4,857 search results (0.017 seconds)
  1. Jeeves by Red Rooster Collection, $79.00
    The inspiration for Jeeves came from Leslie Carbarga's wonderful book LETTERHEADS, One Hundred Years of Great Design, 1850-1950. It was based on a secondary type usage for the letterhead for Sutherland in New York. The rest of the letterhead had features that were more typical of the Art Deco period, but this script added a touch of timeless elegance. And since at the time I was reading every scrap of P.G. Wodehouse I could get my hands on, the name Jeeves seemed like a perfect fit. The font is loaded with a plethora of extra glyphs, ligature characters and OpenType features.
  2. Syabil by Eko Bimantara, $16.00
    Syabil is a sans serif font family designed by Eko Bimantara. This font crafted with the intention to present a clean, legible, multipurpose that easy to read wether it on screen or print. Fit for all purposes; Text, display, headline, print, corporate identity, logo, branding, product, infographic, photography and other application and medium. This font consist of 9 weight; Thin, Light, Book, Regular, Medium, SemiBold, Bold, ExtraBold and Heavy with each weight paired by italic. Also including Latin Plus language support with more than 11.700 glyphs in all weight which make this font contain broad language support.
  3. HGB Santo by HGB fonts, $16.00
    Must a letter always have a symmetrical basic form? What happens when the shape of the letters stretch like an arc in the reading direction? When writing with a broad nib, this is easily achieved. The HGB Santo examines the effect of this formal principle on the readability of a text. First attempts have shown a warm and reader-friendly typeface. Six shades from Light to Black, each with an italic should be sufficient for most applications. Small caps and old-style figures are available via OpenType features as well as some ornamental forms in the italics.
  4. Lagoena by San Studio, $9.99
    Lagoena Font was designed by Zainul Faozi from San Studio. This was inspired by road markings. This font fits on any project You make, on posters, logos, ads, banners, and more.
  5. Antypica by Anfound Type, $33.00
    Antypica is a soft and friendly slab-serif font that draws inspiration from typewriter styles. This font is designed to be easily legible in both small and large sizes, making it a great option for various applications. Its simple yet timeless design with a modern twist makes it perfect for use in a wide range of design projects. This includes package design, ad campaigns, brand identities, movie titles, poster art, booklets, and even classified documents. With an impressive 790 glyph count, Antypica supports Basic Latin and Latin Extended-A. OpenType features further enhance typography by providing Small Caps and Small Numbers, Lining Figures, Oldstyle Figures, Superscripts, and Subscripts, Fractions, Tabular Lining Figures, Tabular Oldstyle Figures, Ligatures, and Contextual Alternates to prevent some unwanted letter pair collisions. Additionally, Stylistic Sets offer Stylistic Alternate Lowercase a, Alternate Cap T, Alternate Dollar Sign, and Slanted Hyphen to add calligraphic quality to text blocks, while the Special Set offers unique glyphs like Bitcoin and Interrobang. Antypica is highly versatile and can be used in many design applications. Small Caps and Small Numbers can be used creatively to create more visually engaging typography, and the optimized underline effect can be used to enhance the design. To access the Special Set in OpenType features, select it from the OpenType menu. To add special additional marks, type following in your text field. • For the Exclam-Comma mark, type ” ,! ” (comma+exclam) • For the Question-Comma mark, type ” ,? ” (comma+question) • For the Bitcoin mark, simply type " bitcoin " (not case sensitive). • For the alternate (Cap Height) Registered mark, type " registered " (not case sensitive). • For the Published mark, type " published " (not case sensitive). The font also has a small caps version of the Published Mark. • For the Numero mark, type " N° " (N + degree) (case sensitive). • For the Interrobang, type " bang " (not case sensitive). • For Price marking, type ” ,– ” (comma + one of these: hyphen, en dash, em dash). • For Dot(s) Pattern glyph, type " dots " (not case sensitive). • For Line(s) Pattern glyph, type " lines " (not case sensitive).
  6. RV Park by Komet & Flicker, $10.00
    Hit the open road with RV Park! This font was inspired by the typography seen on the signage for quirky roadside attractions. Use it anywhere you’re looking to inject a little fun and whimsy.
  7. Bellezza by Wilton Foundry, $39.00
    Bellezza (Italian: beautiful) is an elegant calligraphic script with many ligatures to provide great solutions for Invitations, presentations, signage, posters wherever sensitivity, legibility and elegance is essential.
  8. RF Tone by Russian Fonts, $29.00
    Tone was inspired by classic geometric sans-serif fonts but has a distinct modern day spirit. Contains 16 styles from ultralight to black: 8 regulars and 8 italics. Have a multilingual support and big amount of OpenType features. This typeface is comfortable to read in small sizes. Great for big pieces of text or as the main typeface in website design. Logotypes and branding, packaging, posters, editorial design, music covers, navigation systems, videos — these are just a few areas in which Tone can help you. Opentype features: old-style figures, tabular and tabular old-style, tabular currency symbols, ligatures, stylistic alternates, fractions and automatic frations, circled numbers, arrows and stylistic alternates for arrows, superscript and subscript, case sensitive forms. Multilingual support: Latin, latin extended, cyrillic and cyrillic extended (more than 70+ languages).
  9. Avenue by Funk King, $10.00
    Avenue is a specialty font used to create imitation road signs. This is a very simple concept that can provide some versatile results. With an extensive character set, the possibilities for various signs are endless.
  10. FF Routes by FontFont, $41.99
    German type designer Hans Reichel created this symbols FontFont in 2001.It is ideal for creating road maps. The family has 8 weights, and is ideally suited for editorial and publishing and wayfinding and signage.
  11. Sassoon Primary by Sassoon-Williams, $48.00
    The Regular typeface was researched with children and developed specially for use in children’s reading books - bridging the gap between reading and handwriting. Short ascenders and descenders may not trouble literate adults but it is quite a different matter for children struggling to read. These fonts include extended ascenders and descenders and slight slant makes blocks of text easier to read. Free to download resources How to access Stylistic Sets of alternative letters in these fonts
  12. Kari Pro by Positype, $45.00
    I have always enjoyed this typeface and have had fond memories from the time I originally drew its predecessor, Kari. Now with almost 100 new ligatures, alternate and swash characters, Kari Pro has a great deal more personality and versatility. Subsets from the original Kari have been integrated into each unified weight adding both lining and hanging (oldstyle) numerals as options as well.
  13. Naston by Sopheynoft, $49.00
    Naston Regular is the font of choice for those who seek an elegant and versatile typeface. With its timeless design, Naston Regular adds sophistication to a wide array of applications, be it formal invitations, business presentations, or creative projects. Its meticulously crafted letterforms prioritize readability while maintaining a unique and distinctive style, leaving a lasting impression on your audience. This font's broad language support and impeccable craftsmanship ensure a seamless reading experience, making it an excellent choice for anyone who values professionalism and aesthetics in their design projects. Choose Naston Regular to elevate your content and effectively convey your message with clarity and elegance.
  14. KG Kiss Me Slowly by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Super curly letters with a playful vibe. Whimsical, fun, and cute- yet still legible enough that you can read it! Cute doesn't have to be painful to read!
  15. OCR-A AI by Apply Interactive, $90.00
    OCR-A AI Text is the version for normal use when the text will be read by humans. OCR-A AI is the version to use for machine reading.
  16. 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
  17. Ganges by ROHH, $40.00
    Ganges is a condensed sans serif typeface inspired by Central European advertising typography from late XIX century. The font has condensed proportions and original letter shapes. Ganges is designed mainly for editorial design, especially for display use, as well as short paragraphs of text. Its narrow proportion makes it very practical to use for posters and magazine covers. Characteristic letter forms fit great for branding, logo and packaging design. It is also a very interesting choice for websites and e-book headlines. Ganges family consist of 27 fonts - 9 weights, 9 italics and 9 obliques. It supports extended set of latin languages, as well as broad number of OpenType features, such as case sensitive forms, standard and dicretionary ligatures, stylistic alternates, contextual alternates, lining, oldstyle and tabular figures, slashed zero, fractions, superscript and subscript, ordinals, currencies and symbols.
  18. Luzern by Gumpita Rahayu, $-
    Inspired by the most common grotesque heights and boxed sans serif typefaces, Luzern Typefaces was built with low-mid contrast sans serif and was designed in quite tall caps height and lower x-height which represents the flavor of the dynamic typefaces and is subtle for the display typefaces. The typefaces comes with five weights, from light to extra bold, plus matching italics in each weights. And Luzern Typefaces is loaded with OpenType features such as some stylistic alternates in uppercase, case-sensitive forms, fractions, and another numerals features such as super and subscript characters, tabular figures, numerator-denominator, etc. It’s highly usable for display text titles such as editorial magazine headline, websites heading, poster, advertising, logo, also it works well for medium body text. It comes with more 400+ glyph support including more latin european diacritics language.
  19. Cowgirl by By Meg Burk, $25.00
    An uppercase font that has versatile character. Got a story to tell? Cowgirl can help you tell it. Includes western-themed vector illustrations handmade by Meg Burk. I grew up spending almost every family vacation as a road trip across the southwestern US. In these adventures, I fell in love with learning about the nature around us; deserts, mountains, plains, piñon trees, rainbow trout, black bears, eagles, and more. I fell into freezing cold white water rapids, explored long-abandoned cliff dwellings, camped under the Milky Way, saw old cave markings, stone markings, preserved art, and read many a many old map legends. These memories are visceral and the inspiration that I get from them permeates my every day. Take a piece of these stories with you and use them in your designs, too. Handmade, meant to last a lifetime and inspire others for decades to come.
  20. 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 :)
  21. Skolar PE by Rosetta, $70.00
    Originally developed for academic publishing, Skolar asserts credibility and sustains comfortable reading. It has established itself as a go-to choice for all kinds of scholarly texts, no matter the field or school of thought: it handles the minutiae of linguistic, scientific, and editorial typography with ease. A classic with a twist, Skolar brings a trace of human touch to serious typography. Thanks to this knack for subtlety, it is also successfully used in other genres from branding to children’s literature. Skolar PE has a vast character set that caters to nearly four hundred languages and transliteration systems (Pinyin, IAST/Sanskrit) using Latin, Cyrillic, and Greek (including polytonic). Its larger x-height, robust serifs, low contrast, and its deft italic make it a pleasure to read even at small sizes. With Skolar, footnotes and bibliography become readers’ best friends. The OpenType feature set is engineered for the most rigorous editorial settings. Tabular, proportional, old-style, and lining figures as well as a full set of fractions, ordinals, and scientific superiors and inferiors will stand up to any conjectural challenge. Language-sensitive forms and compound diacritics will handle the demands of many linguistic texts. The companion families Skolar Gujarati, Skolar Devanagari, Skolar Sans PE, and Skolar Sans Arabic expand its typographic and semantic potential even further.
  22. Stallman Round by Par Défaut, $9.00
    Stallman Round is a Display font family containing 98 Fonts (Regular, Oblique). It's a perfect font for titles There are also 6 OpenType features (Numerator; Denominator; Fraction; Case Sensitive; Ordinals; Access All Alternates)
  23. Boppa Delux by Patricia Lillie, $39.00
    Say it with authority and style with Boppa Delux, a big, bold display font in four weights. For use in OpenType aware applications, Boppa Delux includes small caps, alternates, case sensitive forms, and more.
  24. Stallman by Par Défaut, $9.00
    Stallman is a Display font family containing 100 Fonts (Regular, Oblique and Variables). It's a perfect font for titles There are also 6 OpenType features (Numerator; Denominator; Fraction; Case Sensitive; Ordinals; Access All Alternates)
  25. Penwrite JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The same 1935 piece of sheet music ("Along Tobacco Road") that yielded the multi-line lettering design for Deco Triline JNL has also provided lettering examples inspired by the writers' credits for what is now Penwrite JNL, in both regular and oblique versions.
  26. Sensation is a modern and highly versatile font family that captures the essence of simplicity and elegance in typographic design. It is not associated with a specific historical font but rather embo...
  27. Acumin by Adobe, $35.00
    Acumin is a versatile sans serif intended for a balanced and rational quality. Solidly neo-grotesque, it not only performs beautifully at display sizes, but also maintains an exceptional degree of sensitivity for text sizes.
  28. Dreamure by Nexitype, $18.00
    Dreamure is a font designed specifically for reading on online platforms. With the fun and cheerful character of the font, Dreamure also gives you an easy-to-read design. Dreamure will help your work become attractive and user-friendly.
  29. Sydney by Aboutype, $24.99
    Broad pen script typeface from 1930s magazine advertising.
  30. Cobbler Sans by Juri Zaech, $30.00
    Cobbler Sans is a friendly type family in six weights and the humble cousin to Cobbler. With its rounded aspect and proportions of geometric type Cobbler Sans is expressively soft and contemporary. All terminals are shaped organically and even inner corners are rounded. The few remaining straight lines give the typeface the stability of a workhorse while keeping the playfulness that characterizes the entire Cobbler family so much. Additionally there is a pile of OpenType features built in. For example loads of discretionary ligatures that make capital letters interlock left and right. Other features include automatic fractions, case sensitive punctuation and contextual alternates. Cobbler Sans works great for branding, packaging, editorial or any display application – and it comes with an expansive character set that covers over 200 languages. Furthermore Cobbler Sans is manually kerned and auto-hinted for crisp display on screen also in small sizes.
  31. Ganges Slab by ROHH, $40.00
    Ganges Slab is a condensed slab serif typeface inspired by Central European advertising typography from late XIX century. It is a perfect match for Ganges Sans. The font has condensed proportions and original letter shapes. Ganges is designed mainly for editorial design, especially for display use, as well as short paragraphs of text. Its narrow proportion makes it very practical to use for posters and magazine covers. Characteristic letter forms fit great for branding, logo and packaging design. It is also a very interesting choice for websites and e-book headlines. Ganges Slab family consist of 27 fonts - 9 weight, 9 italics and 9 obliques. It supports extended set of latin languages, as well as broad number of OpenType features, such as case sensitive forms, standard and dicretionary ligatures, stylistic alternates, contextual alternates, lining, oldstyle and tabular figures, slashed zero, fractions, superscript and subscript, ordinals, currencies and symbols.
  32. Qualion Round by ROHH, $39.00
    Qualion Round™ is a soft geometric sans serif with lots of swashes and ligatures, a sibling of successful Qualion™ and Qualion Text™ families. The rounded family is designed by carefully adjusting letter shapes, tapering and ink traps to in order to achieve optimal legibility as well as strong personality. The family is intended to serve in display situations like branding and advertising as well as in paragraph text and user interfaces. Its versatility can be even strengthened by pairing it with Qualion™ or Qualion Text™ families. Qualion Round™ family consists of 10 weights with corresponding oblique styles. It has extended language support, as well as broad number of OpenType features, such as case sensitive forms, standard and discretionary ligatures, swashes, terminal forms, stylistic sets, contextual alternates, lining, oldstyle, tabular figures, slashed zero, fractions, superscript and subscript, ordinals, currencies and symbols.
  33. Halogen Flare by Positype, $29.00
    When I released Halogen, I asked ‘Who doesn't want or need an expansive contemporary extended sans that has a sense of style and swagger… what if it had a lowercase, small caps and various numeral options… how could you say no?’ Go, click on the Halogen link and read on, if you're interested. Halogen was well-received, so I decided to take it further with Halogen Flare (the name kinda tips you off as to what kind of typeface it is, don't ya think?). As always, I prefer not to take short cuts and provide an anemic offering of glyphs — a modern typeface offered today must provide more than just the basics and this one does — lowercase, smallcaps, old style numerals, tabular forms, stylistic and titling alternates, fractions, case-sensitive features, and even an alternate uppercase ordinal set is included. Now, go make cool print and digital things with it.
  34. Bumpy Ride by Hanoded, $16.00
    I live in a small hamlet near the Rhine river. It is a sleepy little town and it doesn’t have any facilities. For groceries I need to go to the next town. The only road leading to that town has been closed for half a year, because of ‘maintenance’, so doing groceries got a lot trickier. The fastest way to travel is through yet another hamlet in the forest, on a very narrow road with extremely bumpy shoulders. Yes, you’ve guessed it: it is a Bumpy Ride. Bumpy Ride was made using a so called Brush Pen. It comes with all the accents and a sweet set of alternates for the lower case letters.
  35. VLNL Bromfiets by VetteLetters, $30.00
    Vette Letters are thrilled to add maverick designer Dirk Uhlenbrock to the family, with the release of VLNL Bromfiets. Bromfiets (the Dutch word for moped) is a ‘holiday child’, the basic idea coming from a stop at a road junction in the Dutch coastal province of Zeeland. The Dutch signage, the black and white rings of traffic light poles, the symbols for brom- and snorfiets have always appealed to Dirk. While on vacation in Zeeland the first scribbles and digital drafts were created, always in mind that the typeface had to be striking, clear and friendly. The end result is more than that, a strong and instantly recognisable font with a matching dingbat weight full of icons and arrows. Stencil fonts have always interested Dirk, the informal character and the possible universal use as a paint- or spray-stencil on a wide variety of surfaces makes this type of font so interesting for me. The technically necessary dissolution of closed font contours always ensures a special aesthetic: What’HAT and HOW MUCH has to be removed or left, in order to make words easy to read and to avoid a fractal impression. Dirk Uhlenbrock has been working as graphic designer and illustrator in his hometown Essen, Germany for over 30 years. Always interested in typedesign he got in contact with Fontographer in 1996 and started to create and distribute loads of free fonts through his online platforms ‘Eyesaw’ and ‘Fontomas’. A bunch of these type experiments have been extented on request to complete fonts. Still located in Essen in 2009 Dirk started his second owner-based business erste liga büro für gestaltung - ersteliga.de
  36. SF Topic by Sultan Fonts, $19.99
    Topic - Dedicated to writing a Big text in newspapers, magazines, road boards, book , TV and other printing products, and web pages. The Topic font contains 4 styles (Light, regular, Medium and bold) The font includes a matching Latin design and support for Arabic, Persian, Kurdish, and Urdu.
  37. Stars And Type by Tim Kirkman, $22.00
    Stars & Type is a display font inspired by a road trip around the USA. It is bold, abstract and experimental and is meant for attention grabbing large headlines. Utilising stars to give a sense of Americana, it would be suited to editorial, advertising and display typography.
  38. Ando Round by JCFonts, $30.00
    This is the rounded version of Ando, an elegant geometric typeface with smooth curves, designed for headlines. Six styles are available, with the same OpenType features as the original: stylistic alternates, case sensitive forms, tabular figures, and more!
  39. Ribbon - Unknown license
  40. Merrimac by Aboutype, $24.99
    Broad pen script typeface from 1930s and 40s; magazine advertising.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing