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  1. Go POP by Gleb Guralnyk, $14.00
    Hey! Introducing a vintage style font GoPOP. This font was inspired by 80s pop culture and has a smooth rounded shape with decorative thin lines. Base shape and additional lines can be combined from two font layers, for easy color manipulations.
  2. Averox by Almarkha Type, $29.00
    Introducing Averox is a Futuristic Sans font with a stylish touch inspired by the famous minimalist logo and averox is perfect for the purposes of designing templates, brochures, videos, advertising branding, logos and more.
  3. Sofya by Gaslight, $30.00
    This funny script font based on the logo which we did. It will look great on the package, restaurant menus, logos and magazine headlines. A large number of ligatures help you vary your design.
  4. Core Dodam by S-Core, $59.00
    CoreDodam is a geometric shaped title font with unique structure. The shape of each character is very simple and modern. Depending on shape, some characters have different heights. It makes the line of text rhythmically. Supported codepages are MS Windows 1252 Latin1 and MS Windows 949 Korean consisting of 11,172 Korean letters and Symbols except Chinese. We recommend to use for the title or short sentence on posters and especially useful for design works.
  5. Tessie Some More by Ingrimayne Type, $12.00
    A tessellation is a shape that can be used to completely fill the plane without gaps or overlaps—simple examples are isosceles triangles, squares, and hexagons. Tessellation patterns are eye-catching and visually appealing, which is the reason that they have long been popular in a variety of decorative situations. TessieSomeMore has two family members, a solid style that must have different colors to be useful and an outline style. They can be used separately or they can be used in layers with the outline style on top of the solid style. For rows to align properly, leading must be the same as point size. To see how patterns can be constructed, see the “Samples” file here. Shapes that tessellate and also resemble real-world objects are often called Escher-like tessellations. Most of the shapes in TessieSomeMore are Escher-like. Over half are either bug-like and bird-like shapes. There are also a few animal and other object shapes as well as some geometric or abstract shapes that have visual appeal.
  6. TessiePuzzlePieces by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    After exploring tessellations for several years, I decided to see how many ways I could tessellate puzzle pieces. I began with a square template and used the same asymmetrical shape for all four edges. By flips or rotation each edge could be fitted in four ways. Eventually I discovered that, given this way of forming tiles, there were 15 distinct shapes that tessellate and these shapes can take a total of 96 orientations. (A note in the November 2016 issue of Mathematical Gazette has the proof for the 15 shapes.) This typeface contains those 15 shapes and 96 orientations. A pdf note here shows some of the tilings possible using only one shape in a pattern. An unlimited number of patterns are possible if shapes are mixed. There are two members of the family, a solid style that must have different colors when used and an outline style. They can be used separately or they can be used in layers with the outline style on top of the solid style. For rows to align properly, leading must be the same as point size. (Earlier tessellation fonts from IngrimayneType, the TessieDingies fonts, lack a black or filled version so cannot do colored patterns.)
  7. Sheriff - Unknown license
  8. Cimiez by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    Classical nineteenth century french engravers typeface, traditional with corners sharpened, a flick of the burin and a touch of Art Deco.
  9. African Textile by Scholtz Fonts, $19.00
    The African Textile font had two major influences. The pattern is derived from the bogolan cloths from Africa, originally made using a traditional dyeing technique from Mali that uses bogo or clay as prime dye material. The character shapes are largely based on the Tabwa font. The font is best used as a heading or poster font, although the boldness of the design allows it to be useful at medium sizes, as subheadings as well. It is professionally letter-spaced and kerned and contains a complete character set.
  10. heartfont - Unknown license
  11. kerorin - Unknown license
  12. Shmuot MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Funny and crazy? Yes, all in one happy font.
  13. Whimsy by Image Club, $29.99
    Featured in: Best Fonts for Logos
  14. Axeleon Abstract by Sipanji21, $16.00
    Axeleon is great looking with a futuristic, rough, and metal-themed Display font. It will look great in death metal music projects, poster, logo band, band apparel, metal music logo, music album and much more!
  15. Love Forever by Goodigital13, $20.00
    Perfectly suited to signature, stationery, logo, typography quotes, magazine or book cover, website header, clothing, branding, packaging design and more. it’s perfect for logos, name card, magazine layouts, invitations, headers, or even large-scale artwork.
  16. Conestoga by FontMesa, $20.00
    Conestoga was a challenge that I took on which was to take a logo from an old antique vegetable crate label and create a complete font based on its design. The original logo was curved on a path and was caps only. The new letters were drawn straight and a matching lowercase was created to turn this old custom logo into a working font.
  17. Something Rounded by wearecolt, $16.00
    Something Rounded is a soft version of Something New and has been designed with logo designers and typographers firmly in mind. This feature-packed display font is a perfect addition to your design arsenal, ready for your next logo wordmark, heavy headings, or coffee labels. "A stylish mix of serif and blackletter" Great for; logos, branding materials, business cards, gift cards, t-shirts, prints, posters, quotes, etc.
  18. Schism One by Alias, $55.00
    Schism is a modulated sans-serif, originally developed from our Alias Didot typeface, as a serif-less version of the same design. It was expanded to three sub-families, with the thin stroke getting progressively heavier from Schism One to Schism Three. The different versions explore how this change in contrast between thick and thin strokes changes the character of the letterforms. The shape is maintained, but the emphasis shifts from rounded to angular, elegant to incised. Schism One has high contrast, and the same weight of thin stroke from Light to Black. Letter endings are at horizontal or vertical, giving a pinched, constricted shape for characters such as a, c, e and s. The h, m, n and u have a sharp connection between curve and vertical, and are high shouldered, giving a slightly square shape. The r and y have a thick stress at their horizontal endings, which makes them impactful and striking at bolder weights. Though derived from an elegant, classic form, Schism feels austere rather than flowery. It doesn’t have the flourishes of other modulated sans typefaces, its aesthetic more a kind of graphic-tinged utility. While in Schism Two and Three the thin stroke gets progressively heavier, the connections between vertical and curves — in a, b, n etc — remain cut to an incised point throughout. The effect is that Schism looks chiselled and textural across all weights. Forms maintain a clear, defined shape even in Bold and Black, and don’t have the bloated, wide and heavy appearance heavy weights can have. The change in the thickness of the thin stroke in different versions of the same weight of a typeface is called grading. This is often used when the types are to used in problematic print surfaces such as newsprint, or at small sizes — where thin strokes might bleed, and counters fill in and lose clarity, or detail might be lost or be too thin to register. The different gradings are incremental and can be quite subtle. In Schism it is extreme, and used as a design device, giving three connected but separate styles, from Sans-Didot to almost-Grotesk. The name Schism suggests the differences in shape and style in Schism One, Two and Three. Three styles with distinct differences, from the same start point.
  19. Schism Three by Alias, $55.00
    Schism is a modulated sans-serif, originally developed from our Alias Didot typeface, as a serif-less version of the same design. It was expanded to three sub-families, with the thin stroke getting progressively heavier from Schism One to Schism Three. The different versions explore how this change in contrast between thick and thin strokes changes the character of the letterforms. The shape is maintained, but the emphasis shifts from rounded to angular, elegant to incised. Schism One has high contrast, and the same weight of thin stroke from Light to Black. Letter endings are at horizontal or vertical, giving a pinched, constricted shape for characters such as a, c, e and s. The h, m, n and u have a sharp connection between curve and vertical, and are high shouldered, giving a slightly square shape. The r and y have a thick stress at their horizontal endings, which makes them impactful and striking at bolder weights. Though derived from an elegant, classic form, Schism feels austere rather than flowery. It doesn’t have the flourishes of other modulated sans typefaces, its aesthetic more a kind of graphic-tinged utility. While in Schism Two and Three the thin stroke gets progressively heavier, the connections between vertical and curves — in a, b, n etc — remain cut to an incised point throughout. The effect is that Schism looks chiselled and textural across all weights. Forms maintain a clear, defined shape even in Bold and Black, and don’t have the bloated, wide and heavy appearance heavy weights can have. The change in the thickness of the thin stroke in different versions of the same weight of a typeface is called grading. This is often used when the types are to used in problematic print surfaces such as newsprint, or at small sizes — where thin strokes might bleed, and counters fill in and lose clarity, or detail might be lost or be too thin to register. The different gradings are incremental and can be quite subtle. In Schism it is extreme, and used as a design device, giving three connected but separate styles, from Sans-Didot to almost-Grotesk. The name Schism suggests the differences in shape and style in Schism One, Two and Three. Three styles with distinct differences, from the same start point.
  20. Schism Two by Alias, $55.00
    Schism is a modulated sans-serif, originally developed from our Alias Didot typeface, as a serif-less version of the same design. It was expanded to three sub-families, with the thin stroke getting progressively heavier from Schism One to Schism Three. The different versions explore how this change in contrast between thick and thin strokes changes the character of the letterforms. The shape is maintained, but the emphasis shifts from rounded to angular, elegant to incised. Schism One has high contrast, and the same weight of thin stroke from Light to Black. Letter endings are at horizontal or vertical, giving a pinched, constricted shape for characters such as a, c, e and s. The h, m, n and u have a sharp connection between curve and vertical, and are high shouldered, giving a slightly square shape. The r and y have a thick stress at their horizontal endings, which makes them impactful and striking at bolder weights. Though derived from an elegant, classic form, Schism feels austere rather than flowery. It doesn’t have the flourishes of other modulated sans typefaces, its aesthetic more a kind of graphic-tinged utility. While in Schism Two and Three the thin stroke gets progressively heavier, the connections between vertical and curves — in a, b, n etc — remain cut to an incised point throughout. The effect is that Schism looks chiselled and textural across all weights. Forms maintain a clear, defined shape even in Bold and Black, and don’t have the bloated, wide and heavy appearance heavy weights can have. The change in the thickness of the thin stroke in different versions of the same weight of a typeface is called grading. This is often used when the types are to used in problematic print surfaces such as newsprint, or at small sizes — where thin strokes might bleed, and counters fill in and lose clarity, or detail might be lost or be too thin to register. The different gradings are incremental and can be quite subtle. In Schism it is extreme, and used as a design device, giving three connected but separate styles, from Sans-Didot to almost-Grotesk. The name Schism suggests the differences in shape and style in Schism One, Two and Three. Three styles with distinct differences, from the same start point.
  21. Toxic Brew by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    The Toxic Brew font was initially designed to be a Halloween font, but I guess it turned out not so scary in the end. But maybe you can use it for something scary anyway? I've added several versions, and they mix very well
  22. Banana by Dharma Type, $19.99
    This font is a modern urban script. Very impressive because of its heavy and rounded shape. Upright stems and wide width of their shape gives easy and slow impression. There is one more script designed by in the same concept. -Nothing -Banana
  23. Folio by Bitstream, $29.99
    Designed by Konrad Bauer and Walter Baum in 1956, Folio was the first popular Swiss Sanserif; the positive black shapes of the letters appear to be locked inevitably into the correct position by the firm and positive white shapes that surround them.
  24. P22 Latimer by IHOF, $24.95
    Latimer is one of a series exploring a fusion of Roman and Gothic forms. Characteristics of each genre can be seen: the fluid tapering serifs and rounded shapes of the Roman form, contrasted with the angular diamond and hexagonal shapes of Gothic.
  25. Scream Zombie by Blankids, $23.00
    Introducing of our new product the name is Scream Zombie a Playful Scary Font, Scream Zombie inspired by scary playful style with a fun theme, this font very good for Halloween dan horror theme. FEATURES : Uppercase Lowercase Number Punctuation Multilingual PUA Encode Opentype
  26. Hydrella by Ayca Atalay, $28.00
    Hydrella is a modern sans serif with sharp, unique features and moderately high contrast. Its easily distinguishable attributes provide just enough of a fresh new look without overpowering the overall design. Available in 9 weights, Hydrella works well as both a display typeface and in smaller sizes.
  27. Bodeg by Nermin K, $6.00
    Bodeg is a modern and cool looking sans serif font, using both sharp and curved edges to stand out from the crowd while maintaining a clean design which makes it adaptable to many situations. Add it confidently to your projects, and you will love the results.
  28. PeterPierre by Ingrimayne Type, $6.95
    PeterPierre is a stiff, awkward sans serif face. It has little variation in stroke width and the vertical and horizontal elements are connected with short, sharp curves. The condensed style was developed first and then, in a quest for legibility, it was widened into the regular style.
  29. Rauda Slab by Graviton, $12.00
    Ruda Slab font family has been designed for Graviton Font Foundry by Pablo Balcells in 2017. It is a display, slab serif, geometric typeface, with sharp angles that provides a strong and solid appearence. Ruda Slab consists of 8 styles. Each containing glyph coverage for several languages.
  30. Violenta by Graviton, $12.00
    Violenta font family has been designed for Graviton Font Foundry by Pablo Balcells in 2015. It is a display, geometric typeface, with a condensed design and sharp angles that provides an aggresive and strong appearence. Violenta consists of 8 styles. Each containing glyph coverage for several languages.
  31. Jude by Alias Collection, $60.00
    Simple, angular and incised, Jude mixes the geometric precision of the computer with expressive and intuitive letterforms. The typeface avoids classical references in construction and proportions to produce a bold, modern serif typeface for text and display. The italic is a sharp edged version of calligraphic letterforms.
  32. Haggard by TipografiaRamis, $29.00
    Haggard is a wedge serifs typeface family of six styles. It stands out from the crowd with unique features like compact proportions of glyphs, sharp wedge serifs, small caps, and true italics. Haggard is a display font and can be used for editorial and print design.
  33. Egosta by skillyas studio, $15.00
    EGOSTA is a complete sans serif family. The letterform and sharp variations characterize a bold and playful typeface in a graphic layout, making it perfect for modern and futuristic visual needs, EGOSTA complete family contains 10 styles with two axes; Weight and Width, from Thin to Bold.
  34. Superion by Subectype, $19.00
    Superion is a supercharged, street-wise brush font bursting with energy. Extra attention was given to quick strokes and sharp details. This font is perfect for challenging jobs, titles, t-shirts, websites, hoodies, clothing, headline, logotype, branding, advertising, event and various energetic print and digital media projects.
  35. Mister Twiggs by Type Innovations, $39.00
    Mister Twiggs is a comtemporary modern sans created by the American type designer Alex Kaczun. There are absolutely no curves in this elegant typeface. It has sharp corners with extra tall capitals and a narrow waistline. Mister Twiggs comes in 3 flavors: regular, thin and heavy.
  36. Broost by ZetDesign, $15.00
    Broost is a groovy font that gives you a bold feel with sharp, bold strokes at each end of the letter. This font also gives a relaxed and cheerful impression to each of your works. very suitable for holiday design materials, parties, music, games, and more.
  37. HS Alwajd by Hiba Studio, $50.00
    Hs Alwajd is an Arabic display typeface, under “titles” category. It is useful for book titles, creative designs and modern logos. Also, it is used when a contemporary and simple look is desired that can fit with the characteristics of Kufi fatmic where horizontal parts are equal than vertical ones. It is a new style based on HS Almajd but without swirling round forms terminating in ball. The font is based on Kufi Fatmic calligraphy along with some derived ideas of decorative fonts, maintaining the beauty of the Arabic font and its fixed rates. Undoubtedly, the insertion of curved ornament in some parts adds more beauty and fascinating diversity in the flow line between sharp, soft and curved parts. This font supports Arabic, Persian, Pashtu, Kurdish Sorani, Kurdish Kirmanji and Urdu, consisting only one weight which can add to the library of Arabic Kufic fonts contemporary models that meet with the purposes of various designs for all purposes and all tastes.
  38. Megabeat by Invasi Studio, $17.00
    Megabeat Font is a new and exciting typeface that is inspired by the robotic and mecha poster movies of the past. The font references the science-fiction visual of the retro-futurism mindset, making it perfect for any project that requires a futuristic and technologically advanced design. This font is perfect for creating sci-fi movie posters, serials, technology-based branding, posters, logos, vintage illustrations, packaging, snacks, event and festival materials, album and cover artwork, books, toys, games, arcades, cards, automotive designs, and many more. The font features bold and chunky letterforms with sharp angles and mechanical elements, giving it a futuristic and robotic feel. The font is easy to read and legible, making it perfect for headlines, titles, and other design elements that need to be easily understood. The font is perfect for any project that requires a futuristic and technologically advanced design that is inspired by the iconic visual of retro-futurism.
  39. Polarity by The Paper Town, $21.00
    Polarity is a serif typeface with a touch of retro flair. It exudes a classic charm that effortlessly captures the essence of vintage typography. Its 2 styles, a roman and an italic compliment each other gracefully, each one with its own unique personality. While the roman is bold and modern, the true italic gives an elegant refined look for a perfect combination that’ll make your creations truly unique. Each character has been meticulously crafted to achieve a harmonious balance between smooth curves and sharp angles. Thanks to the numerous alternates, stylish ligatures and swash letters, the font family offers countless options and shows great versatility whether you're designing a logo, crafting a vintage-inspired poster, or creating eye-catching headlines. With 2 weights (regular and bold) and 2 styles - 4 fonts in total, the type family is equipped with various opentype features such as stylistic alternates, beautiful ligatures, additional symbols, old styles figures and multilingual support for major latin based languages.
  40. Marquette by Letteralle, $18.00
    Marquette is a rustic font with sharp scratch characters. Marquette is very suitable for signature logos, branding, merch, ads, book title, packaging, etc. With this font each word produced will give its own uniqueness. Marquette includes 3 weights: - Marquette Regular: The main font with Uppercase, Lowercase, Number, Punctuation, and also multilingual support. - Marquette Alternate: Besides you can access alternative characters from the main font through the OpenType features, you can also install this alternative fonts. Marquette Alternate will give you other options for a character, which of course will add a natural impression. - Marquette Swashes: A set of 14 swashes, you just have to install it, then type the letters A - N to make swashes. Marquette also has a some of ligatures that will enhance the natural impression. That’s it! Please do let me know what you think, feel free to comment if there are issues or queries. Enjoy the Font, Thank You!
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