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  1. Rockin Roman NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Here's another gem from Blandford Press' Pen & Brush Lettering and Practical Alphabets. Pleasant, playful and packed with personality, this typeface rocks.
  2. Malachim Writing by Deniart Systems, $10.00
    Magical alphabet used by secret societies in times past. NOTE: this font comes with a comprehensive interpretation guide in pdf format.
  3. Mayan by Grummedia, $20.00
    Designed for a role-playing scenario, this alphabet was fun to create and fun to ‘translate’ when incorporated into replica stelae.
  4. Appelstroop by Hanoded, $15.00
    Appelstroop literally means ‘Apple Syrup’ in Dutch, but it is also know as Apple Butter; a slightly sweet & sour goo that you can use to sweeten things, or, as we do in Holland, spread it on a sandwich. It’s delicious, give it a try! Appelstroop font is a chunky, slightly eroded affair. It is mostly all caps, with a few lower case glyphs thrown in for good measure. Use this sticky font for your product packaging, toys and kids book covers!
  5. Abrikos by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    Abrikos is apricot in danish. A lovely and sweet fruit, often underestimated and not very well known - but if you ask me, it is delicious! The letters were drawn using a small brush, and as you can see, I almost ran out of ink - leaving the letters somewhat rough. I made 4 different versions of each lowercase letter, and these cycle automatically as you type in order to make some randomness. I threw in an extensive set of international characters as well! Enjoy!
  6. Silvestre Weygel by Intellecta Design, $20.90
    A complete figurative alphabet was published by one Peter Flotner (ca. 1485-1546) in 1534. In Flotner’s alphabet, naked or nearly-naked figures are posed singly or disposed in pairs to form the various letters. Unlike de Grassi’s alphabet, we find only human figures here, no other animals. And unlike Tory’s illustrations, these letters seem an end in themselves, rather than the means of demonstrating a design strategy. Flotner’s alphabet was imitated by other engravers. The letters G and N are reproduced from an alphabet published by one Martin Weygel in Bavaria in 1560. Peter Flötner , c.1485-1546, German medalist and artisan, possibly Swiss by birth. He was active in decorative sculpture, wood carving, and other crafts, making medals and plaques and furnishing designs of classical motifs for silversmiths. He was in Nuremberg by 1522 and did most of his work there, although he made two trips to Italy. Flötner is now regarded as a pioneer of the German Renaissance. His Kunstbuch was published in 1549. In the Metropolitan Museum are five of his bronze plaques illustrating biblical episodes. A stylistical tip : Use this caps with SchneiderBuchDeutsch, as shown in the banners above, to create a perfect historiated layout.
  7. In the whimsical world of typography, where letters are not just letters but characters bursting with personality, the font Misirlou Day by Ray Larabie performs a vibrant hula dance, beckoning the su...
  8. Drop Cap One by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Drop Cap One is a drop cap or an initial cap font. Even though it has all the letters of the alphabet it is not an alphabet font to be used for headlines or body copy. It has no kerning or punctuation except a period. It does not have accent marks. There are basically 2 alphabets in this font. The lighter letters are lower case and the darker letters are upper case. The light and dark letters are interchangeable. While a fun desktop font the real inspiration for this font was my need for a webfont for initial caps for blogging. It could also make a great scrapbooking font too. Lots of uses for this quirky little font.
  9. GHEA Narek Serif by Edik Ghabuzyan, $65.00
    This font family can be used as Display as well as text font. The font family includes Armenian, Cyrillic and Latin alphabets.
  10. Crunchy by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Vintage handwriting font with stylistic alternate alphabet, contextual alternates, swashes, initial and final alternates, as well as ligatures and 200+ special characters.
  11. Diamondwood JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Diamondwood JNL is based on examples of vintage wood type with condensed, elongated diamond shapes containing the various letters of the alphabet.
  12. Ivan Zemtsov by K-Type, $20.00
    The Ivan Zemtsov font is based on the lettering of Russian mailartist Ivan Zemtsov, and features both the Latin and Cyrillic alphabets.
  13. Jaggard by Intellecta Design, $23.90
    Jaggard is a classical renaissance penmanship inspired font which works great when used for display reasons only. Contains only uppercase alphabet designs.
  14. Refuse Pro by The Type Fetish, $25.00
    Refuse has an extended Latin, extended Cyrillic and Greek alphabet so it will work with most languages in Europe and the Americas.
  15. Christel Line by JOEBOB graphics, $19.00
    As a present, my sister in law Christel Marseille-Hoksbergen created a hand-sewn alphabet which I liked so much, I decided to turn it into a font and this is the result. Probably a fun font to use in scrapbooks or magazines about handmade things. As an addition to the christelLine font, Christel Hoksbergen created another hand sewn alphabet which I turned into a font. This time with filled characters.
  16. Ongunkan Tolkien Cirth Runic by Runic World Tamgacı, $55.00
    Cirth was invented by John Ronald Reuel Tolkien for use in his novels. It is modelled on the Anglo-Saxon Runic alphabet, and is used to write the language of the Dwarves (Khuzdul) in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings in inscriptions in wood and stone. It is also used as a alternative alphabet for English. The fonts here are both the hobbit version and the version for English.
  17. Strokes by Favorite Fonts, $17.00
    The "Strokes" font family presented here has several styles: regular, italic, bold and bold italic. The font supports the alphabet consisting of Latin letters and symbols, Cyrillic, Tatar. The composition of the font "Strokes" includes graphemes from uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, standard characters. The originality of the font lies in its name. The "Strokes" font is made up of many intersecting lines, forming rounded sans-serif letters, but at the same time smooth and easy to read, which will fit perfectly into your composition. The unusualness and attractiveness of the font makes it noticeable among the texts that surround us everywhere. This property is convenient to use on signs, logos, corporate identity, product packaging. The decorativeness of the font is eye-catching and will add important accents to your work.
  18. 1689 GLC Garamond Pro by GLC, $42.00
    This typeface family was inspired by a set of fonts, designed in the Garamond style, used for an edition of Remarques critiques sur les œuvres d’Horace by “D.A.E.P.”, published in Paris in 1689 by two different booksellers: Deny Thierry and Claude Barbin. We can see some differences in comparison with our “pure” Garamond (see our 1592 GLC Garamond), particularly in the lowercase of the Normal style and the uppercase of the Italic. Unfortunately, we know neither the name of the punchcutter, nor that of the printer. This complete font set contains small caps, fractions all the way up to 1999/1999, historical and standard ligatures, and all of the fleurons contained in the edition (Normal style only). The alphabet covers all Western, Eastern and Central European languages (including Celtic diacritics) and Turkish.
  19. Lucida Console by Monotype, $50.99
    Kris Holmes and Charles Bigelow designed Lucida Console in 1993 for on-screen console and terminal emulation windows that needed monospaced fonts with sturdy letter shapes. Lucida Console has simple, clear, robust letterforms, a big x-height, and economical fitting. It looks large on-screen and in print but takes up less space than traditional typewriter and monospaced fonts. Its short capitals were originally technical adaptations to user interfaces on computers, but its compact look and active italic appeals to typographers and designers for a wide variety of uses, including in games and digital devices. The Lucida Console family has 675 glyphs in each font, and supports the WGL and W1G character sets. This includes the Extended Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic alphabets along with a generous set of symbols, box-draw, and graphical characters.
  20. Decoral Soft by Totem, $30.00
    Decoral Soft depicts the character of Art Deco period typography and reinterprets it into modern approaches. This typeface is a friendly and flexible family that is fun to use. It comes with a set of 670 characters per weight, supporting over 50 different languages using the Latin alphabet. Decoral Soft also comes with special stylistic sets and swash characters that allow the user to be creative and playful with the type, helps enhance many different possibilities that certainly will spice up your design. Decoral Soft will satisfy all your typographic needs, from book jackets to monograms to packaging, logos, and even wedding invitations—timelessly elegant, with a distinctive flair that exudes Art Deco typography in a fresh, modern way. The wide selection of titling alternates and ligatures make copyfitting a delight.
  21. African Gold by Scholtz Fonts, $19.00
    The name African Gold is associated with Johannesburg, the "City of Gold"; (the Zulu name for Johannesburg is eGoli). The font was so named for two reasons: the intricate African patterns within the characters of the font suggest the shafts and tunnels of a gold mine, and, as with a gold mine, the richness lies within. African Gold is a display font that is best used at larger sizes, however, it contains a full character set with all accents, special characters, diacritical marks and all the characters are carefully spaced and kerned. The numerals are mono-spaced so that they will line up correctly in columns of figures. The letters of the alphabet are spaced according to their width and are carefully kerned to create an attractive appearance.
  22. Backspacer by Emigre, $39.00
    Years ago, by happenstance, designers Nancy Mazzei and Brian Kelly found an old decrepit typewriter in an abandoned lot with tall grass in Brooklyn. They kept it around their apartment for two years. Then one day they decided that it was time to move and they planned to throw the old typewriter away. But it was so beautiful they wanted to keep at least a part of it. So they decided on keeping the keys. They kept the keys in a brown bag until one fine day the keys were introduced to a camera. It was a match made in heaven that resulted in some beautiful quirky images of typewriter keys. These images were the inspiration for Backspacer. They were scanned, traced and turned into a working typeface by Zuzana Licko.
  23. Bouteilles by Hanoded, $16.00
    Bouteilles is French for bottles. No fancy name this time, just bottles. You’re probably wondering why I chose this name… Well, I was taking out the glass (in Holland we recycle just about everything, glass, paper, plastic, metal, garden and kitchen waste, etc.), which included a number of French wine bottles. As I was throwing them into the underground container one block from where I live, I realised that the word Bouteilles actually sounds great and it would be a nice name for a font! Yes, it is that simple! Bouteilles is a nice brush font I made with my trusted Chinese ink and a really worn brush I found. It comes with all the diacritics you need plus two sets of alternates, which you can play with!
  24. CA Zentrum by Cape Arcona Type Foundry, $40.00
    CA Zentrum is a compelling mix of conciseness and pragmatism. Bold, distinct and original, contemporary and versatile. At a closer look, it reveals rounder reading-friendly forms. The choice of weights aims at an easy, straight forward use. A set of five well-balanced weights and three widths ranging from light to black and from condensed to wide. This variety ought to be enough to cover most needs without throwing the typographer into questions. The family’s glyph set supports over 100 Latin languages. With its blend of timelessness and modernity, the type-family is uniquely suited for modern corporate visual languages, websites, corporate design, editorial design and advertising. Careful spacing and a great choice of OpenType features make it especially well suited for text copy and/or editorial design.
  25. Etewut Serif by Etewut, $35.00
    Proudly introducing Etewut Serif family. Each font supports extended latin and basic cyrillic alphabet. There are many alternative symbols ligature and special characters.
  26. Passing The River by Deniart Systems, $10.00
    Alphabet primarily used for writings with magical purpose in ancient times NOTE: this font comes with a comprehensive interpretation guide in pdf format.
  27. Polen by Intellecta Design, $30.90
    Polen is a soft, well elaborated and unusual font design. Works great when used for display reasons only. Contains only uppercase alphabet designs.
  28. Breesh by Noir Typo, $19.00
    Breesh font is a dancing handwriting, quickly trace with a pointed brush. The inspiration come from both asian calligraphy, italic and copperplate alphabets.
  29. Claim Check JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A page from an old manual for sign painters yielded the hand-lettered alphabet that served as a model for Claim Check JNL.
  30. Polen Two by Intellecta Design, $29.90
    Polen is a soft, well elaborated and unusual font design. Works great when used for display reasons only. Contains only uppercase alphabet designs.
  31. Arte Critique JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Arte Critique JNL was modeled after an alphabet in an early 20th Century French lettering book spotted online at an image sharing site.
  32. Thousands by Dharma Type, $19.99
    This slab serif has an incredible type system. By using power of OpenType alternates, typographic flexibility going up and up as its name indicates. Serifs transform, change to small caps and ligatures give you rich typography.
  33. Velour - Unknown license
  34. Rogers2 - Unknown license
  35. Graced Script by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Graced Script is a calligraphic brush font in high quality, with a full alternate alphabet. Turn on contextual alternates to get natural letter variations.
  36. Barokah Ramadhan by Gartype Studio, $17.00
    Barokah Ramadhan is script font inspired by arabic alphabet / calligraphy,come with alternate and multilingual features.This font very suitable for your arabic stylish design.
  37. Ongunkan Modern Latin by Runic World Tamgacı, $45.00
    I present a beautiful interpretation of the Modern Latin Alphabet, in which the foundations of today's modern world and civilization have risen, enjoy it.
  38. Lustre by ParaType, $25.00
    Non-alphabetic typeface consisting of 38 silhouette and outline images of women’s footwear and accessories. Designed by Yana Kutyina. Released by ParaType in 2008.
  39. Blippo by Bitstream, $29.99
    Another variant of Bayer’s Universal Alphabet, resembling ITC Bauhaus in design, ITC Ronda in proportion and fit, prepared by FotoStar in the mid 1970s.
  40. Manas Pro by Fontuma, $24.00
    Manas is the name of the epic of the Kyrgyz Turks. The font family is also designed with serifs to reflect the characteristics of the epic from which it is named. This typeface, which is a serif, consists of three families: ▪ Manas: Font family containing Latin letters ▪ Manas Pro: Font family including Latin, Arabic and Hebrew alphabets ▪ Manas World: A family of typefaces including Latin, Cyrillic, Greek, Arabic and Hebrew alphabets
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