10,000 search results (0.204 seconds)
  1. Ugly Face - Unknown license
  2. Beatnik by Type Innovations, $39.00
    I was working at Bozell Worldwide, an advertising agency, on their yearly promotional pitch. An art director was looking for a condensed informal headline treatment to be used on one of the new ad campaigns. I took several different font designs and started to condense and scale the proportions in the hopes of finding several good solutions. They finally settled on a version of Times Roman, scaled horizontally to about 50 percent proportions. I liked the look so much that I later went back to the drawing board and refined the concept by adding slanted serifs and a varying alignment on all the letter forms giving the typeface a very casual and informal appearance. At about that time, I was reading a book by Jack Kerouac, and was so inspired by his writings on the ‘beat generation’ that I decided to name the font ‘Beatnik’. Afterwards, I added a set of true small capitals and old style figures. I'm currently working on additional weights and variations to expand this ‘hip’ new font series. Groovin' baby.
  3. Sadyan by Twinletter, $12.00
    Sadyan is a new san serif font with a lovely and graceful shape that can elevate your specific project to new heights. because we carefully and thoroughly develop each letterform in order to create a beautiful, appealing, and versatile blend of words for you to use in your various projects Now is the time to start using this typeface in your various projects. of course, your various design projects will be perfect and extraordinary if you use this font because this font is equipped with a font family, both for titles and subtitles and sentence text, start using our fonts for your extraordinary projects.
  4. Hunter by Aboutype, $24.99
    A redraw of Beton, Bauer, Intertype. with additional weights, shorter x-height and new Italic styles. Roman and Italic share same Roman Caps. Hunter has some text kerning but requires subjective display kerning and compensation.
  5. Neverwinter - Unknown license
  6. Zar - Unknown license
  7. Nadia Serif - 100% free
  8. funk - Unknown license
  9. Turtles - Unknown license
  10. ROTRING - Unknown license
  11. Dragonmaster - Unknown license
  12. Thundercats - Unknown license
  13. GALLAECIA - Unknown license
  14. Witchcraft - Unknown license
  15. Scrapes - Unknown license
  16. Gargoyles - Unknown license
  17. Kabanoss - Unknown license
  18. Faktos-Mirror - Unknown license
  19. Transmaidens - Unknown license
  20. tenuki gothic - Unknown license
  21. King Arthur Special - Unknown license
  22. Dinobots - Unknown license
  23. D_rough - Unknown license
  24. Visionaries - Unknown license
  25. Lancelot Pro by Canada Type, $39.95
    When type historians look back on Jim Rimmer, they will consider him the last type designer who just couldn't let go of metal type, even though he was just as proficient in digital type. Lancelot is one definite case in point: A face designed and produced in digital as late in the game as 1999, only to spring onto the new millenium a couple of years later as a metal type cast in three sizes. That was Jim, a time traveler constantly reminding the craft of its origins. This particular time machine was originally designed as a simple set of attractive caps that emphasize the beauty of the variable conventional dialogue between the drawing tool and the intended final form, and the one exchanged within the totality of the forms themselves. Jim designed two weights, with contrast and counterspace being the main difference between them. In 2013, the Lancelot family was remastered and greatly expanded. Lancelot Pro is now a wonder of over 840 glyphs per font, including smaller versions of the caps in the minuscule slots, and alternates and ligatures that can transform the historic spirit of the original design into anything from half-uncial to outright gothic. Language support goes beyond the extended Latin stuff, to cover Cyrillic and Greek as well. 20% of the Lancelot Pro family's revenues will be donated to the Canada Type Scholarship Fund, supporting higher typography education in Canada.
  26. Bottle Fork by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    Here is my font with carved out letters, like a really bad stamp. Each lowercase letter has 3 different versions, and that makes your text more natural, organic and handmade. Normally I kern my fonts throughout, but this time there is no kerning at all...and that's odd, when we're not talking about monospaced fonts. Anyway, Bottle Fork has its flaws and jumpy x-height...but that's exactly the charm of it all! :)
  27. Gelato Fresco by Eclectotype, $49.00
    Gelato Fresco represents a coming-of-age of a script font that started life in 2011 as the popular Gelato Script. In 2018, Gelato Luxe sought to improve on Gelato Script, and now, with the addition of extra weights for the first time, Gelato Fresco takes the baton. What was always a typographically sophisticated and versatile font, has reached new levels of usability as it becomes a family. In its previous incarnations, the typeface has graced everything from designer handbags to prime-time TV shows; food blogs to wedding invitations; glossy magazines to (not so imaginatively!) ice cream shops. I can't wait to see what this even more versatile version gets used for.
  28. Fairground by Monotype, $15.99
    Fairground was created by calligrapher Rachel Yallop using a vintage nib and ink. This gives it a light flourishing feel, combining the formal penmanship of calligraphy with something a little more informal at the same time. It’s a delicate font with a full range of upper and lowercase alternate characters. Oh, and it has ligatures too!
  29. Avento by Larin Type Co, $16.00
    Avento this is a wonderful vintage font designed in the Art Deco style. With it, you will be transported to the era of the 20s-60s. it will add charm, estetica and create a unique atmosphere of this time in your design project. this font includes four styles : regular, InLine, thin outline and bold outline, as well as it has many alternates that you can use to play with the dynamics of the font. This font is easy to use and has OpenType features. Following international .
  30. Canto by Lipton Letter Design, $29.00
    Inspired by Edward M. Catich’s seminal thesis on the origins of the Roman inscriptional style, such as that found on Trajan’s column, Richard Lipton’s Canto traces the path from an expressive, preparatory Brush (with Brush Open to preserve gestural details at smaller sizes), through informal Pen, to the formal Roman. Classical capitals are accompanied by Lipton’s own calligraphic lowercase, small caps, and swashes.
  31. Antiqva by Ultramarin, $40.00
    An alphabet based on classic Roman letterforms. As a model for our typography since ancient times, Roman stone inscription remains the starting point for all Latin letterforms. Working with these classical letters is an eternal dance for the graphic artist. The constant drawing and refinement of detail. A typographical relationship for ever.
  32. Economica Cyrillic PRO by Underground, $29.90
    Economica Pro is a font especially developed for design in complex situations: It is ideal for use in small sizes on screen and in print. It has been tested successfully for use in very small sizes without losing legibility. Its ink traps ensure smooth operation even on low quality papers. It is an ideal font for newspapers, news portals and all designs requiring space saving. Now also in Cyrillic!
  33. Underwood1913 - Personal use only
  34. Samarkan - Unknown license
  35. EURONEW - Unknown license
  36. Escape Pod - Unknown license
  37. CitonLightDB - Unknown license
  38. ARIA - Unknown license
  39. Shalom - Unknown license
  40. Nurnberg by Vintage Voyage Design Supply, $20.00
    Nürnberg (Nuremberg in eng.) New blackletter-sans font family in modern look with contrasts elements in six widths. Impressive style with non-typical Blackletter uppercases as alternates and normal Sans as standard. In the company with good-looking lowercases and their alternates you can get outstanding result for your project. Six widths give you wide range of use. Massive Bold or Black will be really good in none-long magazine headlines, some logos or cafe/bar signs, menu's or coffeeshops. Medium or Regular is for normally (not giant) text blocks or any of accented texts. Light and Thin are good in big pt. Short word forms or numerals is just awesome.
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