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  1. Brughler by Invasi Studio, $17.00
    Take inspiration from the old-fashioned era. The Brughler typeface gives a vintage aesthetic. With it's unique & distinct characteristics, it stands out from the rest, while also keeping a timeless appeal. Brughler comes with 3 different styles of the font: Regular, Rough, and Stamp. Brughler's Rough & Stamp versions allow you to create a printed look without using 3rd party effects, removing a step in the creation of your final product. It is perfect for packaging, posters, and branding projects that need a bold impact. Features: Uppercase Numerals & Punctuation Alternates Multilanguage Supports 60+ Latin based languages
  2. Monasterka by DePlictis Types, $31.00
    Monasterka refers to the preservation of ancient traditions and the right orthodox faith. It is a bold, archaic typeface in two styles especially designed for printing purposes. It is a powerfull, expressive typeface inspired by old cyrillic writing and may do a great job for brochures and publications designs that has to do with religious or historical thematic, mostly as headlines and titles with great impact and personality. This family has an extended language coverage for many languages including latin, cyrillic and greek alphabets and comes in two styles.
  3. Monotype Clearface by Monotype, $29.99
    A rather narrow and compact design, Monotype Clearface combines both old style and antique characteristics. The lowercase letters are tall, the ascenders and descenders quite short. The intention was to produce a typeface that was easy to read in small sizes, hence the name. Monotype Clearface Bold was first cut for mechanical composition in 1922, and was based on the Clearface Gothic design created by Morris Fuller Benton for ATF in 1910. Although designed as a text face, Monotype Clearface is now more commonly used in advertising and display work.
  4. Killarney by Fontdation, $15.00
    Introducing our new font Killarney. A bold and heavy display font that inspired by the vintage/classic letterforms used in old-advertisements. Mouse-crafted with high attention to details; clean lines, sharp edges and tempting curves. Its square and blocky letterforms make Killarney a great for headlines and space killer. Packed with 500+ glyphs, Killarney composed of slanted version, standard upper/lower case characters, numerals, punctuations, some multilingual letters, alternate characters, stylistic sets, ligatures, etc. This font is a must have item for your designing arsenal. Go get yours now while it's hot. :D
  5. Gazeta by Vanarchiv, $21.00
    This typeface was designed for editorial purposes (text sizes), where the letterforms contain short serifs (more economical). This font family contains different weights (from Extra Light until to Extra Bold) to create an simple and sequential typographic hierarchy scale. There are two different weights and options designed specifically for text sizes (Regular and Text). The design is classical but contain some contemporary details, which are not distractive for reading, it's simple and clean at small sizes. This font family include italics, small caps, ligatures, old style and tabular figures.
  6. Banret by Ryzhychenko Olga, $12.00
    Banret is built using simple geometric shapes. It is mostly the result of my experiments on the other font I made earlier in 2016, called Inventor. Font is inspired by old fonts of the beginning of the 20th century. Capital letters are built with one to four proportions. The font has four weights: normal, and bold, and two alternatives: ribbon, and flag. As far as it is a decorative font, it is not designed for large amounts of text. But it is perfect for creating branding elements, logos, slogans and posters.
  7. Souffle by Eurotypo, $48.00
    Souffle fonts are carefully hand-drawn made, with different letter shapes, full of ligatures, and stylistic alternates that will provide great flexibility for your designs. They come in three versions: Solid, College and Rayé (rough sketched); Including diacritics for CE languages. They fit perfect for logos and packaging design, posters, children books and many other purposes.
  8. FS Millbank by Fontsmith, $80.00
    A sign of something better When designer Stuart de Rozario surveyed the fonts used in signage on London’s public transport systems, he reached a dead end. They seemed staid, sterile, lacking in personality, and ill-suited to use by modern brands. He was pointed in another direction entirely. ‘The driving force behind my thoughts was to design something more current and fresh without compromising legibility and clarity. A font with both personality and function, that’s versatile and large and small sizes, and effortless to read, but which also says something new.’ Speed reading Late for a meeting and can’t find your way? Trying to catch a flight? Lost in a hospital? Reading signs is a different business to reading a book or a newspaper. Text on signs needs to be deciphered quickly and effortlessly. So the legibility criteria for signage letterforms are different to those for normal reading, too. Throughout FS Millbank’s uppercase and lowercase alphabets, characters have been given features for extra definition, including: wide ink traps on the A, K, M, V, W, X and Y; a serifed i, accentuated spurs on the a, d, l u; and different x-height shapes on the b, g, p and q. Distinctive forms and generous, open internal shapes all help the quick reading of sign text, and wide, open terminals and counters allow similar letter shapes to be distinguished easily when viewed at different angles. Running down a corridor, maybe... Positive/negative Standard type tends to glow on the kind of dark backgrounds often used for signage, and look heavier than its true weight. To correct the imbalance caused by this optical trick, special weights of the typeface have to be drawn for these ‘negative’, light-on-dark applications. These are lighter than their comparable positive weights to overcome the ‘glow’ effect. After extensive tests of the negative weights, at all sizes, we achieved the right optical balance. Glowing, glowing, gone. Icons This wouldn’t be a signage typeface without its own set of icons, or symbols, to help people find what they’re looking for. So, to sit alongside the positive and negative fonts, we’ve created a comprehensive set of 172 icons, covering a wide range of applications from transport and user interface to information and directional. Designed within the typeface capital height, they sit on the baseline and are spaced centrally.
  9. Lust Stencil by Positype, $39.00
    When you hear that name, you likely ask yourself, ‘why?!’ I did too, but the number of requests could not be ignored. Once I finally decided to move forward with it, the only way to solve the offering would be to adhere to the same theme of indulgence, I planned for the same number of optical weights AND Italics. Yeah, italic stencils… ok, why not? It’s not a new concept. One thing to note and a creative liberty I assumed during the design. Lust Stencil would not be just a redaction or removal of stress to produce a quick stencil. To do that, would just be a cheap solution. Strokes had to resolve themselves correctly and/or uniquely to the concept of the stencil format. And, it had to be heftier. For it it to look correctly, it needed about 8% additional mass to the strokes for it to retain the effervescent flow of the curves and the resolute scalloped lachrymals. The Lust Collection is the culmination of 5 years of exploration and development, and I am very excited to share it with everyone. When the original Lust was first conceived in 2010 and released a year and half later, I had planned for a Script and a Sans to accompany it. The Script was released about a year later, but I paused the Sans. The primary reason was the amount of feedback and requests I was receiving for alternate versions, expansions, and ‘hey, have you considered making?’ and so on. I listen to my customers and what they are needing… and besides, I was stalling with the Sans. Like Optima and other earlier high-contrast sans, they are difficult to deliver responsibly without suffering from ill-conceived excess or timidity. The new Lust Collection aggregates all of that past customer feedback and distills it into 6 separate families, each adhering to the original Lust precept of exercises in indulgence and each based in large part on the original 2010 exemplars produced for Lust. I just hate that it took so long to deliver, but better right, than rushed, I imagine. It would have taken even longer if not for font engineer and designer, Potch Auacherdkul. Thanks Potch.
  10. Sweet Upright Script by Sweet, $39.00
    Sweet Upright Script is the first release for Sweet Fonts Collection, published by MVB Fonts. It is an interpreted revival of a vintage, social engraving lettering style that was popular during the 20th Century. It is probably the first digital version of the design. With the advent of the engraving machine (a pantograph device) around 1900, commercial engraving moved from the use of hand-cut plates to the use of masterplates (lettering patterns). Lettering was traced from the masterplate using the engraving machine, letter by letter, onto a coated steel plate, that would then be etched in a chemical bath. The resulting plate was used to print engraved stationery with the raised print distinctive to the process. Many of these lettering styles were used for decades for commercial and social applications (letterheads, wedding invitations, etc.), but as they were merely traced alphabets, were not "fonts". Many remain unavailable in digital form. Over time, a number of the most popular styles were adapted to phototype, which sped up the process of plating for engraving, avoiding the need to trace each letter by hand with the engraving machine. Later, when type went digital, these phototype fonts were revived as digital fonts. As a result, the styles offered by engravers narrowed over time, as has the range of engraving styles revived in digital form.
  11. Green Mountain 3 - Unknown license
  12. SF Big Whiskey - Unknown license
  13. ModernGradate - Unknown license
  14. SF New Republic - Unknown license
  15. SF Technodelight - Unknown license
  16. SF Tattle Tales - Unknown license
  17. Snott - Unknown license
  18. SF Quartzite - Unknown license
  19. Gr-Memories - Unknown license
  20. SF Juggernaut Condensed - Unknown license
  21. 612Koshey - Unknown license
  22. SF Juggernaut - Unknown license
  23. 612KosheyLine - Unknown license
  24. SF Americana Dreams Upright - Unknown license
  25. 612KosheyPL - Unknown license
  26. SF Americana Dreams SC - Unknown license
  27. SF Atarian System - Unknown license
  28. SF Technodelight NS - Unknown license
  29. SF Solar Sailer - Unknown license
  30. SF Fortune Wheel - Unknown license
  31. Lemon Twist by Art Grootfontein, $20.00
    Modern and bold, LemonTwist gives your designs a little zest of fresh feeling...
  32. Linear Gothic by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A great headline face very bold and graphic. Not recommended for small sizes!
  33. Rahel MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    This bold and high contrast typeface is mainly used for extreme outstanding headlines.
  34. Ringa by Melvastype, $25.00
    Ringa is extra bold slab serif typeface with a fun and sympathetic feel.
  35. Geo by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A Bold Powerful Geometric design. Great headline face; works well in many applications.
  36. FG Nadja by YOFF, $13.95
    FG Nadja is bold and beautiful - with a real artistic flair around her.
  37. Kaine by The Northern Block, $12.80
    A bold slab-serif typeface influenced by Spagetti Western posters of the 1960s.
  38. Supernational 264 by Fonts of Chaos, $10.00
    Grand brother of Super National in extra bold. Looks nice in all size.
  39. Pigama MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    The bold presence is in every weight you choose - for packaging, signage etc.
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