10,000 search results (0.183 seconds)
  1. ARG219am - 100% free
  2. Back In The USSR DL - Personal use only
  3. Idolwild - Unknown license
  4. COnsume - Unknown license
  5. Torgny.. - Unknown license
  6. Grange Shadow - Unknown license
  7. Thiamine - Unknown license
  8. Eaglemania - Personal use only
  9. Thundercats - Unknown license
  10. Ego trip Fat Skew - Unknown license
  11. Plastic No.20 - 100% free
  12. Eklektic-Normal - Unknown license
  13. Reaver - Personal use only
  14. Action Man Extended - Unknown license
  15. Quake & Shake - Unknown license
  16. Imperfect font - Unknown license
  17. Rogue Hero Italic - Unknown license
  18. Tank Junior - Unknown license
  19. ReskaGraf - Unknown license
  20. Grunge Serifia - Unknown license
  21. Tour de Font - 100% free
  22. Corrodated J - Unknown license
  23. RaveParty Offset - Unknown license
  24. Hall Fetica Wide - Unknown license
  25. KASnake - Unknown license
  26. oktober - Unknown license
  27. Amature Circus - Unknown license
  28. Drummon - Unknown license
  29. MDRS-FD01 - Unknown license
  30. Spongebob Dingpants - Unknown license
  31. Big Fat Ugly Cow - Unknown license
  32. Oxona Caps - Personal use only
  33. Hetilica - Personal use only
  34. Beton by Linotype, $29.99
    The Bauer Typefoundry first released the Beton family of types in 1936. Created by the German type designer Heinrich Jost, the present digital version of the Beton family consists of six slab serif typefaces. First developed during the early 1800s, by the 1930s slab serif faces had become one of many stock styles of type developed by foundries all over the world. Because of their distance from pen-drawn forms and their industrial appearance, they were seen as “modern” typefaces. (Their serifs kept them from being too modern.) The first slab serif typefaces were outgrowths of didone style text faces (e.g., Walbaum). As newspapers and advertising grew in importance in the western world (especially in “Wild West” America), type founders and printers began to create bigger, bolder typefaces, which would set large headlines apart from text, and each other. Through display tactics, businesses and industry could begin to visually differentiate their products from one another. This craze eventually led to the development of monster sized wood type, among other things. By the 20th Century, the typographic establishment had begun to tame, categorize, and codify 19th Century type styles. It was in the wake of this environment that Jost developed Beton. The Beton family is a type “family” in a pre-1950s sense of the word. Although six styles of type are available, only four of them fit in logical progression with each other (Beton Light, Beton Demi Bold, Beton Bold, and Beton Extra Bold). The other two members of the family, Beton Bold Condensed and Beton Bold Compressed, are more like distant cousins. They function better as single headlines to text set in Beton Light or Beton Demi Bold, of as companions to totally separate typefaces.
  35. Pecot - Personal use only
  36. IJF0100 - Unknown license
  37. Silom - Unknown license
  38. Lino Stamp - Unknown license
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