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  1. Tuxedo Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The sheet music for the 1934 tune "Two in A Dream" had the title hand lettered in a bold type style that utilized some stencil and some solid lettering. Following through on the stencil portion of the design, Tuxedo Stencil JNL was created in both regular and oblique versions. The 1930s were the era of elegant supper clubs and night spots, and it was not unusual to find gentlemen all decked out in formal wear for an evening on the town, hence the font's name.
  2. Prima Sans by Bitstream, $29.99
    Prima is a series of fonts designed at Bitstream by Jim Lyles (Sans and Serif) and Sue Zafarana (Sans Mono), released in 1998. The fonts have been tuned to give exceptionally good quality at low screen resolutions. The fonts are therefore suitable for sustained use in browsers and other applications where users read for long periods from the screen. Of course, Prima looks great printed out too.
  3. Prima Serif by Bitstream, $29.99
    Prima is a series of fonts designed at Bitstream by Jim Lyles (Sans and Serif) and Sue Zafarana (Sans Mono), released in 1998. The fonts have been tuned to give exceptionally good quality at low screen resolutions. The fonts are therefore suitable for sustained use in browsers and other applications where users read for long periods from the screen. Of course, Prima looks great printed out too.
  4. Aegipti 7 by 2D Typo, $28.00
    Aegypti 7 is a digital revival of Font No.7 or Egyptian Narrow - a Soviet display face cast for hand composition. I settled on the 12pt version as a basis for my digital version, as larger sizes added too much contrast to an otherwise quite orderly slab serif. The Soviet Font No.7 itself was based on an older Semi-Egyptian narrow cut before the revolution.
  5. Dogfight by Tigade Std, $8.00
    Dogfight is a hand-crafted brush font which created from scratch by using a brush pen on a paper. It is not too sharp with sharp edges, but rather with a softer rounded shape. It is suitable as a display font for printed or digital products. Mainly as an advertisement or video production. It comes with Regular and Italic Multilingual characters AllCaps Ligatures Alternate characters
  6. Honey and Smoke by Ana's Fonts, $16.00
    Honey and Smoke is a handwritten script font and illustration collection, perfect to create cute handmade designs, such as logos, packaging, prints and postcards, patterns, and social media posts. Honey and Smoke includes: A handwritten script font with tons of ligatures and a bonus slant version A dingbat font with 62 handmade line drawings, including fruits, vegetables and plants, with a bonus blackout version.
  7. Rekord Antiqua by RMU, $30.00
    Rekord Antiqua, regular and semibold, released 1911 by Wagner & Schmidt, is a perfect body text partner for Art Nouveau display fonts. Both styles come with a long s, which can be reached by the OT feature of historical forms or by typing [alt] + b. In addition, you find two framing elements on [alt] + P and [alt] + p, and an oblique style was added too.
  8. Chantal by Device, $29.00
    A loose, casual felt-pen script, Chantal comes in three weights plus italics, and a Cyrillic version too. Alternate versions are available in the upper and lower case keys, so settings can be customised according to taste. Chantal communicates a hand-drawn light touch with character. Originally designed to letter the RoboHunter series that Peter Hogan and Rian Hughes produced for the comic 2000AD.
  9. Thick Fun by PizzaDude.dk, $17.00
    This is not a brush font! This is an imitation of brushstrokes, done by pen. But I guess you've already noticed that - the brushstrokes are way too obvious, to have been made by brush. Although being a "fake", the letters leaves you with quite a good impression. Letters were inspired by an old horror movie poster, but is very useful for something less terrifying!
  10. bearerFond by JOEBOB graphics, $9.00
    BearerFond has been in my pen for years and I've used this way of writing a lot on cassette cases. Anyone still using cassettes? Me neither, so in order to keep it alive I have made a font out of it and named it bearerFond; as in bearer bond, since it looks like it could be used on official documents. Nothing too official though.
  11. Lanetta by RVM Creative, $9.00
    Lanetta is the perfect mixture between a blackletter and serif font. It's narrow characters give it stylistic appeal that you just can't get anywhere else. It's the perfect font for the fall/winter seasons, too. Perfect for use in letters and documents, branding and logos, websites, book and album design, themed projects, and anything else that could use edgy elegance. Glyph count: 440. Supports most western languages.
  12. Ps Willy by Fontopia, $13.99
    Willy is a typeface with a wink. This display font is based on existing piquant form from the immediate vicinity. It is sexy, if you have an eye for. But it also should not be taken too seriously, especially because it has a humorous slant. The font has its origins in an art project. It is now made available for design around festifals, parties, invitations, etc.
  13. Bling by Hackberry Font Foundry, $24.95
    My second font for 2009, Bling is a hoot. This vaguely Deco, sparkly sans is for those heads that need bling. This is the first font released in a long time without my complete feature set. It has lining and oldstyle figures, many wild ligatures, the x-height is too high to make a small caps set worth the effort. It's just for fun. Enjoy!
  14. Breakdance Reborn by Trustha, $15.00
    Breakdance is inspired by dance moves, the first font created with this concept is sans serif with a curved shape in one direction. Curves are made not too extreme, so that they maintain the shape balance. And now Breakdance comes in several styles and is divided into three typesface, namely script, sans and serif. Each typeface has several different styles and the total is 18 fonts.
  15. Polyglot Neue by MJType, $25.00
    Introducing Polyglot Neue Typeface Redesign previous typeface, It’s Polyglot and “Neue” it’s means New. The unique and fashionable font with tons of ligatures uppercase and lowercase. and supports multilingual languages. the straight lines combined with a slight curve make polyglot look minimalist and elegant. Create unique & elegant logotype, use it as an elegant for your next project headlines, logotype designs, posters or t-shirts, business cards. Thanks!
  16. ALS Zheldor by Art. Lebedev Studio, $63.00
    The Zheldor typeface was designed specially for the Railroad movie credits, but wasn’t used there. As a result, here comes an original type product that fits nicely into the urban environment. This vigorous, twitching and deconstructive font works well for emotional large-letter designs and non-too-serious teenage style headings. But however extreme it may seem, Zheldor also has a simple and friendly feel to it.
  17. Reverie by District, $15.00
    Reverie is a cheerful band of letters that bounce across the page and get together to create words in three weights. Generous spacing and a modest x-height project an airy typeface that's open but not frail. Quirky without being too whimsical. Use the regular weight for surprisingly readable text or put the light and bold weights to use for decorative headlines and titles.
  18. PF Playskool Pro by Parachute, $69.00
    A great fun typeface with a straightforward childlike simplicity. It really hits home with kids, but if you want to add this extra playful personality to your designs this is the one to use. It has a strong, easy to read structure, which makes it ideal for children’s books, toys and other fun applications. Designer Alexandros Papalexis has discover the kid within. You can too!
  19. Fiesta De Los Muertos by Mvmet, $10.00
    Fiesta De Los Muertos is a fun and festive display font! Not only can be used for Halloween theme needs, you can use it too for other things for daily needs. Use it on t-shirts and clothing, book designs, greeting cards, stickers, posters, banners, or anything that needs a fun touch. Try it to create fabulous designs and feel the fun and cool vibes with it!
  20. Happy Go Lucky Display Font by Goldfish Girl Creative, $9.00
    A Feel Good Kinda Font This playful and light-hearted, sans serif, display font includes uppercase letters, numbers, and punctuation. Great for carefree, boho, and fun designs like stationery, logos, wall art, stickers, patterns, and products. Use the font styles separately or try layering them! Built for easy use in Canva too. Includes: Happy Go Lucky font in 3 styles: Regular, Outlined, and Rounded
  21. Woodrow by Chank, $49.00
    If Mister Frisky is a bit too kooky for your project, try Woodrow. The big floppy serifs and hand-drawn strokes give this font very "Chanky" characteristics. Woodrow is bold, bouncy, fun and legible like Mister Frisky, but it is also a little more traditional and structured. Chank created Woodrow in 1997. It was named in honor of The Chank Company's first office assistant, Scott "Woodrow" Macdonald.
  22. Quickpen by Trial by Cupcakes, $29.00
    Quickpen is casual and carefree, designed to recreate the look of confident, quickly jotted script with a felt tip pen or brush. In OpenType, ligatures and contextual alternates for lowercase letters add a natural hand-written look, while swashes lend a bit more finesse. The perfect script for any design that doesn’t take itself too seriously. For a fuller brush texture, check out Quickpen’s cousin, Quickbrush.
  23. Suit Sans Pro by Just in Type, $29.00
    Suit Sans Pro is a typeface designed for multi-purposes with a wide range of 12 weights plus italics. The large set of 1377 glyphs embraces a lot of latin languages, and it’s perfect for multi-national brands. Take a look at the specimen. Suit Sans Pro is too much for you? Take a look on Suit Sans STD, a simpler version for Suit Sans.
  24. Gravity Well by Hanoded, $15.00
    I seem to be in my astronomical phase right now. I recently released several fonts with names relating to space! Don’t worry, it is just a phase and this too will pass… Gravity Well is a handmade brush font, ideally suited for product packaging or book covers. Gravity Well comes with all the diacritics you can ask for and a set of double letter ligatures to boot!
  25. Blue Jay Way NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Modern Caps—and lowercase, too—was how Ross George described the pattern for this typeface in his Speedball Text Book. Not surprisingly, the design was used on the Beatles' original Magical Mystery Tour album, which suggested the current name. Art Deco meets Psychedelia! Both versions include the complete Unicode Latin 1252, Central European 1250 and Turkish 1254 character sets, with localization for Moldovan and Romanian.
  26. Gangstown GT by Gartype Studio, $13.00
    Inspired by quick handwritten graffiti tagging around city, we are make this graffiti typeface called Gangstown. This font comes with contextual and stylistic alternates that way easy to use, multilingual glyphs, and swashes too. Create your uniquely mix combination with swashes and alternates. Your project will look cool while using this for project like tagging, product package, ads, title, headlines, logo, stickers, apparel, etc.
  27. CCS Sofiera by Creative Corner Studio, $19.00
    CCS Sofiera is a New Luxury Vintage font that is both elegant and unique with smooth curves and tons of special alternative glyphs, ornament and multilingual support. It's a very versatile font that works great in large and small sizes. CCS Sofiera is perfect for branding projects, Logo design, Clothing Branding, product packaging, magazine headers, or simply as a stylish text overlay to any background image.
  28. CCS Monalesa by Creative Corner Studio, $29.00
    Monalesa is a New Vintage font that is both elegant and unique with smooth curves and beautiful ligatures, tons of special alternative glyphs, ornament and multilingual support. It's a very versatile font that works great in large and small sizes. Monalesa is perfect for branding projects, Logo design, Clothing Branding, product packaging, magazine headers, or simply as a stylish text overlay to any background image.
  29. Dark Shade by Letterhend, $16.00
    Meet Dark Shade, the font that dares you to venture into the shadows where creepy and fascination intertwine. This font an aura of spine-tingling dread, perfect for instilling suspense but playful too in your designs. Whether you're channeling classic horror or crafting a display masterpiece, Nights Side versatility is your creative companion. Features : Uppercase & lowercase Numbers and punctuation Alternates & Ligatures Multilingual PUA encoded
  30. GL Benicassim by Fontbilisi, $30.00
    GL Benicassim is a very condensed and practical font. It is only caps font, but it contains latin and cyrillic characters, as well as all kind of accents to be compatible with many languages. It will give to your designs a fancy and fashionable touch and it is specially practical when the space you have is not too big, since it is really condensed.
  31. Chicago by Rezastudio, $5.00
    CHICAGO is a Fancy Modern vintage serif typeface with beautiful ligatures, tons of special alternative glyphs, ornament and multilingual support. It's a very versatile font that works great in large and small sizes. Perfect for editorial projects, Logo design, Clothing Branding, product packaging, magazine headers, or simply as a stylish text overlay to any background image. 2 Weights font Lowercase and Uppercase Stylistic Alternates & Ligatures Numerals & Punctuation
  32. Heller Sans JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Heller Sans JNL is based on the main letterforms of an experimental alphabet designed by Steven Heller; noted author of over 170 books on design and visual culture. Some modifications were made in turning his design into a digital font. In his own words, here is the background to this typeface: “I recently recovered this from the junk heap. It is a yellowing photostat of my first and only typeface design (1969-70). Total folly! At the time I was smitten by Art Moderne lettering. I called it “Klaus Boobala Bold” because I liked the K and B. I’ve lost the letters S through Z, which were made. The letters were drawn with compass, Techno pen (that frequently clogged). as well as a triangle and T-square. The inline and outline made no real logical sense. I based the design, in part, on Kabel, Avant Garde and it was a product of whatever I could accomplish with those tools. The caps-only alphabet was photographed and produced as a film negative that was cut in foot-long strips and spliced to fit on a Typositor reel. Sadly, the negatives made for the font were too brittle and the splice snapped apart in the Typositor. I worked on it for well over a month and used the face only once. I realized with this attempt, like so many other times I attempted different challenges, that type design — indeed mechanical drawing — was not my strong suit.” Heller Sans JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  33. Grafical by Halbfett, $30.00
    Grafical is a contemporary take on 19th-century sans serifs. In this family, the amount of geometry inherent within the letterforms has been amped up. Many shapes have received further streamlining, too. All the geometric forms you see have been optically corrected, ensuring their delivery of better legibility. Grafical ships in two different formats: depending on your preference, you can install the typeface as two Variable Fonts or use the family’s 16 static OpenType font files instead. The static fonts offer eight weights, running from Extralight through Black. Each weight has an upright and an italic font available. While the static-format fonts offer a good intermediary-step selection, users who install the Variable Fonts have vastly greater control over their text’s stroke width. The Grafical Variable and Grafical Variable Italic font’s weight axes allow users to differentiate between almost 1,000 possible font weights. That enables you to fine-tune your text’s exact appearance on-screen or in print. Grafical is the perfect tool for a range of design uses, including text on the web, text in print, and text in motion graphics. Its fonts are typographic workhorses – not just from their legibility perspective but also because of the amount of OpenType features they include. There are ligatures, for instance, as well as proportional and tabular lining and oldstyle figures, fractions, numbers placed inside circles, and even Roman numerals. Users can also substitute alternate versions of the “a”, “g”, “i”, “j”, “y”, “G”, and “Q” into their work.
  34. Busted by Canada Type, $24.95
    Busted is the very strange and out-of-character outburst of Bill Troop, a guy who was classically trained in everything, from classical piano and literature to classical photography and type design. As far as we could tell, Bill Troop is the kind of guy whose appearance and voice instantly trigger thoughts of black and white photos, fedoras, and pre-industrial age Europe. A few years ago, he even moved from the United States to England, where it took him less than a week to feel at home and start sounding like a Norwich native. Then something happened and the poor dude just snapped. Busted is the controversial result of the blood rushing to his head. If you know what exactly happened to him, please let us know. Concern, consideration and human interest story aside, Busted is a fascinating thing. It is a set of four interchangeable thick outline fonts where the same letter forms turn from wild to wilder to broken to somewhat clean. Mix them up in a setting and you have words that snarl with a sneer. Life's too short. Take it all with a grain of salt. Scream whenever you feel like it. Busted Pro is a single font combining all four character sets, and rigged with an OpenType pseudo-randomizer in the contextual alternates feature, which you can disable or enable anywhere in your setting for maximum visual shock just the way you like it. Works just as well in PAL or SECAM. Don't be fooled by imitations, and don't get caught with your drawers down.
  35. Whomp by Sudtipos, $59.00
    Whomp takes its inspiration from the work of an American master in sign painting and alphabet manipulation: Alf Becker . In 1932, Becker began designing a series of alphabets to be published in Signs of the Times magazine at the rate of one alphabet per month. Nine years later, 100 of those alphabets were compiled in one book that became an enormous success among sign painters. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, many Alf Becker alphabets were digitized with blurbs that falsely credit an “Alf Becker typeface”. Alf Becker was not really a typeface kind of guy. He was more of a calligrapher and sign painter. His alphabets were either incomplete or full of variations on different letters, and didn't become typefaces until the digital era. This particular Becker alphabet was quite incomplete. In fact, it wasn't a showing of an alphabet, but words on a poster. Alejandro Paul took the challenge of drawing, digitizing, restructuring, and finally building a complete usable typeface from that partial alphabet. He then extended his pleasure by once again playing with the wonderful possibilities of OpenType. Whomp comes with more than 100 alternates, tons of swashy endings and ligatures, all built into the font and accessible through OpenType palettes in programs that support such features. This is the in-your-face kind of font that stands among other Becker-based alphabets as paying most homage to the vision of this great American artist who saw letters as live ever-changing beings. Whomp is right at home when used on packaging, signage, posters, and entertainment related products.
  36. Middleton Brush by Canada Type, $24.95
    One of the earliest fonts published by Canada Type was Coffee Script, Phil Rutter's digitization of Robert Hunter Middleton's 1962 brush script, Wave. In 2010, when the font was revisited for an update, it was shown that it was too light for applications under 24 pt, and too irregular for applications over 64 pt. So the face was redigitized from scratch. This new digitization maintains a soft contour and a steadier stroke, as well as much better outlines for use at both extremes of scaling. Language support was also greatly expanded, and many alternates were added to the redigitized character set. The name was also changed to Middleton Brush, to better reflect the origins of the design, which was Middleton's response to Robert Smith's popular Brush Script Middleton Brush comes in all popular formats. Language support includes Western, Central and Eastern European character sets, as well as Baltic, Esperanto, Maltese, Turkish, and Celtic/Welsh languages.
  37. Ultine by insigne, $-
    No frills. No fluff. Still friendly. Keep your look clean and simple with the utilitarian but gentle Ultine. This font with a slightly extended geometric architecture gets straight to the point without pushing your reader away with too firm an approach. Ultine covers a large set of multi-Latin languages. It includes a wide range of other OpenType features, too, including ligatures and contextual alternates. Moreover, small caps of Utline and titling alternates are available for deepening your design capabilities with this basic face. The Ultine family consists of 42 fonts with three different widths and italics counterparts for every style. The design is well suited for graphic design and any use of the screen. It can easily operate as a webfont, as text for banner ads and for branding as well as editorial design. And just to show you how simple and friendly the font can be, the regular weight is free, so you can use it to your heart's content.
  38. Gingersans by Sryga, $22.00
    Introducing Gingersans, the typeface that's basically a font party in 12 different weights! Imagine a font that's not just a font but a personality chameleon, smoothly transitioning from easygoing and polite in the regular weights to downright wild and fun in the bolds. It's like having multiple distinct characters living in one seamless universe. The design? Oh, it's calligraphy meets sans serif – the rebel child of fonts. The curves are having a party of their own; they go wild on the Black, get too cute on the Hairline, and throw in some artsy politeness on the Regulars. It's a typographic adventure that keeps the vibe consistent, whether you're going Hairline, Regular or Black. And here's the best part – Gingersans is not just a font; it's a variable font too, with a weight axis to cater to your every design mood swing. Get ready to fall in love with the font that's as versatile as your ever-changing design whims! 🎉✨ #Gingersans #TypefaceMagic
  39. Hanley Pro by District 62 Studio, $29.00
    The origin story of HANLEY FONT COLLECTION all starts with the Script. We were designing logos and kept feeling like we needed a different kind of script, vintage feeling but not dated, and not too baseball-y or too formal. We couldn’t find exactly what we were looking for, so we decided to create it ourselves. After that we realized what we really wanted was good wood block looking lettering especially with small caps. And the collection just grew from there - a tall slim style, a monoline version of the script and of course a good sans. We topped off the group with a large selection of catchwords and extras with plenty of swirls, swashes and frames. Hanley has just enough irregularity to the edges to impart a human feel, but it’s still clean. Super versatile, all the styles work well together and can look authentically vintage or modern and hand-crafted.
  40. Hey Jintan by Gatype, $14.00
    Hey Jintan is an elegant script font with a contemporary atmosphere and impeccable shape, inspired by timeless classic calligraphy. Neither too thin nor too thick, balanced and varied, Hey Jintan is designed to enhance the beauty of your project. because this font will be advocates for purposes such as wedding invitations, party, graduation, birthday, gathering, etc. Hey Jintan is coded with PUA Unicode, which allows full access to all additional characters without having to design any special software. Mac users can use Font Book, and Windows users can use Character Map to view and copy any additional characters for pasting into your favorite text editor / application. you need a program that supports Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe Indesign & CorelDraw X6-X7, Microsoft Word 2010 or a later version. How to access all alternative characters using Adobe Illustrator: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzwjMkbB-wQ How to access all alternative characters, using the Windows Character Map with Photoshop: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Go9vacoYmBw
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