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  1. Neat Hand by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Neat Hand is a neat hand-lettered sans serif font set. As their names imply Neat Hand Lower Case has a lowercase alphabet while Neat Hand Small Caps has small caps in place of the lowercase alphabet. Both fonts have the same uppercase alphabet, numbers, punctuation, symbols, and miscellaneous characters. The Neat Hand fonts are ideal for use where a neat but casual feel is desirable. Neat Hand Lower Case and Neat Hand Small Caps are to be sold only as a set priced at $20.
  2. Sticky Toffee by Hanoded, $15.00
    I don’t have a sweet tooth myself, but I do like toffee! One of my favourite desserts is English Sticky Toffee Pudding, so I really had to name a font after this delicacy. Sticky Toffee is a bold display font. It’s all caps (in case you might have missed that), but upper and lower case differ and can be used together to create a more ‘natural’ look. Sticky Toffee comes in two great styles: Regular and Sprinkles, and has all the diacritics you’ll need.
  3. Cross Stitch Coarse by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Cross Stitch Coarse is based on upper case characters 5 stitches tall and contains the upper case characters A-Z, numbers 0-9, ampersand, exclamation and question marks, comma, and period. Also, under the character set are all possible combinations of stitches 5 high from 1 through 5, which allows for the creation of custom glyphs. If the font is set at solid leading, lines following will align and mesh with stitches above. When setting lines of copy, extra leading is required to separate individual lines.
  4. SJURecord by Ingrimayne Type, $9.95
    The inspiration for SJURecord was calligraphic lettering used for the title of a student newspaper, St. John’s Record, during the late 1920s and early 1930s. The three upper-case and nine lower-case letters were considerably different from any calligraphic lettering I had developed, so I thought creating a complete typeface around these twelve letters would be an interesting challenge. The SJCRecord family has four members: regular, oblique, shadowed, and oblique shadowed. There are alternate letters for A, J, L, S, V, W, and X.
  5. Stemplate by Burghal Design, $29.00
    Stemplate is a bold, no-nonsense font based on the common translucent green templates that are available now at an office supply near you! Stemplate includes upper and lower case letters, as well as numbers, symbols, punctuation, and accented foreign characters. Stemplate Outline is based on the common translucent green templates that are available now at an office supply near you, and includes upper and lower case letters, numbers, symbols, punctuation, and accented foreign characters. Stemplate Outline is particularly fetching with a neon glow.
  6. Spice Of Life by Olivetype, $18.00
    Bring a little extra flavor to your designs with Spice of Life, the perfect display font for logos, posters, and movie titles. Its unique brush typeface gives it a bold yet elegant look that will stand out in any design. Unleash your creativity with Spice Of Life and give life to your projects today! Spice of Life includes : Standard Latin Upper Case & Lower Case Numbers, symbols, and punctuations Multilingual Support. Fully accessible without additional design software Simple Installations Works on PC & Mac Thank You.
  7. Fiesole by Eurotypo, $22.00
    Fiesole was inspired by calligraphic models; it is a bookface font family to be used for text, display and caption. Fiesole has three different lengths of items (ascenders-descenders). Old style figures have been included in the fonts. Spacing of Small Caps has been adjusted to obtain good legibility and integrity with Capitals and lower cases. Fiesole Text: Two weights. Fiesole Display: Two weights. Fiesole Caption: Five weights. They include also CE languages, swashes, small caps, ligatures, discretionary ligatures, alternates, old style figures and case sensitive forms.
  8. FiveOh by Ingrimayne Type, $9.95
    The FiveOh fonts are caps-only with extreme contrast.. They are decorative or display fonts with a carefree, wobbly look. FiveOh-One and FiveOh-Shadowed contain the same set of letters on upper and lower-case keys. FiveOh-Two, Three, and Stars contain different interior decorations on upper and lower cases. Thus there are eight different sets of letters in the five typefaces. FiveOh-One can serve as a base layer with the other four fonts layered on top of it to give letters with two colors.
  9. Stringlight by Riverside Type Foundry, $16.00
    Stringlight is a Monoline Script Typeface with an amazing character & a multitude of letter variations to make that perfect and unique design. Ideal for a logo, a name tag, handwritten quotations, product packaging, goods, social media and greeting cards. It contains a complete set of lower and upper case letters, assorted punctuation, numbers, swash and multilingual support. The font also contains several ligatures and contextual alternates for lower case characters, accessible in the Adobe Illustrator Glyphs panel, or under Stylistic Alternates in the Adobe Photoshop OpenType menu.
  10. LemonCookieBold, created by Shara's Fonts, is a font that immediately evokes a sense of whimsy and sweetness, much like the delightful treat it is named after. This bold variant of the LemonCookie fo...
  11. Fantini by Canada Type, $29.95
    Fantini is the revival and elaborate update of a typeface called Fantan, made in-house and released in 1970 by a minor Chicago film type supplier called Custom Headings International. In the most excellent tradition of seriously-planned American film faces back then, CHI released a full complement of swashes and alternates to the curly art nouveau letters. Fantan didn't fare much among the type scene's big players back then, but it did spread like electricity among the smaller ones, the mom-and-pop type shops. But by the late 1980s, when film type was giving up the ghost, most smaller players in the industry were gone, in some cases along with little original libraries that existed nowhere else and became instant rarities on their way to be forgotten and almost impossible to resurrect for future technologies. Fantini is the fun and curly art nouveau font bridging the softness and psychedelia of the 1960s with the flirtatious flare of the 1970s like no other face does. Elements of psychedelia and funk flare out and intermix crazily to create cool, swirly letters packed with a lot of joy and energy. This is the kind of American art nouveau font that made its comeback in the late 20th century and is now a standard visual in the branding drive of almost every consumer product, from coffee labels to book and music covers to your favorite sugar or thirst-crunching fix. Alongside Fantini's enormous main font come small caps and three extra fonts loaded with swashy alternates and variations on plenty of letters. All available in all popular font formats. Fantini Pro, the OpenType version, packs the whole she-bang in a single font of high versatility for those who have applications that support advanced type technologies. In order to make Fantini a reality, Canada Type received original 2" film specimen from Robert Donona, a Clevelander whose enthusiasm about American film type has never faltered, even decades after the technology itself became obsolete. Keep an eye out for that name. Robert, who was computer-reluctant for the longest time, has now come a long way toward mastering digital type design.
  12. Tant Gertrud by Cercurius, $19.95
    A cross-stitch font based on a classical pattern, including capital and lower-case letters. It is suitable for posters, signs, ads and greeting cards in the Thanksgiving and Christmas season.
  13. Zura by Caoni Studio, $19.00
    Zura’s font family design draws its inspiration from nature and a tribal style. The use of geometrical expression emotes a technological undertone. Opentype features include: Old style numerals Case sensitive forms
  14. LD Genevieve by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    Both edgy and elegant, LD Genevieve—with its decorative plumes—adds unique flair to your scrapbook layouts, handmade greeting cards and other creative projects. Pair Lowercase and Uppercase to mix cases.
  15. Personal Manifesto by Thomas Käding, $15.00
    This holographic font is great for writing your own manifesto, or for giving your anonymous letters to the government that personal touch that shows you care. Also good for children’s books.
  16. Gothic Extended by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    Based on a revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century, suitable for display, lower case missing but not always designed for this type of face.
  17. Designers Gothic by Jonahfonts, $30.00
    Occasionally a designer needs the combination of caps and lower case glyphs for a particular purpose, visually or otherwise. Designer’s Gothic was designed with the Caps equal to the x height.
  18. Antique Wells Expanded by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century, suitable for text, expanded, unusual Antique, with unique features in lower case design, g, k, y, a.
  19. Down With The King by A New Machine, $19.00
    Down With the King is a very bold all caps font best used for large titles, headers and logo work. The lower case letters have rounded edges for a softer feel.
  20. Alright, prepare yourself for a typographic voyage to the land of "Rational Integer" by Tepid Monkey Fonts, where numerals and letters coexist in a harmonious utopia devoid of irrationality. Ration...
  21. ITC Lubalin Graph by ITC, $40.99
    ITC Lubalin Graph® was initially designed by Herb Lubalin and drawn to fit the requirements of typographic reproduction by Tony DiSpigna and Joe Sundwall in 1974. Its underlying forms are those of Lubalin's previously released ITC Avant Garde Gothic, but its shapes were modified to accommodate large slab serifs. Its condensed weights, which include small caps and oldstyle figures, were later additions by Helga Jörgenson and Sigrid Engelmann in 1992. The family, with its generous x-height and overall tight fit has come to represent the typographic style of American graphic design in the 1970s. The typeface is at home when paired with mid-century modern design and spare sanses or more traditional text faces from the period. ITC Lubalin Graph covers four weights in its condensed width from Book to Bold, and five weights in its normal width.
  22. Bank Sans EF by Elsner+Flake, $35.00
    With its extended complement, this comprehensive redesign of Bank Gothic by Elsner+Flake offers a wide spectrum for usage. After 80 years, the typeface Bank Gothic, designed by Morris Fuller Benton in 1930, is still as desirable for all areas of graphic design as it has ever been. Its usage spans the design of headlines to exterior design. Game manufacturers adopt this spry typeface, so reminiscent of the Bauhaus and its geometric forms, as often as do architects and web designers. The creative path of the Bank Gothic from hot metal type via phototypesetting to digital variations created by desktop designers has by now taken on great breadth. The number of cuts has increased. The original Roman weight has been augmented by Oblique and Italic variants. The original versions came with just a complement of Small Caps. Now, they are, however, enlarged by often quite individualized lower case letters. In order to do justice to the form changes and in order to differentiate between the various versions, the Bank Gothic, since 2007 a US trademark of the Grosse Pointe Group (Trademark FontHaus, USA), is nowadays available under a variety of different names. Some of these variations remain close to the original concept, others strive for greater individualism in their designs. The typeface family which was cut by the American typefoundry ATF (American Type Founders) in the early 1930’s consisted of a normal and a narrow type family, each one in the weights Light, Medium and Bold. In addition to its basic ornamental structure which has its origin in square or rectangular geometric forms, there is another unique feature of the Bank Gothic: the normally round upper case letters such as B, C, G, O, P, Q, R and U are also rectangular. The one exception is the upper case letter D, which remains round, most likely for legibility reasons (there is the danger of mistaking it for the letter O.) Because of the huge success of this type design, which follows the design principles of the more square and the more contemporary adaption of the already existing Copperplate, it was soon adopted by all of the major type and typesetting manufacturers. Thus, the Bank Gothic appeared at Linotype; as Commerce Gothic it was brought out by Ludlow; and as Deluxe Gothic on Intertype typesetters. Among others, it was also available from Monotype and sold under the name Stationer’s Gothic. In 1936, Linotype introduced 6pt and 12pt weights of the condensed version as Card Gothic. Lateron, Linotype came out with Bank Gothic Medium Condensed in larger sizes and a more narrow set width and named it Poster Gothic. With the advent of photoypesetters and CRT technologies, the Bank Gothic experienced an even wider acceptance. The first digital versions, designed according to present computing technologies, was created by Bitstream whose PostScript fonts in Regular and Medium weights have been available through FontShop since 1991. These were followed by digital redesigns by FontHaus, USA, and, in 1996, by Elsner+Flake who were also the first company to add cursive cuts. In 2009, they extended the family to 16 weights in both Roman and Oblique designs. In addition, they created the long-awaited Cyrillic complement. In 2010, Elsner+Flake completed the set with lowercase letters and small caps. Since its redesign the type family has been available from Elsner+Flake under the name Bank Sans®. The character set of the Bank Sans® Caps and the Bank Sans® covers almost all latin-based languages (Europe Plus) as well as the Cyrillic character set MAC OS Cyrillic and MS Windows 1251. Both families are available in Normal, Condensed and Compressed weights in 4 stroke widths each (Light, Regular, Medium and Bold). The basic stroke widths of the different weights have been kept even which allows the mixing of, for instance, normal upper case letters and the more narrow small caps. This gives the family an even wider and more interactive range of use. There are, furthermore, extensive sets of numerals which can be accessed via OpenType-Features. The Bank Sans® type family, as opposed to the Bank Sans® Caps family, contains, instead of the optically reduced upper case letters, newly designed lower case letters and the matching small caps. Bank Sans® fonts are available in the formats OpenType and TrueType.
  23. Kids Place by Sabrcreative, $10.00
    Introducing Kids Place, a delightful and vibrant display sans serif font designed to bring joy and playfulness to your designs. This font is perfect for adding a touch of whimsy to children's books, nursery decor, party invitations, and more. Let your creativity soar with Kids Place and create designs that capture the imaginations of both young and young-at-heart. With its charming combination of uppercase and lowercase letters, Kids Place offers versatility and adds a sense of fun to your typography. The extensive set of numbers and punctuations ensures consistency and usability in various design projects. Kids Place goes beyond language barriers with its multilingual support, allowing you to express your messages in different languages and connect with a global audience. From English to Spanish, French to German, Kids Place provides a seamless experience. Unlock the full potential of Kids Place with its PUA encoding, which grants easy access to additional glyphs and characters. This feature enables you to add playful elements and unique touches to your designs, making them truly stand out. Let your imagination run wild with Kids Place, the perfect font for all your whimsical and playful projects. Whether you're designing for children or simply embracing your inner child, Kids Place is the font that will bring a smile to your face.
  24. Cut Paper Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Playing around with a previous design, Jeff Levine came up with Cut Paper Stencil JNL, a typeface with both an Art Deco flair and the look of letters made from cut paper.
  25. Lemon Salt by FadeLine Studio, $18.00
    Lemonsalt Script! This is a handwritten font made with care and sweetness. With upright calligraphy text form and dancing as well as some additional alternate characters will make it more interesting. Thanks!
  26. Cross Stitch Carefree by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Cross Stitch Carefree is based on upper case characters 10 stitches tall and contains the characters A-Z and period. Several characters extend above the capital line or below the base line.
  27. Gothic Tuscan Round by Wooden Type Fonts, $20.00
    A revival of one of the popular sans serif wooden type fonts of the 19th century, narrow, rounded strokes at top and bottom, pointed horizontal devices in centers, no lower case designed.
  28. La Mona Pro by RodrigoTypo, $49.00
    La Mona Pro is a redesign of the Mona 2012 design. Greek is case sensitive, as also the Cyrillic. La Mona Pro contains ligatures, ornaments, layers, shadows, swash alternatives (72 fonts) Play :)
  29. Aristocrat by ITC, $29.00
    Aristocrat: a fitting name for this font. A work of British designer Donald Stevens, this elegant script combines intricate capitals with a reserved lower case alphabet, perfect for certificates and greeting cards.
  30. Honey Florist - Personal Use - Personal use only
  31. Milla Cilla - Personal Use - Personal use only
  32. Ivory Chill - Personal Use - Personal use only
  33. Pleasure Point by Comicraft, $39.00
    Slocals! Check out the action of our radical new font, PLEASURE POINT! It's Bananas, Totally Tubular, Stoked and ready to ride some waves. Back in his grom days, Comicraftsman John JG Roshell could be found down at Pleasure Point, waiting for The Big One, and this is IT! Don't be a criddler, paddle hard and rip this font to your motherboard to keep it real every time you gun, rail or tail. And if you get rag dolled, dude, don't blow out your squeaker. Pleasure Point will hang loose and chillax you to the max.
  34. 1634 René Descartes by GLC, $38.00
    This font was inspired by the well-known philosopher René Descartes' hand writing. In 1634, from Amsterdam, he wrote a famous letter to his friend Mersenne, a great scientist monk, in which he spoke about Gallileus works. The greatest part of our glyphs is based on this document. We have added some letters Descartes himself didn't use, like modern s and j (he used exclusively s long and i instead of j). A lot of ligatures and alternates are enriching the font, giving a better appearance of real handwriting.
  35. Ending Story by Senekaligrafika, $12.00
    “Ending story” is experimental vintage font style that to speak instant nostalgic and retro sensation, it was inspired by the inscription on the shop/hotel/vehicle in the 90's era. “Ending story” will help you to create special and touching typographical design for your vintage and oldschool projects.Perfect when you place them into magazines, book cover, cafe product, newspaper titles, poster, and many more. It is really universal and modern font. The owner of endless possibilities!
  36. Nouveau Crayon by Hanoded, $15.00
    Nouveau Crayon is based on Crayon Crumble, a font I made a long time ago. I changed a lot of glyphs and added a whole bunch of new ones. It has become quite a good looking font to be honest: oodles of crayon goodness, heaps of crumbling bits and a lot of expression. Use it for cafe websites, restaurant menus, children’s books, art fair posters and whatever else you fancy. Nouveau Crayon comes with abundant language support.
  37. Steak Muroh by Attype Studio, $12.00
    Steak Muroh is a layered display font with grill effect. This font perfect for steak & grilled food promotion . Combine it with steak muroh regular & display style to make grill effects better! Steak Muroh perfect for steak restaurant & cafe promotion, branding, logo, invitation, stationery, social media post, product packaging, merchandise, blog design, game titles, cute style design, Book/Cover Title and more. What's Included : - Steak Muroh Family Font - Layered Font - Multilingual Support --- Hope you enjoy with our font! Attype Studio
  38. Gazella by Raditya Type, $14.00
    GAZELLA Displays Fonts. This font has a unique and bold typeface, making it suitable for unique design themes. The unique binding of the serifs makes this typeface cool and stands out from the usual serif fonts, perfect for headlines, logos, posters, packaging, T-shirts, coffee shops, restaurants, magazine headers, signs or gift/post cards, cafes and weddings or any kind of advertising purposes. GAZELLA comes with uppercase, lowercase, Numbers, Punctuation, Ligatures and also Multi Language Support.
  39. Callimathy by Anomali Creative, $15.00
    Broken letters or Gothic letters, also known as German letters, are the typeface used in Europe West from the 12th century to the 17th century. Meanwhile, Danish spoke it until 1875 and German, Estonian and Latvian spoke it well into the 20th century. Fracture is one of the broken typefaces that is often considered to represent the entire broken typeface. Broken letters are sometimes also called Old English, but not in the Old English or Anglo-Saxon sense that was born centuries earlier. This group of letters is so named because it contains Latin letters that have breaks in the curvature of the letters, either in part or in whole designs. The fracture arises from a sudden dip when writing certain parts of the letter. In contrast, letters with perfect, unbroken curves, such as Antikua, are created from smooth, flowing writing movements. Callimathy is a font inspired by the Blackletter typeface, made with a modern impression but still looks strong and unique. In addition, Young Best font is also supported with multilingual characters that can be used in several international languages. Callimathy font is very suitable for use in making music album cover designs, tattoo logos, wishkey labels, packaging pomades and so on which are made with dark and strong concepts.
  40. Wild Bunch by Hanoded, $15.00
    The Wild Bunch, also known as the Doolin–Dalton Gang, was a gang of outlaws that terrorized Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, and Oklahoma Territory during the 1890s. They robbed banks, killed lawmen and held up trains. Of course its members were hunted down and 'wanted' posters, with that typical 'Wild West' font, appeared all over. Wild Bunch is a 'wanted poster' type font. It is an all caps font, but upper and lower case differ slightly. A set of alternate, non-eroded, glyphs for the lower case (including alternate numbers) completes this font.
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