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  1. Thirteenth Classmate by Gassstype, $22.00
    Introducing Thirteenth Classmate – Handmade Brush Font is a Authentic Natural and classy style, this font is great for your creative projects such as watermark on photography, and perfect for logos & branding, photography, invitation, watermark,advertisements,product designs, stationery, wedding designs,label ,product packaging, special events or anything that need handwritting taste. Thirteenth Classmate a natural handwritten feel. This handmade font will make your design has a beautiful natural touch for each details. It is perfect for any design project as Invitation,logo, book cover, craft or any design purposes.photos, photography overlays, signs, window art, scrapbooking, tags and so much more!
  2. Rovey by Craft Supply Co, $15.00
    Rovey is an all caps handwritten serif font. It can be used to create almost all types of design projects like print materials. Just use your imagination and some graphic design set in Extras and your project will become more alive and look greater than ever with Rovey. You want to make a greeting card or a package design, or even a brand identity, craft design, any DIY project, book title, wedding font, pop vintage design, retro design or any purpose to make your art / design project look pretty and trendy? Feel free to play with this fonts!
  3. Aringgo by Letterara, $15.00
    Aringgo is a stylish and elegant serif font. It is suitable for a wide variety of designs due to its neat and clean style. Incredibly versatile, this font fits a vast pool of designs, elevating them to the highest levels. Comes with some alternates and ligatures, so you can combine them to make a perfect typography design. It is ideal for your upcoming projects. Such as luxury logo and branding, classy editorial design, magazines, Packaging, poster, movie, cosmetic brand, fashion promotions, art gallery branding, and more. This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the glyphs.
  4. HS Almohandis by Hiba Studio, $59.00
    HS Almohandis is an Arabic display typeface. It is useful for book titles and graphic projects where a contemporary, streamlined look is desired. The font is based on the simple lines of modern and simplified Kufi calligraphy, that support Arabic, Persian and Urdu. This font was created in the beginning as regular weight with the font HS Alhandasi in 2007 for use in technical and engineering company. The company tends to follow the geometrical shape with equal dimensions in both vertical and horizontal storks. There is also a tendency to make all characters to be similar to oval shape with the impression that they are all geometrical and clear. I followed that with Bold weight in 2011. The difference between this font and HS Almohandis is that its characters have a sharp baseline.
  5. Duskey by Craft Supply Co, $19.00
    Introducing Duskey Font Family + Extras. Duskey includes 4 Fonts styles. It can be used to create almost all types of design projects and printing materials. Just use your imagination and some graphic design sets in Extras and your project will become more alive and will look greater than ever with one of the Duskey Font. You want to make a greeting card or a package design, or even a brand identity, craft design, any DIY project, book title, wedding font, pop vintage design, retro design or any purpose to make your art / design project look pretty and trendy? Feel free to play with all style of this font!
  6. Broken Console by Arterfak Project, $14.00
    Proudly present "Broken Console", the geometric pixel font inspired by the old school game console which displaying pixel art in the game view. Broken Console created in 3 styles: Regular (one pixel), Bold (double pixels), and Shadow. This font is an all-caps font that is suitable for the contemporary era of graphic design nowadays. This font has a distinctive look in letterforms that makes it so unique, and suitable for specific themes like Techno, Digital, Retro, New Wave, Cyberpunk, Night, Gaming, Sporty, and much more! Font featured : All-caps alphabet Numbers Symbols & punctuation Multilingual support Thank you for visiting. Hope you like it!
  7. Bulbis by Azzam Ridhamalik, $10.00
    Introducing Bulbis, the latest addition to our font collection. This unique bubble font is inspired by graffiti and street art, infused with a modern layout that is sure to stand out. The font also incorporates a mix of y2k culture and streetwear visuals, which are currently trending in design identities. With its eye-catching appearance, Bulbis captures attention right from the start, drawing the viewer in to explore its fun and dynamic features. The font is versatile and can be used for a variety of design projects, from logos and branding to social media graphics and more. Give your designs a fresh and modern edge with Bulbis font today!
  8. Fast Lane by Gassstype, $22.00
    Here comes a New font,Introducing Fast Lane - Dynamic Handwritten Font with a natural style and dramatic movement. Crafted manually with love and passion, This font is great for your next creative project such as logos, printed quotes, invitations, cards, product packaging, headers, Logotype, Letterhead, Poster, Label, and etc. This handmade font will make your design has a beautiful natural touch for each details. It is perfect for any design project as Invitation,logo, book cover, craft or any design purposes,photos, photography overlays, signs, window art, scrapbooking, tags and so much more! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of ligatures glypsh.
  9. Cusp by Typeco, $29.00
    Cusp is a display font that was initially inspired by austere Art Deco lettering. After the capitals were refined, then the lowercase was designed with a bit of techno flair. From these basic letterforms a variety of styles were created, ranging from the rigid DeStijl to the whimsical Loose. The result is a versatile display font family that allows the user to mix, match, and overlay the letters for a dynamic effect. In-fact 2 overlay fonts were designed specifically so that one can create graffiti-like multi-layered effects. Cusp is a super-kawaii display family of 16 fonts plus 2 overlay fonts.
  10. Kröwn by Vasava Fonts, $30.00
    Kröwn is a ruthless display font family. It is presented in three styles that can be used stacked to create beveling and dimensional effects. Kröwn’s most distinctive feature is the absence of counter shapes, or at least its minimum impact. All counter shapes width is the same as the separation between characters, this creates a blocky, strong and hardcore rhythm. Use it with precaution to build strong titling, powerful logotypes or short letterings. With Kröwn, the less is more, the bigger the better. Its visual style draws inspiration from sword and sorcery fantasy genre and historical periods as the middle age.
  11. Obvia Wide by Typefolio, $29.00
    'Obvia' appeared as a result of direct observation on typefaces classified as geometric and the plan to explore for the first time width axes Condensed, Narrow (soon), Normal and new Wide and Expanded. The idea behind 'Obvia's design was to create a distancing from geometrically pure shapes, in this case, square shapes. Then some details were added, such as subtle inktraps, concave endings of the stems and carefully drawn alternate characters, giving a 'geohumanist' tone to the font. This first family of 'Obvia' has 9 weights ranging from Thin to Black, delivering a strong typographic identity, from the paper to the pixel.
  12. Obvia Expanded by Typefolio, $29.00
    'Obvia' appeared as a result of direct observation on typefaces classified as geometric and the plan to explore for the first time width axes Condensed, Narrow (soon), Normal and new Wide and Expanded. The idea behind 'Obvia's design was to create a distancing from geometrically pure shapes, in this case, square shapes. Then some details were added, such as subtle inktraps, concave endings of the stems and carefully drawn alternate characters, giving a 'geohumanist' tone to the font. This first family of 'Obvia' has 9 weights ranging from Thin to Black, delivering a strong typographic identity, from the paper to the pixel.
  13. Linked Now by Jehoo Creative, $16.00
    Linked Now is so named because this Typeface has Multiple Discreationary Ligatures that unite two different letters to make a striking shape. Is a powerful grotesque typeface designed to be versatile in a wide range of contexts. Having more than 50 stylish Dsicreationary Ligatures on Uppercase letters and unique Alternate on certain letters makes it seem like they have various shapes, so they are great to use as display fonts. To complete it, Linked Now typeface is equipped with 8 weights from Extralight to black and each includes italic. More than 485 glyphs on each and support most European languages .
  14. Obvia Condensed by Typefolio, $29.00
    'Obvia' appeared as a result of direct observation on typefaces classified as geometric and the plan to explore for the first time width axes Expanded, Wide, Normal, Narrow and Condensed The idea behind 'Obvia's design was to create a distancing from geometrically pure shapes, in this case, square shapes. Then some details were added, such as subtle inktraps, concave endings of the stems and carefully drawn alternate characters, giving a 'geohumanist' tone to the font. This first family of 'Obvia' has 9 weights ranging from Thin to Black, delivering a strong typographic identity, from the paper to the pixel.
  15. Budare by fragTYPE, $14.00
    Budare is a geometric font family that rebelled to find its own identity within an ocean of other typefaces of the same style. Its design is based on the shape of the wrought iron plate used in Venezuela and other countries to make arepas and other foods. Its appearance is strongly defined by basic geometric shapes such as the circle and its upright style is accompanied by rotated italics "rotalics" that complement its rebellious spirit. Because of its strong display characteristics, its best uses are focused on posters, branding, titles and anything that needs a strong graphic emphasis.
  16. Obvia Narrow by Typefolio, $29.00
    'Obvia' appeared as a result of direct observation on typefaces classified as geometric and the plan to explore for the first time width axes Condensed, Narrow, Normal, Wide and Expanded. The idea behind 'Obvia's design was to create a distancing from geometrically pure shapes, in this case, square shapes. Then some details were added, such as subtle inktraps, concave endings of the stems and carefully drawn alternate characters, giving a 'geohumanist' tone to the font. This first family of 'Obvia' has 9 weights ranging from Thin to Black, delivering a strong typographic identity, from the paper to the pixel.
  17. FF Sizmo by FontFont, $50.99
    FF Sizmo™ is available in two flavors. One is an honest, industrial strength, somewhat condensed, sans serif family. The other builds on the first, and is a display design with horizontally connecting baseline strokes. The five weights of basic the FF Sizmo typefaces are ideal for print and digital projects. Character spacing is generous, counters are open and apertures are wide and clear. Banners, navigational links, sub heads, and short blocks of contextual copy are natural on-screen uses for the design. Print projects from branding to way-finding also fall easily into FF Sizmo’s range of applications. The “line” versions of FF Sizmo can be arresting stand-alone typefaces – or distinctive complements to the basic roman and italic designs. In either instance, the line designs make powerful statements in headlines, subheads, posters and cover art. OpenType® fonts automatically insert beginning, middle or ending line element characters into the copy. Drawn by Verena Gerlach, both designs were inspired by the same source, a commercial signage system that enabled quick and easy copy changes. “The idea for the typeface,” explains Gerlach, “is a housing complex index board, on which movable white plastic capital letters were fixed by a thick line to the wooden board. This line is an important part of the font’s appearance.”
  18. Quidic by Ingrimayne Type, $12.95
    Quidic is an unusual display typeface. The upper-case letters are strongly vertical, condensed, and bold. Used by themselves, they make headlines and titles that stand out. The lower case letters do not have serifs similar to those on the upper-case letters, but rather have the serif shapes one expects from an italic style. The lower-case is also quite short compared to the upper-case letters. The italic styles of the family are unusual because the lower-case letters keep their shapes and the upper-case letters and numbers change. The family has three styles that differ more by width rather than by weight. Although some Bauhaus fonts have several letter shapes that are similar, there is no other typeface quite like Quidic. The family can be used for many things, but not for text. For a "normalized" version of this typeface, see Qwatick.
  19. Studio Neon by LLW Studio, $22.00
    Studio Neon is an all-caps display font constructed with three rounded-end strokes; the lowercase set is included as a repeat of the uppercase to make setting type just that little bit easier. It’s a modern rendition of neon sign lettering, with a decidedly art deco pedigree, and is intended for use in larger sizes of type, upwards of 36 pt. It’s perfect for a design that wants to imitate neon — use Photoshop layer effects to light it up! I originally started this font with only a few letters, since I could not find a neon-style font made with 3 strokes that looked modern. (Once I started, I found out why. It's a LOT of work!) Most traditional neon fonts include a “bent tube” element in the design; however, not all modern neon signage is constructed with the tubes bent. I also wanted to design a fun font that would have more life than just as an imitation of signage — something to inspire designers who love the geometry of art-deco type. So I made all the corners consistent, with no references to bent tubes. Use this font for any application that needs a bold and decorative look. Studio Neon should work well for sign production and even vinyl cut applications at larger sizes.
  20. Hand Scribble Sketch Times by TypoGraphicDesign, $19.00
    CHARACTERISTICS A state-of-the-art OpenType-Feature (like Contextual Alternates (calt) and Stylistic Alternates (salt)) of “Hand Scribble Sketch Times” is, that each uppercase and each lowercase letter has automatically alternated two variations to bring humanly-random characteristics of handwriting to life. The cha­rac­ter of the rough, ruggend and raw hand­written classic serif type­face is a very uni­que warmly atmosphere. An pro-version of the font “Hand TIMES”. APPLICATION AREA warmth, love, handmade. For support of human warmth. Of cooking recipes, menus in the restaurant across party flyer, music cover Art to logo (word marks), headings in magazines and websites. TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS ? Font Name: Hand Scribble Sketch Times ? Font Weights: Regu­lar, Rough, Invert ? Font Cate­gory: Grunge Serif Dis­play for Head­line Size ? Font For­mat: OTF (Open­Type Font for Mac + Win) ? Glyph cover­age: 601 ? Lan­guage Sup­port: Basic Latin/English let­ters, Cen­tral Europe, West Euro­pean diacri­tics, Bal­tic, Roma­nian, Tur­kish ? Spe­cials: Alter­na­tive let­ters, Standard & Discretionary Ligatures, extras like sym­bols, ding­bats, Old-style Digits, Lining Figures, accents & €, incl. OpenType-Features like Con­text­ual Alter­na­tes (calt), Glyph Composition/Decomposition (ccmp), Dis­cre­tio­nary Liga­tures (dlig), Kerning (kern), Stan­dard Liga­tures (liga), Nume­ra­tors (onum), Ordi­nals (ordn), Sty­listic Alter­na­tes (salt), Stylistic Set 01 (ss01), Stylistic Set 02 (ss02), Stylistic Set 03 (ss03), Slas­hed Zero (zero), Lining Figures (lnum), Tabular Figures (tnum), Old Style Figures (onum), Proportional Figures (pnum) ? Design Date: 2013 ? Type Desi­gner: Manuel Vier­gutz
  21. One-Eighty - Unknown license
  22. Robur by Canada Type, $24.95
    It shouldn't be a surprise to anyone that these letter shapes are familiar. They have the unmistakable color and weight of Cooper Black, Oswald Cooper's most famous typeface from 1921. What should be a surprise is that these letters are actually from George Auriol's Robur Noir (or Robur Black), published in France circa 1909 by the Peignot foundry as a bolder, solid counterpart to its popular Auriol typeface (1901). This face precedes Cooper Black by a dozen of years and a whole Great War. Cooper Black has always been a bit of a strange typographical apparition to anyone who tried to explain its original purpose, instant popularity in the 1920s, and major revival in the late 1960s. BB&S and Oswald Cooper PR aside, it is quite evident that the majority of Cooper Black's forms did not evolve from Cooper Old Style, as its originators claimed. And the claim that it collected various Art Nouveau elements is of course too ambiguous to be questioned. But when compared with Robur Noir, the "elements" in question can hardly be debated. The chronology of this "machine age" ad face in metal is amusing and stands as somewhat of a general index of post-Great War global industrial competition: - 1901: Peignot releases Auriol, based on the handwriting of George Auriol (the "quintessential Art Nouveau designer," according to Steven Heller and Louise Fili), and it becomes very popular. - 1909-1912: Peignot releases the Robur family of faces. The eight styles released are Robur Noir and its italic, a condensed version called Robur Noir Allongée (Elongated) and its italic, an outline version called Clair De Lune and its condensed/elongated, a lined/striped version called Robur Tigre, and its condensed/elongated counterpart. - 1914 to 1918: World War One uses up economies on both sides of the Atlantic, claims Georges Peignot with a bullet to the forehead, and non-war industry stalls for 4 years. - 1921: BB&S releases Cooper Black with a lot of hype to hungry publishing, manufacturing and advertising industries. - 1924: Robert Middleton releases Ludlow Black. - 1924: The Stevens Shanks foundry, the British successor to the Figgins legacy, releases its own exact copies of Robur Noir and Robur Noir Allongée, alongside a lined version called Royal Lining. - 1925: Oswald Cooper releases his Cooper Black Condensed, with similar math to Robur Noir Allongée (20% reduction in width and vectical stroke). - 1925: Monotype releases Frederick Goudy's Goudy Heavy, an "answer to Cooper Black". Type historians gravely note it as the "teacher steals from his student" scandal. Goudy Heavy Condensed follows a few years later. - 1928: Linotype releases Chauncey Griffith's Pabst Extra Bold. The condensed counterpart is released in 1931. When type production technologies changed and it was time to retool the old faces for the Typositor age, Cooper Black was a frontrunning candidate, while Robur Noir was all but erased from history. This was mostly due to its commercial revival by flourishing and media-driven music and advertising industries. By the late 1960s variations and spinoffs of Cooper Black were in every typesetting catalog. In the early- to mid-1970s, VGC, wanting to capitalize on the Art Nouveau onslaught, published an uncredited exact copy of Robur Black under the name Skylark. But that also went with the dust of history and PR when digital tech came around, and Cooper Black was once again a prime retooling candidate. The "old fellows stole all of our best ideas" indeed. So almost a hundred years after its initial fizz, Robur is here in digital form, to reclaim its rightful position as the inspiration for, and the best alternative to, Cooper Black. Given that its forms date back to the turn of the century, a time when foundry output had a closer relationship to calligraphic and humanist craft, its shapes are truer to brush strokes and much more idiosyncratic than Cooper Black in their totality's construct. Robur and Robur Italic come in all popular font formats. Language support includes Western, Central and Eastern European character sets, as well as Baltic, Esperanto, Maltese, Turkish, and Celtic/Welsh languages. A range of complementary f-ligatures and a few alternates letters are included within the fonts.
  23. Cambirela by Sea Types, $15.00
    Inspired by Santa Catarina mountains, the shapes of the characters refers to the winding contour of the mountain Cambirela.
  24. P22 Broadwindsor by IHOF, $24.95
    Broadwindsor is part of the "Staunton Script Family" of fonts designed by Ted Staunton for his historic novel. The Broadwindsor font is a neatly written script with capitals and lower case in a close relationship.
  25. Sica Condensed by dooType, $30.00
    The Sica Family was designed in order to address issues related to technology, while maintaining humanistic forms. Thus, a font with square shapes emerged, but with smooth curves and slightly rounded terminals making it friendly. The family has three widths – condensed, normal and expanded – each of them with six weights and their respective italics, resulting in 36 fonts. With particular details and open shapes that increase legibility, it can be used for both text compositions as well for display sizes. It has 774 glyphs, covering more than 50 languages, as well as ligatures, lining, oldstyle, tabular and proportional figures, fractions, superiors, inferiors, and small caps, all of them accessible through OpenType features.
  26. Camplones by Miracledsign, $8.00
    Camplones is a handwritten font that accentuates the style and curve of the hand when inking the ink on the paper by perfecting the shape of each character so that Camplones looks very beautiful when applied in a sentence. Camplones is specially shaped and made so that users feel the touch of a hand that lives in the character of the letters so that it has tremendous value when used in your templates, game fonts, wedding invitations or sales products which will surely be very attractive to consumers when they see it and will definitely love it. make the product look more elegant and will increase the selling value of your product.
  27. Route 66 NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Statistics Prove. Near and Far. That Folks Who Drive Like Crazy. Are! Burma-Shave. In the days before the Interstate Highway system, you were likely to encounter a series of signs like this, somewhere in the backwoods between the large and small towns connected by the U.S. Highway system. The fonts in this series are based on the typefaces used on U.S. Highway signs from the 1930s to the 1950s. Included in each font are a sign shield in the backslash position, and a Burma-Shave logo in the section mark position. The Truetype and Opentype versions contain the complete Latin language character set (Unicode 1252) plus Central European (Unicode 1250) languages as well.
  28. Sica Expanded by dooType, $30.00
    The Sica Family was designed in order to address issues related to technology, while maintaining humanistic forms. Thus, a font with square shapes emerged, but with smooth curves and slightly rounded terminals making it friendly. The family has three widths – condensed, normal and expanded – each of them with six weights and their respective italics, resulting in 36 fonts. With particular details and open shapes that increase legibility, it can be used for both text compositions as well for display sizes. It has 774 glyphs, covering more than 50 languages, as well as ligatures, lining, oldstyle, tabular and proportional figures, fractions, superiors, inferiors, and small caps, all of them accessible through OpenType features.
  29. Foros by ParaType, $30.00
    Foros(tm) is a modern humanist sanserif font family of 8 styles. Each style contains beside many other alternatives of upper and lowercase letters a 'unicase' character set. Foros is a development of a modern pattern of rough geometric shapes in combination with open humanistic forms that produces a mixture of obstinacy and delicacy. Quadratic shapes of ovals bring stability and firmness, but angular terminals of diagonals in several letters together with curved junctions of bowls with verticals stems add emotions and elegance. Such variety in image make it possible to use the fonts in different kinds of display typography. Foros type family was designed by Oleg Karpinsky. Released by ParaType in 2013.
  30. Sica by dooType, $30.00
    The Sica Family was designed in order to address issues related to technology, while maintaining humanistic forms. Thus, a font with square shapes emerged, but with smooth curves and slightly rounded terminals making it friendly. The family has three widths – condensed, normal and expanded – each of them with six weights and their respective italics, resulting in 36 fonts. With particular details and open shapes that increase legibility, it can be used for both text compositions as well for display sizes. It has 774 glyphs, covering more than 50 languages, as well as ligatures, lining, oldstyle, tabular and proportional figures, fractions, superiors, inferiors, and small caps, all of them accessible through OpenType features.
  31. HS Alhandasi by Hiba Studio, $59.00
    HS Alhandasi is an Arabic display typeface. It is useful for book titles and graphic projects where a contemporary, streamlined look is desired. The font is based on the simple lines of modern and simplified Kufi calligraphy, that support Arabic, Persian and Urdu. This font was created in the beginning as regular weight in 2007 for use in technical and engineering company. The company tends to follow the geometrical shape with equal dimensions in both vertical and horizontal storks. There is also a tendency to make all characters to be similar to oval shape with the impression that they are all geometrical and clear. I followed that with two other weights in 2011, thin and bold.
  32. Adventure Island by Larin Type Co, $12.00
    Adventure Island this is a stunning font family that consists of two types of fonts, script and sans serif, and each has 8 weights (Regular, Rough, Halftone, Pressed, Bold, Bold rough, Bold halftone, Bold pressed,). With their help, a lot of options are opened for you to create your projects, both in vintage and in modern style. These fonts are like twin brothers, they fit perfectly and complement each other. The Script type has flowing shapes and is made to shine and lively for the full hand-signature effect. Sans serif type is also made in monoline and has rounded corners and smooth lines. The script style has alternatives for uppercases and many alternates for lowercaes, with them you can make your design more expressive, varied and playful, change them and you will see how many options you can get for your design, also use swashes touches to complement your design. Enjoy using! The font includes 8 script fonts and 8 sans serif fonts (Regular, Rough, Halftone, Pressed, Bold, Bold rough, Bold halftone, Bold pressed,) Full alphabet with Uppercase and Lowercase A-z for script Full alphabet with Uppercase for sans serif Numbers, fractions for all fonts Punctuation and mathematical symbols for all fonts Alternates Uppercase and Lowercase also ampersand for script Swashes for script Multilingual support all fonts
  33. LaudatioC - Unknown license
  34. Tropical Tourist JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A 1934 advertisement for the Roney Plaza Hotel at 23rd Street and Collins Avenue on Miami Beach yielded the inspiration for Tropical Tourist JNL. While this wonderful example of Art Deco lettering survived, sadly the original Roney was torn down around 1969 and replaced with a modern apartment house/condos bearing the same name.
  35. Movie Drama JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The Nov. 26, 1921 issue of “The Moving Picture World” carried an ad for the dramatic film “For Your Daughter’s Sake” (originally tilted “The Common Sin” and produced in 1920). Hand lettered in an Art Nouveau sans serif style, the ad copy inspired Movie Drama JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  36. Fine Dining JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The lettering for Fine Dining JNL was inspired by the opening titles for the 1940 Barbara Stanwyck-Fred MacMurray film "Remember the Night". A stylized Art Deco sans, the typeface conjures up images of elegant dining, being out on the town and all we warmly associate with the night life of the 1930s and 1940s.
  37. NT Brick Sans by Nurrontype, $17.00
    Back to the future! NT Brick Sans is a pixelated sans serif. Inspired by the Pixel Art phenomenon and Lego bricks, bringing back the good old 16-bit era with open-type features. It's bold, soft rounded, supports multi-language, featuring low caps option. Brick Sans will make your project special. Grab it now.
  38. Poster Contoured JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Sheet music for a selection from the 1928 musical “New Moon” had the show’s title hand lettered in a bold sans serif that reflected the upcoming Art Deco movement, along with a contoured outline around the letters. This served as the model for Poster Contoured JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  39. P22 Kells by P22 Type Foundry, $24.95
    The Book of Kells is a ninth century gospel created in the British Isles and is considered to be the finest existing example of early Celtic art. The book itself is now housed in the Trinity College Library, Dublin. This computer set combines historical accuracy with functional readability and features 72 elements and linking borders.
  40. Totally Deco JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered title found on the sheet music for 1938’s "So Help Me (If I Don't Love You)" was the basis for Totally Deco JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions. A classic mix of widely rounded letters and condensed letters typifies the design style of the Art Deco era.
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