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  1. Going to School by Tlatous Type, $19.00
    Introducing Going to School Font by Tlatoustype Going to School is a Fun Modern Handwritten Font. Going to School is perfect for Book Cover, product packaging, branding project, megazine, social media, wedding, or just used to express words above the background. Going to School also multilingual support.
  2. Moon Rays by Epiclinez, $18.00
    Moon Rays is a bold and playful display font, suitable for all children's designs, product packaging, stationary art, apparel designs, and more fun and creative ideas! So what's included: Basic Latin A-Z & a-z. Numbers, symbols, and punctuations Multilingual Support. Accented Characters : ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÑÒÓÔÕÖØŒŠÙÚÛÜŸÝŽàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïñòóôõöøœšùúûüýÿžß Thank You.
  3. Jatayu by Khurasan, $10.00
    Jatayu is a fun bold script font, with a fresh and modern style. Jatayu has two different styles, regular and extrude. You can combine regular and extrude to get amazing results. Jatayu is suitable for logos, branding, greeting cards, posters and any design that you create.
  4. Gorizon by Mightyfire, $15.00
    Looking for a font that has clean, modern yet unique looks? Gorizon is the answer! With firm lines, this font has an attractive appearance for the readers. This font is suitable for magazines, books, posters or other creative artworks. Enjoy and have fun in using Gorizon!
  5. Nnaivete by Aomam, $10.00
    Nnaivete is a distinctive typeface. It has a form that conveys consistency and solidity while also evoking a feeling of fun. Learning about geometric forms as a student served as the designer's inspiration for the typeface Nnaivete. Consequently, this font's layout is mostly focused on squares.
  6. Loving Kitten by Blankids, $23.00
    Introducing of our new product the name is Loving kitten a Quirky Font. Loving kitten inspired by Quirky Handwritten style this font is a fun theme very good for display, tshirt design, craft, quote sign, logotype and etc FEATURES : Uppercase Lowercase Number Punctuation Multilingual PUA Encode Opentype
  7. Walanor by Konstantine Studio, $10.00
    Jump back to the retro vintage vibes with WALANOR. A bold, casual, and fun display font. Inspired by the visual trends of so-called retro and vintages from the 80s era. We talk about disco, pop culture, vinyl records, sign painting, magazines, posters, labels, and many more.
  8. Yellow Spring by Sakha Design, $10.00
    Yellow Spring is a fresh and vibrant handwritten font that radiates a cheerful and youthful energy. Its organic and imperfect shapes create a natural and authentic look, making it perfect for logos, social media graphics, and packaging designs that aim to convey a fun and friendly vibe.
  9. FS Conrad by Fontsmith, $50.00
    Art into type In 2008, Fontsmith were approached by their friend, Jon Scott, to investigate whether a typeface could assume the aesthetic of one artist’s body of work. Jon’s not-for-profit charity, Measure, was organising an event for the artist, Conrad Shawcross, whose giant mechanical installation, entitled Chord, was going on public display in the long-disused Kingsway tram tunnel in Holborn. Chord explores the way we perceive time, as either a line or a cycle. Two enormous machines with dozens of rotating arms and moving in opposite directions, weave rope with almost infinite slowness. An unusual brief Phil Garnham visited Conrad in his Hackney studio to get a feel for his work and ideas. “Conrad is a very clever and philosophical guy. He struggled to see how typeface design had any relevance to him and his art. This was going to be a challenge.” The artist presented the type designer with a pile of rope and a huge diagram of sketches and mathematical workings. “This was, in essence, my brief.” Phil developed three concepts, the simplest of which ticked all the boxes. “The idea of the strokes in the letterforms appearing and ending at peaks or points of origin fitted perfectly with Conrad’s idea of time occurring and ending at two ends of the sculpture.” Two versions Phil planned modules for two versions of the typeface: one with five lines in the letterforms and one with seven. He then drew the modules on-screen and twisted and turned them to build the machine that is FS Conrad. “This is not a simple headline typeface,” says Phil. “It’s not a rigid structure. It has varying character widths, and it’s informed by real typographic insight and proportions so that it actually works as piece of functioning, harmonious type.”
  10. Gravesend Sans by Device, $39.00
    Smart, legible and elegant, Gravesend Sans is a based on the unique typeface used for the iconic grass-green signage for the Southern Railway. In existence from 1923 to 1948, when the network was nationalised, the Southern Railway linked London with the Channel ports, South West England, the South coast resorts and Kent. The same design was also used for the ‘hawkeye’ signs on the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, differentiated by black letters on a yellow background. Reference for each letter was taken from vintage ‘target’ station nameplates and other platform signage. The rarest letters were the Q, seen in Queens Road Battersea, the X, seen in East Brixton, and the Z, used in Maze Hill, site of an infamous train crash in 1958. Being hand-made, the letters often differ in width and thickness. There was no lower case. The Bluebell Railway, a heritage steam line, runs over part of the old Southern Railway network and uses a very similar type. The design of the numbers differed considerably, but here have been taken from the Device 112 Hours font Smokebox. As well identifying platforms, they were used on the front of the steam engine’s smokebox, hence the name, and stylistically are more in keeping with the letters than some of the squarer versions that can be seen in old photographs. William Caslon IV is credited with the first Latin sans-serif type, shown in a 1816 Caslon specimen book. ‘Two Lines English Egyptian’, as it was called, was caps-only, and there are several other correlations between that type design and this one. Includes a selection of authentic arrows and manicules, plus abbreviated ligatures such as ‘St.’ (Saint or Street) ‘Rd.’ (Road) and ‘Jn.’ (Junction). The Cameo version includes many graphic banner elements that can be freely combined.
  11. Superia Aurora by Putracetol, $28.00
    Introducing Superia Aurora - a unique and modern display font that brings a classic, fun, and trendy impression to your designs. This font features various styles, including ligatures, making it even more unique and distinct. Superia Aurora is inspired by elegant typefaces and posters with display themes, making it perfect for a wide range of display purposes, such as album covers, posters, labels, t-shirts, apparel, signage, quotes, logos, greeting cards, logotypes, and more. It also supports multi-language characters, making it accessible for designers around the world. Superia Aurora offers alternative characters that are divided into several Open Type features, including Swash, Stylistic Sets, Stylistic Alternates, Contextual Alternates, and Ligatures. These features can be easily accessed using Open Type savvy programs like Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Photoshop, Corel Draw X version, and Microsoft Word. This allows you to customize and create unique lettering compositions that suit your design needs, giving you ample options for creative exploration. In your zip package, you'll find the Superia Aurora font files in otf, ttf, and woff formats, providing versatility for different design projects. The font includes uppercase and lowercase letters, numerals, punctuation, and symbols, ensuring that you have all the elements you need for your designs. Superia Aurora is also designed to support multi-language characters, making it suitable for designing in different languages. Whether you're creating designs in English, Spanish, French, or any other language, Superia Aurora has got you covered. In summary, Superia Aurora is a unique and modern display font that offers a variety of styles and Open Type features for customization. With its multi-language support and versatile design options, Superia Aurora is perfect for various display purposes. So, unleash your creativity with Superia Aurora and create eye-catching designs that stand out and make a statement! Thank you for choosing Superia Aurora from our collection. Happy designing!
  12. MVB Solitaire Pro by MVB, $39.00
    A typeface is a tool. Sure, there are frilly fonts that are more art than craft, showy faces that exist merely to call attention to themselves. But, in the end, any functional typeface worth its salt lives to serve one thing first: the text, the content. Everything else—the fashion of the moment, the allure of individual words and letters—is secondary. MVB Solitaire™ epitomizes this universal typographic mandate. As a tempered sans serif somewhere between a humanist and a gothic, MVB Solitaire captures a 21st-century neutrality. But practical doesn’t have to mean banal. MVB Solitaire has a soul. While some “neutral” type is dead the moment the ink hits the page, MVB Solitaire delivers text that feels lively, contemporary, relevant. Readers will not tire of this type. Behind the useful exterior is an arsenal of thoughtful technical features. It’s no surprise that this family’s creator, Mark van Bronkhorst, was first a graphic designer before becoming a type designer. Mark built all the goodies into MVB Solitaire that he would appreciate as a user: case-sensitive punctuation; alternate forms that can be invoked individually or together; oldstyle and lining figures in both tabular and proportional widths; slightly shorter lining figures that don’t stand out in running text, but also cap-height figures for all-cap settings; and the ability to speak nearly any Latin-based language. MVB Solitaire aspires to be the sort of workhorse that a designer keeps installed on their system at all times. It is a family bound to have a permanent spot in the font menu, always at the ready for projects (those most common of all) where the typography mustn’t mask the message. It has that quality that all truly useful typefaces have: the capacity to get the job done without getting in the way.
  13. Merry Brook by Letterhend, $19.00
    Merry Brook is a beautiful signature script based on manual hand writing. The stylistic alternate, ligatures and the tick and thin stroke kk make this font looks a real hand writing instead of typing a font. This type of font perfectly made to be applied especially in logo, and the other various formal forms such as invitations, labels, logos, magazines, books, greeting / wedding cards, packaging, fashion, make up, stationery, novels, labels or any type of advertising purpose.
  14. RT Dyans by Veteran Type, $14.00
    Dyans Font Family is a type of font that is inspired by vintage handwriting art that is often used in signwood, signpainting and others, usually this font is very suitable for manual hand lettering or hand painting art. This font uses the open type feature so you can explore alternative types in certain letters. Enjoyed This font conssist of: Stylistic Set Alternate Character Multilingual Support Math Symbol Numeral & Punctuation Hope your enjoy using this font Thank You.
  15. QARVIC by Alit Design, $12.00
    Introducing QARVIC TYPEFACE, a simple and beautiful font made with persistence and passion. QARVIC has a unique character when compared with the others sans serif font, it has two types of letters (plain type and type grunge) and there also has an outline QARVIC icon characters. QARVIC typeface is suitable for simple logo design, website header, wedding design, badges, menu fonts for website, to design fashion and others that have a minimalist and simple concept. Thank you and enjoy :)
  16. Catalina Shiba by Suza Studio, $13.00
    Catalina Shiba with alternative characters is divided into several Open Type features such as Swash, Stylistic Sets, Stylistic Alternate, Contextual Alternate. The Open Type feature can be accessed using Open Type savvy programs such as Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Photoshop version of Corel Draw X, and Microsoft Word. And this Font has provided PUA unicode (custom coded font). so that all alternative characters can be easily accessed in full by a craftsman or designer. Thank You.
  17. Parangon by ParaType, $25.00
    PT Parangon™ was designed in 1986-2002 by Anatoly Kudryavtsev and licensed by ParaType. This type family belonges to Neogrotesque subclass of closed Sans Serif. Letterforms of lower case is based on the tradition of 1710 Civil type and some modern Italic types. The family has a lot of weights and styles including Extra Condensed, Condensed, Regular, Extra Light, Light, Bold, Extra Bold. For advertising and display matter. Also it can be used for texts in advertising magazines.
  18. Chartha by Amarlettering, $30.00
    Chartha come with 250+ glyphs. The alternative characters were divided into several Open Type features such as Swash, Stylistic Sets, Stylistic Alternates, Contextual Alternates. The Open Type features can be accessed by using Open Type savvy programs such as Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Photoshop Corel Draw X version, And Microsoft Word. And this font has given PUA unicode so that all the alternate characters can easily be accessed in full by a craftsman or designer. Email : amarlettering@gmail.com
  19. Hello Falisha by IM Studio, $15.00
    Hello Falisha amazing script comes with 315+ glyphs. Alternative characters are divided into several Open Type features such as Swash, Stylistic Sets, Stylistic Alternates, Contextual Alternates. The Open Type feature can be accessed using programs that understand Open Type such as Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Photoshop Corel Draw X version, and Microsoft Word. And this font has provided PUA unicode (custom coded font). so that all the stunt doubles are easily accessible to the craftsman or designer.
  20. Mulidey by Amarlettering, $15.00
    Mulidey come with 200+ glyphs. The alternative characters were divided into several Open Type features such as Swash, Stylistic Sets, Stylistic Alternates, Contextual Alternates. The Open Type features can be accessed by using Open Type savvy programs such as Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Photoshop Corel Draw X version, And Microsoft Word. And this Font has given PUA unicode (specially coded fonts). so that all the alternate characters can easily be accessed in full by a craftsman or designer.
  21. Isbellium Pro by No Bodoni, $35.00
    Isbellium is a sans serif version of Dick Isbell’s Americana type, designed in 1967 and the last type cut in metal by the American Type Founders Co. (ATF). Isbellium retains the large x-height, open character, wide stance and elegance of Americana, but with a quieter voice and polite authority. Isbellium is a display face with broad Latin support along with small caps, fraction support and other typographic niceties are included in the ten font family.
  22. Calla Script by Great Lakes Lettering, $30.00
    Calla is a scripted typeface with an interesting personality. Each letter was created many times so you can get a truly distinctive look to your designs. Notice when you type with open type feature switched on, your letters will bounce around and change as you type? This feature ensures you get a new version of each letter throughout the words you use! Want to get even more custom? Pair all caps words with your lowercase words to create hierarchy!
  23. SF Obliquities - Unknown license
  24. SF Intellivised - Unknown license
  25. Delargo DT Informal by DTP Types, $49.00
    An original design by Malcolm Wooden of DTP Types Limited.
  26. Vigor DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    An original design by Malcolm Wooden of DTP Types Limited.
  27. Mega by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A bold engraver type style with a Wall Street look.
  28. American Advertise 008 by Intellecta Design, $22.90
    a decorative caps font digitized in the american type heritage
  29. DR Kruk Single by Dmitry Rastvortsev, $49.99
    Honorable Mention at Morisawa Type Design Competition 2019 (Tokyo, Japan).
  30. Finalia DT Condensed by DTP Types, $49.00
    An original design by Malcolm Wooden of DTP Types Limited.
  31. Pen Tip DT by DTP Types, $89.00
    An original design by Malcolm Wooden of DTP Types Limited.
  32. Garamond 96 DT by DTP Types, $89.00
    A revival design by Malcolm Wooden of DTP Types Limited.
  33. Blobbing by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    One of a few quirky display types by this designer.
  34. Cookie Dough by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A nice loose hand written brush or marker type script.
  35. Donut by Vladvertising, $20.00
    Yummy dönut ya? Does this type make me look fat?
  36. Titanic by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    Based on an early wood type design. An original creation.
  37. Triple Condensed Gothic by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    Based on an early wood type design. An original creation.
  38. Yeoman Gothic by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    Based on an early wood type design. An original creation.
  39. Antique by Storm Type Foundry, $26.00
    The concept of the Baroque Roman type face is something which is remote from us. Ungrateful theorists gave Baroque type faces the ill-sounding attribute "Transitional", as if the Baroque Roman type face wilfully diverted from the tradition and at the same time did not manage to mature. This "transition" was originally meant as an intermediate stage between the Aldine/Garamond Roman face of the Renaissance, and its modern counterpart, as represented by Bodoni or Didot. Otherwise there was also a "transition" from a slanted axis of the shadow to a perpendicular one. What a petty detail led to the pejorative designation of Baroque type faces! If a bookseller were to tell his customers that they are about to choose a book which is set in some sort of transitional type face, he would probably go bust. After all, a reader, for his money, would not put up with some typographical experimentation. He wants to read a book without losing his eyesight while doing so. Nevertheless, it was Baroque typography which gave the world the most legible type faces. In those days the craft of punch-cutting was gradually separating itself from that of book-printing, but also from publishing and bookselling. Previously all these activities could be performed by a single person. The punch-cutter, who at that time was already fully occupied with the production of letters, achieved better results than he would have achieved if his creative talents were to be diffused in a printing office or a bookseller's shop. Thus it was possible that for example the printer John Baskerville did not cut a single letter in his entire lifetime, for he used the services of the accomplished punch-cutter John Handy. It became the custom that one type founder supplied type to multiple printing offices, so that the same type faces appeared in various parts of the world. The type face was losing its national character. In the Renaissance period it is still quite easy to distinguish for example a French Roman type face from a Venetian one; in the Baroque period this could be achieved only with great difficulties. Imagination and variety of shapes, which so far have been reserved only to the fine arts, now come into play. Thanks to technological progress, book printers are now able to reproduce hairstrokes and imitate calligraphic type faces. Scripts and elaborate ornaments are no longer the privilege of copper-engravers. Also the appearance of the basic, body design is slowly undergoing a change. The Renaissance canonical stiffness is now replaced with colour and contrast. The page of the book is suddenly darker, its lay-out more varied and its lines more compact. For Baroque type designers made a simple, yet ingenious discovery - they enlarged the x-height and reduced the ascenders to the cap-height. The type face thus became seemingly larger, and hence more legible, but at the same time more economical in composition; the type area was increasing to the detriment of the margins. Paper was expensive, and the aim of all the publishers was, therefore, to sell as many ideas in as small a book block as possible. A narrowed, bold majuscule, designed for use on the title page, appeared for the first time in the Late Baroque period. Also the title page was laid out with the highest possible economy. It comprised as a rule the brief contents of the book and the address of the bookseller, i.e. roughly that which is now placed on the flaps and in the imprint lines. Bold upper-case letters in the first line dramatically give way to the more subtle italics, the third line is highlighted with vermilion; a few words set in lower-case letters are scattered in-between, and then vermilion appears again. Somewhere in the middle there is an ornament, a monogram or an engraving as a kind of climax of the drama, while at the foot of the title-page all this din is quietened by a line with the name of the printer and the year expressed in Roman numerals, set in 8-point body size. Every Baroque title-page could well pass muster as a striking poster. The pride of every book printer was the publication of a type specimen book - a typographical manual. Among these manuals the one published by Fournier stands out - also as regards the selection of the texts for the specimen type matter. It reveals the scope of knowledge and education of the master typographers of that period. The same Fournier established a system of typographical measurement which, revised by Didot, is still used today. Baskerville introduced the smoothing of paper by a hot steel roller, in order that he could print astonishingly sharp letters, etc. ... In other words - Baroque typography deserves anything else but the attribute "transitional". In the first half of the 18th century, besides persons whose names are prominent and well-known up to the present, as was Caslon, there were many type founders who did not manage to publish their manuals or forgot to become famous in some other way. They often imitated the type faces of their more experienced contemporaries, but many of them arrived at a quite strange, even weird originality, which ran completely outside the mainstream of typographical art. The prints from which we have drawn inspiration for these six digital designs come from Paris, Vienna and Prague, from the period around 1750. The transcription of letters in their intact form is our firm principle. Does it mean, therefore, that the task of the digital restorer is to copy meticulously the outline of the letter with all inadequacies of the particular imprint? No. The type face should not to evoke the rustic atmosphere of letterpress after printing, but to analyze the appearance of the punches before they are imprinted. It is also necessary to take account of the size of the type face and to avoid excessive enlargement or reduction. Let us keep in mind that every size requires its own design. The longer we work on the computer where a change in size is child's play, the more we are convinced that the appearance of a letter is tied to its proportions, and therefore, to a fixed size. We are also aware of the fact that the computer is a straightjacket of the type face and that the dictate of mathematical vectors effectively kills any hint of naturalness. That is why we strive to preserve in these six alphabets the numerous anomalies to which later no type designer ever returned due to their obvious eccentricity. Please accept this PostScript study as an attempt (possibly futile, possibly inspirational) to brush up the warm magic of Baroque prints. Hopefully it will give pleasure in today's modern type designer's nihilism.
  40. Pani Sans by Alessio Laiso Type, $19.99
    Pani Sans is a contemporary type family in 18 styles designed by Alessio Laiso. It takes inspiration from Italian rationalist and art deco typefaces, bringing them into the present with the mix of its reliable geometric structure and distinctive warm personality. The italics add to the unique character of the family by featuring distinguishing calligraphic touches. Pani Sans is fully equipped for intense professional use for both print and digital applications. It supports 219 languages, covering 100% of the Latin Plus character set, and it ships with powerful OpenType features including beautiful small caps, ligatures, stylistic alternates, fractions, tabular figures, old-style figures, and more. The variable fonts included in the family package allow you to pick the perfect weight, for unlimited design freedom.
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