8,521 search results (0.166 seconds)
  1. Powell Antique - Personal use only
  2. College Halo - Personal use only
  3. TGL 31034-2 - 100% free
  4. DejaVu Serif - Unknown license
  5. DejaVu Serif Condensed - Unknown license
  6. NFL Broncos - Unknown license
  7. EPF - 100% free
  8. red shirt - Unknown license
  9. Archery Black Condensed - Unknown license
  10. BPmono - Unknown license
  11. advent - Unknown license
  12. 18thCentury - Unknown license
  13. Lane - Posh - Personal use only
  14. 7 days rotated - Unknown license
  15. Valdemar - Unknown license
  16. Bodidota - 100% free
  17. Clearblock circular - 3DFX - Unknown license
  18. SW Crawl Body - Unknown license
  19. W.J. Pearce hollow - Unknown license
  20. Wellsley - Unknown license
  21. Aurulent Sans Mono - Unknown license
  22. REDRING 1969 - Unknown license
  23. MinstrelPosterWHG - 100% free
  24. FatSansRound - 100% free
  25. Steiner - Unknown license
  26. BrightonBold - Unknown license
  27. Concielian - Personal use only
  28. Castorgate - Unknown license
  29. eko - Unknown license
  30. LT Wave - 100% free
  31. Rint Basic - Personal use only
  32. Flipahaus - Personal use only
  33. LT Edge Sans - 100% free
  34. Grava by Positype, $35.00
    Grava is Neil Summerour’s injection of warmth within the geometric sans font category. Historically, geometric sans families have been based on primal shapes — triangle, circle, square — and the more closely they held to those rigid rules, the more internal inconsistencies they showed. Angles won’t match up correctly, letters will lean, overshoots complicate clean typesetting, and idealized circles become grotesque and unwieldy in some weights. Because of issues like these, geometric sans fonts have a reputation of being cold, austere, even a bit “off”. Grava was made to hold a T-square and triangle in one hand while giving a welcoming handshake with the other. The Grava font family comes in two styles (a normal and a Display), each with 20 weights (Thin to Ultra) and paired with italics. Its design allowed the three scripts of Latin, Cyrillic, and Greek to emerge seamlessly, ensuring Grava will find its home in multilingual publications. Even better, each character in the three scripts is spaced with every other character for a beautifully matched fit, and it’s a buy-one-get-all-three deal since they are all packaged together. The normal style’s large x-height won’t let you down in paragraphs, headings, and any call-out text. And have you seen the angles on those numerals? Pairing Grava’s numerals on a jersey is sure to catch some eyes, just sayin'. Grava Display is purposefully quirky and sharp, and made for poster sizes, book and album covers, and those websites with a well-defined character — somewhere between playfully self-aware and overtly vintage. Flat edges are abandoned to make way for sharp points and conspicuousness, for geometrical attitude and respectful expressiveness. Corporate reports use Grava Display to take on a professional and current look. The optional ligatures (N–T, L–L, G–A, C–O, almost anywhere an ‘A’ is placed, and more) in both the normal and Display styles invoke a midcentury modernist and high art feel. Now that introductions are done, you can let go of Grava’s hand and put it to work for you.
  35. Ruutu by Morganismi, $9.00
    Ruutu is a square but queer font presenting odd faces. Supports multiple tongues.
  36. Zygo by Zang-O-Fonts, $25.00
    A wide, square font, ZygoSE fits perfectly into a clean, dynamic design piece.
  37. Scriber by The Northern Block, $12.80
    A technical square-edged font influenced by modern architecture and computer aided design.
  38. Cantiga by Isaco Type, $19.00
    Cantiga is a monophonic song or melody, sometimes repetitive, often with unpretentious themes. In the same simplicity, this font family combines robustness with some very fine details, with 44 versions for various purposes. Choose thinner (or thicker) versions for titles, and intermediate versions (normal, medium, etc.) to small sizes. Explore the condensed versions when you need to save space. Use the light versions for special cases in huge sizes. Cantiga intended to be your new "Swiss army knife" sans typeface. The Cantiga family consists of 2 widths (normal and condensed) with 11 weights each, plus their respective italic versions. The fonts are available in OpenType PS format and have extended character set to support CE, Baltic, Turkish as well as Western European languages.
  39. Espania - Unknown license
  40. Core Sans M by S-Core, $25.00
    The Core Sans M Family is a part of the Core Sans Series, such as Core Sans N, Core Sans N Rounded, Core Sans N SC, and Core Sans G. This font family has open and square letter shapes, and overall rounded finishes provide a soft and friendly appearance. Simple and modern shapes with a tall x-height make the text legible and the spaces between individual letter forms are precisely adjusted to create the perfect typesetting. The Core Sans M Family consists of 2 widths (Condensed, Normal), 7 weights (ExtraLight, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, ExtraBold, Heavy), and Italics for each format. Small Caps versions are also available. It supports WGL4, which provides a wide range of character sets (CE, Greek, Cyrillic and Eastern European characters). Each font includes support for Tabular numbers, Arrows, Box drawings, Geometric shapes, Block elements, Mathematical operators, Miscellaneous symbols and Opentype Features such as Proportional Figures, Numerators, Denominators, Superscript, Scientific Inferiors, Subscript, Fractions and Standard Ligatures. The Core Sans M Family provides both OpenType (.OTF) and TrueType (.TTF) versions in the same package. We highly recommend it for use in books, web pages, screen displays, and so on.
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