5,032 search results (0.025 seconds)
  1. KR I Do! - Unknown license
  2. Fiesta Win95 - Unknown license
  3. Lettering1 Weird - Unknown license
  4. Decipher - Unknown license
  5. Bloxxxx - Unknown license
  6. pookie - Unknown license
  7. Palomino - Unknown license
  8. Talismanica - Unknown license
  9. ChromosomeHeavy - Unknown license
  10. ElroNet Monospace - Unknown license
  11. Horny Devils BV - Unknown license
  12. Cosmic Age Outline - Unknown license
  13. Cosmic Age - Unknown license
  14. Velour - Unknown license
  15. Opulent - Unknown license
  16. Weirdo - Unknown license
  17. IGaramond - Unknown license
  18. Pointage - Unknown license
  19. Cosmic Age Extended - Unknown license
  20. efEMERGENCY CALL - Unknown license
  21. Digital2 - Unknown license
  22. Sepultura Demo - Unknown license
  23. RikyTiky - Personal use only
  24. Cosmic Age - Unknown license
  25. Ryp childA - Unknown license
  26. Teleprinter - Unknown license
  27. Ryp fiestaB - Unknown license
  28. HildiniaDonut by JOEBOB graphics, $-
    HildiniaDonut is the second font designed by Hilde Rikken (age 10). I think a mouse took a little bite out of all the characters...
  29. Blind by Alien, $30.00
    Blind is a braille font for both braille keyboards and standard keyboards.
  30. OCR B by Linotype, $40.99
    OCR A and OCR B are standardized, monospaced fonts designed for Optical Character Recognition" on electronic devices. OCR A was developed to meet the standards set by the American National Standards Institute in 1966 for the processing of documents by banks, credit card companies and similar businesses. This font was intended to be "read" by scanning devices, and not necessarily by humans. However, because of its "techno" look, it has been re-discovered for advertising and display graphics. OCR B was designed in 1968 by Adrian Frutiger to meet the standards of the European Computer Manufacturer's Association. It was intended for use on products that were to be scanned by electronic devices as well as read by humans. OCR B was made a world standard in 1973, and is more legible to human eyes than most other OCR fonts. Though less appealingly geeky than OCR A, the OCR B version also has a distinctive technical appearance that makes it a hit with graphic designers.
  31. OCR A Extended by Monotype, $40.99
    OCR A and OCR B are standardized, monospaced fonts designed for Optical Character Recognition" on electronic devices. OCR A was developed to meet the standards set by the American National Standards Institute in 1966 for the processing of documents by banks, credit card companies and similar businesses. This font was intended to be "read" by scanning devices, and not necessarily by humans. However, because of its "techno" look, it has been re-discovered for advertising and display graphics. OCR B was designed in 1968 by Adrian Frutiger to meet the standards of the European Computer Manufacturer's Association. It was intended for use on products that were to be scanned by electronic devices as well as read by humans. OCR B was made a world standard in 1973, and is more legible to human eyes than most other OCR fonts. Though less appealingly geeky than OCR A, the OCR B version also has a distinctive technical appearance that makes it a hit with graphic designers.
  32. Orca Pro by (v) design, $49.00
    Orca Pro is a modern sans-serif font family. Its lowercase letters are inspired by the well known OCR-A font, however every single glyph has been more or less revised. Capitals, numerals and all other characters and punctuation marks are entirely new. Feel free to download the PDF Specimen for detailed info and examples. The Orca Pro family consists of 10 fonts – light, regular, medium, bold and heavy weights including real italics. It supports many OpenType features like automatic fractions, ordinals, proportional/tabular figures, numerators, denominators, superiors, inferiors or case sensitive forms and offers great multilingual support for most of Latin-based languages (including CE). Orca Pro contains a number of standard and discretionary ligatures, numerals as well as 62 bullets, symbols and arrows. Orca reveals its soft, rounded character in bigger sizes while it remains distinct and legible in small sizes.
  33. Neues Bauen - Unknown license
  34. TT Neoris by TypeType, $39.00
    The future of Neo-Grotesques is now! Introducing TT Neoris—a new ambitious font from TypeType. TT Neoris is an ideal sans with: 21 font styles: 10 upright, 10 italics, and 1 variable font; 1832 characters; 41 OpenType features; 14 stylistic sets with Soft character and Upright cursive in Latin and Cyrillic character sets; 230+ languages support; Special condensed italics designed to create a 'highlighting' effect when used in specific text segments.
  35. Warlock - Unknown license
  36. Balcony Angels - Unknown license
  37. 4YEO IN - Unknown license
  38. Ekberg Demo - Unknown license
  39. 4YEO OUT - Unknown license
  40. Xanadu - Unknown license
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