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  1. Moonlight Shadow - Personal use only
  2. KG Strawberry Limeade - Personal use only
  3. The Shire - Personal use only
  4. akaFrivolity - 100% free
  5. lauralinda - Unknown license
  6. Art Nouveau Caps - Unknown license
  7. Black Roses - Unknown license
  8. First Crush - Personal use only
  9. Morgow Demo - Unknown license
  10. VTKS Dear Love - 100% free
  11. Konanur - Unknown license
  12. BeachType - 100% free
  13. ZeitGeisterbahn - 100% free
  14. Waker - Unknown license
  15. Fh_Letter - Personal use only
  16. elaine - Unknown license
  17. Tenbitesch - Personal use only
  18. KingdomCome - Unknown license
  19. Comic Arousa - Unknown license
  20. Bilibin - Unknown license
  21. I'm Bored - Personal use only
  22. Ginebra Bolds - Unknown license
  23. Melanie - Unknown license
  24. KissMeKissMeKissMe - Unknown license
  25. Zothique Demo - Unknown license
  26. Holmes001 - Unknown license
  27. JBCalli - Unknown license
  28. Brouss - Unknown license
  29. Dark Garden - 100% free
  30. RevolvingDoor - Unknown license
  31. Nocker - Unknown license
  32. BoyzRGross - 100% free
  33. Snailets BRK - Unknown license
  34. MamaeQueNosFaz - Unknown license
  35. lydeke Handwrithing - Unknown license
  36. Anadolu by Glyphobet, $24.99
    Anadolu was inspired by the distinct style of sign lettering in rural Turkey, and refined based on sign lettering in Hungary. Shown here are samples in Turkish and Hungarian, as well as Finnish and Estonian, two other languages in the Finno-Ugric language group with Hungarian. The slight curve at the tops of ascenders and bottoms of descenders is inspired by the linguistic process of "vowel harmony" in Turkish and Hungarian. Anadolu is the Turkish name for Anatolia, the peninsula where Turkey lies. The name recalls another sans-serif typeface named for its country of origin. The tittle on the i is reimagined as a diacritic, and the dotless ı is reimagined as the basic, prototypical i. Too many typefaces treat diacritics as afterthoughts. Since diacritics are integral to the languages that inspired Anadolu, they were designed as core components of the typeface.
  37. Modeco by Eko Bimantara, $29.00
    Modeco is a merge of modern and art deco styles. Its shown elegance, classy, ??and glamour look as 1920's visual trends, blended with geometrical sans serif in a functionality approach and complete font family styles. Its consist of 9 styles from Thin to Black with each matching oblique. It's contain 400+ glyphs that covered broad latin language.
  38. Celluloid JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Celluloid JNL was modeled from a few samples shown in a 1947 sales catalog for changeable letter directory boards and the various styles available for these signs. Prior to modern plastics, celluloid was the material used for these molded letters. Aside from the Regular and Oblique versions, there is also Celluloid Highlight JNL and Celluloid Highlight Oblique JNL.
  39. HWT Antique Tuscan 9 by Hamilton Wood Type Collection, $24.95
    A very condensed 19th century Tuscan style wood type design with a full character set with ligatures. This design was first shown by Wm H Page Co in 1859 and this is the first digital version of this font to include a lowercase and extended European character set. This is a font best used at large sizes.
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