricks, the handy bold serif typeface. Designed with satisfying large serif, and inspired by the newspaper headline and classy fashion logos. In this font, you can find strong and mild looks at the same time that makes Noricks can be used for many purposes. Work perfectly for logo, headline, title, or any design which needs emphasis from typography. Noricks is more complete with ligatures and a lot of special characters that you can apply and get the classy looks. What you’ll get : Uppercase Lowercase Numbers & symbols Punctuation Stylistic alternates Stylistic set Ligatures Accented characters Enjoy!
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