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  1. Amonos display by Brenners Template, $19.00
    Amonos Display Font Family aims for a modern and simple lifestyle. Sleek and stylish skeletons boast a unique style from thin to black weights. Regardless of weights, 18 styles have special talents related to headings, subtitles and logos. The understated metaphor and sense of stability is the best alternatives for creative typography. Therefore, it supports stable dynamics beyond the biased simplicity of geometric fonts. And some different Glyphs of oblique typefaces add to the delightful fun. Enclosed Glyphs and Symbols will be so useful for editorial design.
  2. Freight Text Pro by Freight Collection, $39.00
    Fresh yet at the same time projecting a familiar feeling, Freight Text provides the stable foundation on which all other Freight serif families were built. As its name implies, it was designed to handle standard text sizes for large and small quantities of copy. Unique enough to catch the eyes but comfortable enough keep them from bleeding, Freight Text is a workhorse intended for magazines, newspapers, cookbooks, data-intensive technical documents and collateral. What more could you ask for from such a humble family?
  3. Riva by ITC, $29.00
    ITC Riva is the work of English designer Martin Wait and appeared with ITC in 1994. Its letters form gently flowing words and sentences and the light stroke contrast makes the font stable yet lively. The contemporary typefaces of the 18th century influenced the forms of ITC Riva and its overall image brings to mind flowing white sundresses, fields of flowers and tea parties. Perfect for invitations and greeting cards, the capitals of ITC Riva can also be used as initials and combined with other alphabets.
  4. HoTom by Linotype, $29.99
    Linotype Ho Tom is part of the Take Type Library, which features winners of Linotype’s International Digital Type Design Contest from 1994 to 1997. Designed by Thomas Hoffman, this font’s historical roots are easily traced to the slab serif style. Ho Tom was originally intended as a lettering system for a project in the center of the old East Berlin. This explains the stable, angular characters and the consistent rectangular base forms, which also makes Ho Tom a very legible font, suitable for longer texts.
  5. Squealer Embossed - Unknown license
  6. Independant - Unknown license
  7. Zekton - Unknown license
  8. DS Supervixen Cyr - Personal use only
  9. DS Thompson - Unknown license
  10. SF Buttacup Lettering - Unknown license
  11. DS Reckoning Cyr - Unknown license
  12. Textan - Unknown license
  13. Diehl Deco - Unknown license
  14. Fat Legs - Unknown license
  15. Def Writer | BASE Cyr - Unknown license
  16. Some's Style - Unknown license
  17. Bamf - Unknown license
  18. Tombstone - Unknown license
  19. Christendom - Personal use only
  20. Corinthian - Personal use only
  21. Justinian - Unknown license
  22. Kovacs - Unknown license
  23. Commonwealth - Unknown license
  24. Michaelmas - Personal use only
  25. Replicant - Unknown license
  26. Morlandic - Unknown license
  27. SailingJunco - Unknown license
  28. 2Toon - Unknown license
  29. Yahren - Unknown license
  30. 2Toon2 - Unknown license
  31. Katana - Personal use only
  32. Xoxoxa - Unknown license
  33. Neuralnomicon - Unknown license
  34. Governor - Unknown license
  35. Sever - Unknown license
  36. voxBOX - Unknown license
  37. SF Funk Master - Unknown license
  38. VTC FuzzyPunkySlippers - Unknown license
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