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  1. Bluesman JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The classic blues album "I'm Jimmy Reed" released on the legendary Vee-Jay label out of Chicago featured title lettering in a bouncy, fun, casual take on the classic Latin Wide style of alphabet. Bluesman JNL offers a full digital typeface based on that album titling.
  2. Barb by chicken, $17.00
    Heavy as hell, awkward, asymmetric, sort-of-gothic… Four alternates for every letter, carefully kerned together and nicely shuffled for you by OpenType apps… Blunt has the sharp corners ever so slightly rounded off for a softer look at large sizes. Wired chops everything up for an origami angle…
  3. Cal Roman Modern by Posterizer KG, $19.00
    Cal Roman Modern is one more font from PKG “Cal” (Calligraphic) group. This time for calligraphic sketches we used a wide brush instead of the iron pen. Instead of minuscule letters, there are Small Caps (which are the same weight as capitals). Because there is no difference in the stroke thickness of capital letters and lowercase capital letters the difference in height is only one pen width, because of that, it is possible to use small capitals together with capital letters without noticing a difference in the thickness of the letters. Cal Roman Modern font is rhythmic, informal elegant, bright and light. As such, this font is widely used in the typographic creation of shorter text forms: magazine, catalogs and book titles, logos, posters, movie spots, banners...
  4. Bakery Goods by Ali Hamidi, $10.00
    Bakery Goods is a cool, vintage styled and adaptable display font. This original look will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles, to stationery.
  5. Vectora by Linotype, $40.99
    In creating Vectora, Adrian Frutiger was influenced by American Gothic styles, especially those of Morris F. Benton’s Franklin Gothic and News Gothic. Vectora is light and balanced, giving text legibility and a harmonious appearance.
  6. Alkenyz by Aliptype, $10.00
    Intoducing Alkenyz, with a blackletter style, brings Alkenyz font more elegant, dense, and gothic. Complete by 2 Variation Family fonts with highly decorated caps. Alkenyz font sets come up with capital, lowercase letters, numerics, punctuation, and Multilingual Support. Alkenyz is perfect and suitable for logotype, Music Events, Tatto, Books title, Branding, Barbershops Lettering logos and many more can be discovered for stunning and gothic feels with this font. I really hope that you can work with this item and bring your design to the next level. Need any information or support about these items, please contact me : Thank you Aliptype
  7. MBF Moonlander by Moonbandit, $15.00
    Moonlander, a modern bold and wide sans serif font.This clean and sharp typeface is inspired from the lively urban lifestyle and can be perfect as a headline, title, logo, branding.
  8. Agia Mary by Beary, $14.00
    Agia Mary is an amazing handwritten font, which looks attractive and natural on a wide variety of designs. This font is suitable for wedding invitation, branding, advertising, posters and titles.
  9. Alfarooq by Eyad Al-Samman, $20.00
    Alfarooq is the most widely known epithet for the Islamic figure Umar ibn al-Khattab (c. 586 - 644) who was a leading companion and an adviser to the Islamic prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) who later became the second Muslim Caliph after Muhammad’s death (pbuh) in 632. Muslims widely know Umar ibn Al-Khattab (may Allah be pleased with him) as Alfarooq (i.e., he who knows and distinguishes between truth and falsehood). Alfarooq is a unique, wide, and headline Arabic display typeface. The main trait of this typeface is the novel design of its letters' tails and its dots which renders it as one of the modern stylish typefaces used for headlines and titles. This can be noticed in different letters such as Ain, Ghain, Jeem, Khah, Seen, Sheen, and others. In addition, Alfarooq font has an Arabic character set which supports Arabic, Persian, Kurdish, and Urdu letters and numerals with a limited range of specific Arabic ligatures. This typeface comes in two ultra-bold styles (i.e., Alfarooq and Alfarooq-Pro) and more than 430 distinctive glyphs with a single weight for each style. Alfarooq typeface effectively offers diverse typographic and digital usages including mainly the very large and wide poster-size works. Due to its strong baseline-stroke, Alfarooq typeface is appropriate for heading and titling works in Arabic, Persian, Kurdish, and Urdu newspapers, magazines, and other printed materials. It is also elegantly suitable for signs, book covers, advertisement light boards, street and city names, products- and services names, and titles of flyers, pamphlets, and posters. The wide style of Alfarooq font’s characters gives it more distinction when it is used in greeting cards, covers, exhibitions' signboards, external or internal walls of malls, and also the exits and entrances of airports and halls.
  10. Order Form JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    In the MacKellar, Smiths & Jordan type specimen book of 1892 are examples of Lining Gothic Extended, a wide sans serif typeface. A lining font has the numerals aligned with the capital letter height, rather than following the “Old Style” method of smaller figures that could also descend below the baseline. Order Form JNL is the digital version of this design, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  11. Mattiface by Balpirick, $15.00
    Mattiface is a modern handwritten font, perfect for both formal and non-formal designs. This versatility will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles, to stationery.
  12. Versal - Personal use only
  13. Dark Blades by Tadiar, $19.00
    Dark Blades is an authentic gothic vintage font family of 4 fonts created for headers and text. Multilingual support (Latin Extended). Designed for: - Vintage branding (Clothes, Alcohol, Bikes, Games) - Horror - Music branding - Myth: Vampires, Zombie, Halloween, Werevolves, Magic, Fantasy - Medieval style Well use in vintage labels, headers & titles, Posters, Street Signs and other Outdoor, Package Design.
  14. A Charming Font - Personal use only
  15. KellyAnnGothic - Unknown license
  16. AnglicanText - Personal use only
  17. Sanctuary - Unknown license
  18. Caswallon Demo - Unknown license
  19. Lohengrin - Personal use only
  20. Giureska by URW Type Foundry, $39.99
    I always admired the beauty of Gothic letters, but lamented their low readability. The revivals of Gothic faces are beautiful, but they revive everything, including the traits that prevent readability. Blackletters are fine in ads and titles, but can’t be used in long texts (like books on Middle Ages, Medieval romances etc) where they would be the perfect historical choice. And I wanted to change this scenario. With Giureska, instead of taking one particular face to revive, I chose the best traits from many Gothic faces, i.e. the forms that were pleasant to look and easy to read. For the ‘small caps’, I studied uncial scripts and made a similar selection, adapting everything to make a unified font. With three weights, true italics and the uncials, Giureska can endure a variety of projects, bringing the appeal of Middle Ages much beyond the cover.
  21. Binner - Unknown license
  22. Baltra by Galapagos, $39.00
    After researching the type styles contemporary graphic designers have been using over the past few years, I noticed a consistent use of Copperplate Gothic, and its derivative designs, for various corporate advertising campaigns. That level of usage gave me the inspiration to design a display font possessing subtle characteristics of Copperplate Gothic, and various Latin Condensed designs. The font I ended up designing was semi-condensed, with more contrast between thicks and thins than in Copperplate. Baltra also has a subtle flair in its otherwise traditional lowercase, while possessing a larger than average lowercase x-height. Copperplate Gothic, on the other hand, has minimal contrast and uses small capitals for its lowercase. After examining extensive type specimens from wood type, metal type, phototype and digital type, I was not able to find a single design possessing a majority of Baltra's characteristics. Consequently, I consider Baltra to be a truly unique design, sharing with Copperplate Gothic only its flairs on stems, and having only subtle characteristics in common with traditional Latin designs.
  23. Kirha by Twinletter, $15.00
    Introducing our newest gothic font called Kirha blackletter font, presenting a vintage and elegant style. With a classic typeface, this font evokes confident elegance with striking details on each side of the lettering. Use this font to enhance visual projects that require a bold classic look that exudes style, elegance, and strong personality.
  24. VTCSuperMarketSaleTallTilt - Unknown license
  25. Amherst by Linotype, $29.99
    Amherst is a family of blackletter-inspired typefaces. This family, created by British designer Richard Yeend in 2002, is unique in that it mains the feel of blackletter/medieval type without relying directly on historical forms. Amherst is split into two different sub-families, Amherst and Amherst Gothic. Amherst is very geometric interpretation of Fraktur. Fraktur was a style of German type very popular in central Europe from 1517 until the early 20th Century. Its letters appear "broken" at certain angles and joints. Still, we recommend using it primarily for display purposes. Amherst is available in three weights: Regular, Bold, and Heavy. Amherst Gothic is very loosely inspired by late medieval letterforms, often called Texturas or Gothics. However, the letterforms of Amherst Gothic seem just as inspired by the Art Deco movements of the 1920s and by contemporary sans serif type design as anything else. Nevertheless, certain letters in this typeface do appear more "gothic" than others, especially A, D, M, Y, d, r, and x. Amherst Gothic is made up of three fonts, Amherst Gothic Split, Amherst Gothic Split Alternate, and Amherst Gothic Italic. Amherst Gothic Split has in-lined characters, and appears very ornamented. The alternate characters in Amherst Gothic Split Alternate are quite medieval in their appearance. Amherst Gothic Italic is the least medieval-looking of the set; its characters are very round, and more geometric. All six styles of the Amherst Family are OpenType format fonts, and include old style figures.
  26. Summer Motion by Seemly Fonts, $12.00
    Summer Motion is a simple and friendly display font, featuring the perfect amount of trendiness. This original look will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles to stationery.
  27. Sunny Days by Seemly Fonts, $14.00
    Sunny Days is a simple and friendly display font, featuring the perfect amount of trendiness. This original look will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles to stationery.
  28. Summer Folk by Seemly Fonts, $14.00
    Summer Folk is a simple and friendly display font, featuring the perfect amount of trendiness. This original look will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles to stationery.
  29. Simple Farmhouse by Seemly Fonts, $14.00
    Sunny Days is a simple and friendly handwritten font, featuring the perfect amount of trendiness. This original look will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles to stationery.
  30. Pleasant Feelings by Seemly Fonts, $14.00
    Pleasant Feelings is a simple and friendly display font, featuring the perfect amount of trendiness. This original look will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles to stationery
  31. Christmas Happiness by Seemly Fonts, $14.00
    Christmas Happiness is a simple and friendly handwritten font, featuring the perfect amount of trendiness. This original look will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles to stationery.
  32. HK Nova by Hanken Design Co., $30.00
    HK Nova is a geometric sans inspired by the Century Gothic and Futura. It formalizes Century Gothic and softens Futura.
  33. Marsden by J Foundry, $25.00
    Marsden is a bold, no-nonsense Grotesque. It was designed for display, branding, advertising, packaging or anywhere a strong voice is needed. Marsden is built on a geometric foundation, with just enough warmth to keep the style confident and lively. The family features 8 widths in 12 weights; from a Slim Hairline to an extremely bold Wide Super. The fonts flow from condensed to wide with design intent. The condensed forms feature flat sides and subtle curves, while the wider forms feature rounded sides and open curves. The character set is robust, covering extended latin. The default forms are contemporary with alternates including: single-story a, two-story g, curved terminal l, raised vertex M, rounded top A, fully rounded G, rounded leg R, straight tail Q and straight descender y, all separated into individual style sets for control and customization. Completing the family are the Text fonts where the weights, widths and spacing are adjusted for smaller use.
  34. Skyline by Font Bureau, $40.00
    Skyline was commissioned from Font Bureau by Condé Nast specifically as a headline typeface for Traveler magazine. This strongly personal work by Imre Reiner from 1929 and 1934 was known in Europe as Corvinus. Skyline Black and Bold Condensed offer immediate headline recognition through Reiner’s variations on the themes found in the classical Modern structure. Both styles were adapted by Jane Patterson; FB 1992
  35. Apres by Font Bureau, $40.00
    David Berlow and staff drew Apres as part of a series designed originally for the Palm Pre smart phone, for use both on the device and in print marketing. Simple, open letterforms and generous proportions provide a clear, comfortable, and inviting experience for navigation and readability. The plain-spoken geometry is regular and balanced, without being static or mechanical, for a friendly and forthright familiarity; FB 2008
  36. Soft Press by Canada Type, $24.95
    This is the rounded, softer version of Canada Type's popular Press Gothic. Originally done in 2011 for a global publisher, this font has already seen plenty of magazine and book cover action, perhaps even more than the sharp condensed face that spawned it. And like Press Gothic, Soft Press comes with small caps and biform/unicase forms, in addition to the main upper/lowercase set. The extended language support covers a wide range, including Greek and Cyrillic, Turkish, Baltic, Central and Eastern European languages, Celtic/Welsh and Esperanto. The Pro version combines all three TrueType fonts into one OpenType-programmed font, taking advantage of class-based kerning, the small caps feature, and the stylistic alternates feature for the biform shapes.
  37. Krylon - Unknown license
  38. Never Give Up by Seemly Fonts, $14.00
    Never Give Up is a simple and friendly handwritten font, featuring the perfect amount of trendiness. This original look will appeal to a wide range of crafty ideas, from letterheads and titles to stationery.
  39. Floro by Andinistas, $29.95
    Floro is a typographic family with 3 members designed by Carlos Fabian Camargo. Its idea combines medieval ideas, grotesque, stencil and grunge for T-shirts, stickers, advertising material design. More specifically the concept of Floro join several DNAís coordinating X height, ascendant, descendant and wide, in which proportions and adaptive optics were determined to inject great visual impact when composing titles. Its forms and counter forms have imperfections controlled with vitality and consistency. Floro is useful for ranking words and phrases with corroded edges and creases between the lines of his letters. In that vein, Floro refers to improvised design, deletion and copying. For that reason, its determinants seem stencil patterns that attract the attention of the reader. Its inaccurate decisions were planned that way, in which the type of contrast seems made with a flat tip and the amount of contrast between thick and thin is medium. Its sizes, regular and italic shine by their systematic wear and terminations sometimes in pointed forms resembling medieval darkness. In short, we can say that Floro comes from the miscegenation of Gothic calligraphy texture, foundational calligraphy and some refinements of gothic writings with italic sans-serif ideas of late 19th century. Even with the blur appearance, floro has ideal proportions to pile for horizontal and vertical areas when composing titles with striking looks and robust. And finally, floro dingbats are related shields and stamps, to accompany the written resulting useful at the level of visual support and hierarchical.
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