3,922 search results (0.007 seconds)
  1. Twelve Ton Goldfish - Unknown license
  2. Food Doodles Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Food Doodles Too is a 31-picture clipart font of food. Use them as dingbats or enlarge the small pictures and use them as clipart. Lots to choose from… from soup to nuts OK no nuts. But there is pizza, pasta, soup, eggs, sushi, sandwich, hot dog, hamburger, fish, kabobs, toast, breads, cheese, pickles, shrimp, soufflé, and desserts galore… cake, pie, cookie, cupcake, trifle, sundae, banana split, milk, tea and more. Food Doodles Too works nicely with Coffee & Tea Doodles. If you need some fancy cakes check out Party Doodles. All in the same line drawing style to mix and match.
  3. Zwoelf Ton B by Volcano Type, $19.00
  4. Party Doodles Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Party Doodles Too is the companion font to the popular font Party Doodles. 29 fun icons including a tray of champagne glasses, appetizers, balloons, pinwheel, stork with a baby, ace of hearts playing card, top hat and tunes, dice, bowling ball and pins, gifts, party umbrellas, cakes, cupcakes, ice cream, lollipop, drinks, corkscrew, noise makers, banners and candy.
  5. Diva Doodles Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Diva Doodles Too is more of Outside the Line's top selling font Diva Doodles. More girl things in a line drawn, playful style. Font includes clothes, purses, shoes, jewelry, glove, high heel, bikinis, hats, perfume, flowers and cocktails and the scripted word Diva.
  6. Christmas Doodles Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Christmas Doodles Too is the follow up font to Christmas Doodles. More Christmas icons including a tree, fun new ornaments, a dove, gifts, pine trees, a church, drinks, sleigh, tree lights, drum, horn, Santa hat, holly, snowflakes, stockings, candy, and mistletoe. This font works well with Holiday Doodles and Holiday Doodles Too which also have Christmas icons in them.
  7. Ten Ton Truck by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Ten Ton Truck is a heavy, but very legible font. Works very well with massive text, as well as headlines and such.
  8. Heart Doodles Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Heart Doodles Too is the follow up font to Heart Doodles . This one is a bit fussier and fancier and more detailed. 41 hearts for all your Valentine and Wedding needs.
  9. Wedding Doodles Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Wedding Doodles Too is the follow-up font to the popular Wedding Doodles. This font gives you all you need to make your own invitations, announcements, RSVP cards, save your date cards and thank you notes. Font includes 3 sets of hand-lettered words… save our date, thank you and RSVP. Just add a wedding cake, flowers, top hat, wedding bell, heart or flower and you are done. Check out Wedding Doodles, you may need both.
  10. Holiday Doodles Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    If you liked Holiday Doodles you will love Holiday Doodles Too as it is more of the same. 42 icons to decorate your year. Birthdays, babies, Summer, weddings, presents, St. Pat’s Day, 4th of July, Valentine’s Day, Fall, Christmas, Hanukkah and more. This font is a great clip art addition to the Doodles font family from Outside the Line. For best results use in larger point sizes.
  11. Talking to the Moon - Personal use only
  12. An ode to noone - Unknown license
  13. Toot Sweet Bistro NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    A 1928 poster for a café by German artist Karl Bauer informed the creation of this charming and expansive typeface. This font hops, bops, flip-flops and never stops, and is named after a fictitious café which offers cool jazz and fast service. Both versions contain the complete Unicode 1252 (Latin) and Unicode 1250 (Central European) character sets, with localization for Romanian and Moldovan.
  14. Fong Shay Noon JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Fong Shay Noon JNL is a non-traditional approach to an Oriental-styled font as there are some letter forms with curves and others with straight lines. The name derives from a Chinese restaurant in North Miami Beach, Florida during the 1960s, which in turn took its name from a play on a Yiddish phrase.
  15. On The Town JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    On the Town JNL is a reworking of Parks Department JNL, giving it a classic "solid black Art Deco treatment". The wide monoline font of the original design was inspired by hand lettering on a WPA (Works Progress Administration) poster. Art Deco typography and the streamlined style it embraced often conjures up images of New York City in the 1930s and 1940s, thus On the Town JNL is named for the classic MGM musical starry Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra and Jules Munchen that was filmed on location in "the city that never sleeps".
  16. Rabbit On The Moon by Hanoded, $10.00
    This font is ideal for cartoons, greeting cards and children's books, as it has a happy 'feel' to it.
  17. Old Towne No 536 by Linotype, $29.99
    Old Town No. 536 is a homage to the old woodtypes. These became especially popular through their use on wanted posters in Wild West films. Adrian Frutiger also designed his typeface Westside in this style. Due to its robust figures, Old Town No. 536 is particularly effective when used in headlines. It belongs stylistically to the Italienne typefaces, whose serifs are thicker than the strokes.
  18. Old Towne No. 536 by URW Type Foundry, $35.00
  19. Go To Town JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Vintage sheet music for a song from the 1941 animated feature "Mr. Bug Goes to Town" featured a casual, hand-lettered inline type style on its cover page. Recreated as the digital font Go to Town JNL, this design is presented in all the imperfect glory of pen and ink lettering. Go to Town JNL is available in the regular inline version as well as a solid version. A bit about the cartoon: The project was created by the legendary Fleischer Studios in Miami, Florida (they had relocated from New York City), after they could not obtain the rights to adapt Maurice Maeterlinck's "The Life of the Bee". Beset by the expenses of relocating to Florida, growing production costs on the full-length feature cartoon and other problems; mid-way through the making of "Mr. Bug Goes to Town" the Fleischer brothers were forced to sell their studio to their distributor (Paramount Pictures) in order to continue in operation. It was released on Dec. 5, 1941 - just two days before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The release [and subsequent re-release by Paramount as "Hoppity Goes to Town"] was a disappointing failure, earning [as late as 1946] only $241,000 of the initial cost of $713,511 it took to make the film.
  20. Town And Country JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Town and Country JNL features a mix of block-style characters along with rounded ones found so often in the Art Deco fonts of the 1940s. Modeled from the hand-lettered title on a piece of sheet music from that era, this unusual coupling of two distinct design styles works despite it breaking all of the obvious rules of typography.
  21. Star Time Too JL - Unknown license
  22. Too Sweet To Eat by Cuda Wianki, $20.00
    Too Sweet To Eat is a hand-drawn font that has many variations because you can choose from simple outline version, only shadow version, normal version and filling version. If You put one on another then you have a great possibility to apply different colors on different layers! That makes your letters multicolor! Great stuff for decorative writings, posters, informal stationery! SPECIFICATION: alternate characters for all numbers and letters, nearly 400 kerning pairs, multi-language coverage, ornaments.
  23. Frames and Borders Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    Frames and Borders Too is the follow-up font to Outside the Line’s top selling font Frames and Borders. These borders are a more playful take on borders that are packaged with layout and drawing programs. All hand-drawn for that touch of whimsy. And check out Rae’s newest frame font Frames & Banners and the ever favorite Frames and Borders.
  24. Hearts And Swirls Too by Outside the Line, $19.00
    48 whimsical hearts and swirls, some solid, some line but lots of little graphics for your Valentine needs. Many ways to say "I Love You".
  25. Too Much Information JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Too Much Information JNL is a dingbat font consisting of old-fashioned wall and door plates that can be used as part of a larger illustration or actually scaled up to print out helpful informational signs.
  26. KG Small Town Southern Girl - Personal use only
  27. Old Towne No 536 EF by Elsner+Flake, $35.00
  28. Shredded for you - Unknown license
  29. Oak Street by Three Islands Press, $39.00
    There's a little restaurant in an old house on a sidestreet in town (Rockland, Maine, USA) called Cafe Miranda. The staff is friendly, the setting intimate, and the appetizer a basket of hot bread fresh from a brick oven. Its ample menu features such entries as "Quasi-Cassoulet" and "Gentle Sole." It's among my favorite local places to dine out. But the menu got photocopied once too often, and Cindy's personable handlettering got faded and broken. So I took matters into my own hands. And here's what I delivered to the newly computerized folks at the little restaurant on Oak Street. You, too, can travel in rather heavy felt-tip style.
  30. Nutcase by ArtyType, $29.00
    Nutcase is a perfect example of a font that principally designed itself. I created a hexagonal template (the most economical form in nature by the way) and took out the center to increase the decorative element. I played around with it, creating some pleasing characters at first but it soon became clear it would translate into a complete alphabet, so I set to work applying the idea to both upper and lower cases. It wasn't all straight forward though, avoiding awkward characters and retaining legibility took a little perseverance but it eventually paid off. I thought of this primarily as a decorative display face but having tested it out, found it reads surprisingly well as body copy too.
  31. Shredded - Unknown license
  32. That’s All Folks by Comicraft, $19.00
    Run amuck and head on down to Toon Town with us to enjoy some Madcap Laffs with our latest Frolicking Font, 'THAT'S ALL FOLKS'. It's good, clean family fun for all your favorite comic cuts and looney'toons! What's more, it's (sing along) S-O-E, A-S-Y, T-O-U-S-E! Includes new Inline Regular and Bold weights, Western European accents, and Crossbar I Technology!
  33. Tombstone - Unknown license
  34. Wascally Wabbit by Comicraft, $49.00
    This cunning, conniving, chattering font is devious, devilish and dashing! It's a toon town tattler that will lend a flippant insouciant personality to your comic books and animated features. These handsome letterforms will nab you, jab you, grab you and may even stab you with their sly wily guile. Our advice: Be Very Very Qwiet when tracking down this Wascally Wabbit. Features: Automatic alternate uppercase alphabets Western & Central European language support Manga characters & Crossbar I Technology™
  35. Crowbar by Hanoded, $15.00
    Technically a crowbar is a straight metal rod used for digging. The tool I had in mind when I named this font is called a jemmy or pry bar, but I guess I liked the name crowbar better. Crowbar font, like its namesake, is a very useful tool: its brush-like appearance fits any design, especially if you are aiming for the ‘scary’ look. Comes with a toolbox full of diacritics too!
  36. Deliscript by Alphabet Soup, $29.00
    Although initially inspired by the neon sign in front of Canter’s Delicatessen in Los Angeles, the design of Deliscript Upright and Deliscript Slant soon took on a life of its own–and its own distinctive look. Like its sibling Metroscript, Deliscript has many features that expand its usability such as the the variable length tails which can be accessed in 6 different styles, and the never before seen crossbars which can be extended outward in either direction from the lower case “t”. Throw in the special “WordLogos”, tons of ligatures and foreign accented characters, and you have a recipe for typesetting that approaches the look of hand-lettering. For a better understanding of its unique features please download The Deliscript User Manual—available in the Gallery section.
  37. LS Altia by Letterhend, $14.00
    Introducing Altia Hand Lettering Tool Kit, Yes it is a Tool Kit. The reason why we named it as a Tool Kit is because you will get tons of item in one product! This product will contain 7 fonts. This product will provide anything you need to create a lovely quotes and logo. Just mix and match the fonts and then you can get a beautiful lettering that you can use in any media you want! Very suitable for wedding invitation, greeting cards, merchandise, apparel, poster / print design, etc. All the fonts is also support multilingual.
  38. Cirque De La Lune by Dawnland, $9.00
    Once a year Through mist and rain October soon to end Have no fear Beneath the full moon we gather. Welcome to the show! Now - Silence... Cirque de la Lune is an uppercase only poster/display/headline font in two variants - Eclipse (regular) & Fullmoon (outline). Alternate, nudged or slightly rotated uppercase letters are placed on the lower case keys!
  39. Birka by Linotype, $29.99
    Birka is the first typeface I designed from scratch. It took a whole year of my weekend and evening hours and is the typeface that teached me everything I know about type design. It is easy too see that I had Garamond in mind when drawing it. Birka is beautiful" was the comment of the well known Swedish designer Bo Berndal when he first saw it. That comment gave me the courage to design more and more typefaces. In a Danish article about Scandinavian type design, Birka was taken as example of a typical Swedishness in typography. I am not sure what the writer had in mind, but it surely sounded well. Birka has its name from the ancient Viking town Birka, whose remains are found not far away from Stockholm. Birka was released in 1992."
  40. VLNL Breakz by VetteLetters, $35.00
    Donald DBXL Beekman needed a break. And he took it too. While sitting there consuming a sandwich and a half-pint of milk, he took up his ruler and pencil. By the time there was no milk left and only some bread crumbs remained on his plate, VLNL Breakz was finished. That’s DBXL for you. Get your letters during your break. VLNL Breakz was originally designed as the headline and logo font for the breakdance competition Amsterdam Breakz, but turned out to be very versatile. It has 4 variations, Regular and Condensed widths / Bold and Light weights.
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