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  1. !the troubles - Unknown license
  2. Aure Teddy by Aure Font Design, $23.00
    Aure Teddy emanates the trusting tenderness of a favorite teddy bear. The hand-penned look of these forms engages the reader with a subtext of comfort. Teddy is delightfully legible as a text font and works well where a more organic look is wanted. It brings an unassuming charm to text and titles and a welcome empathy to astrological expressions and chartwheels. Its engaging charcter serves well in labeling diagrams and personalizing nametags. Teddy is an original design developed by Aurora Isaac. After more than a decade in development, 2018 marks the first release of the CJ and KB glyphsets in regular, italic, bold, and bold-italic. The CJ glyphset is a full text font supporting a variety of European languages. A matching set of small-caps complements the extended lowercase and uppercase glyphsets. Supporting glyphs include standard ligatures, four variations of the ampersand, and check-mark and happy-face with their companions x-mark and grumpy-face. Numbers are available in lining, oldstyle, and small versions, with numerators and denominators for forming fractions. Companion glyphs include Roman numerals, specialized glyphs for indicating ordinals, and a variety of mathematical symbols and operators. The CJ glyphset also includes an extended set of glyphs for typesetting Western Astrology. These glyphs are also available separately in the KB glyphset: a symbol font re-coded to allow easy keyboard access for the most commonly used glyphs. Aure Teddy fills a unique niche, being a modestly decorative font as well as a competant text font. Like Aure Jane, Aure Teddy serves well paired with the decorative touches of Aure Brash and Aure Sable. Give Aure Teddy a trial run! You may discover a permanent place for this font family in your typographic palette. AureFontDesign.com
  3. Midnight Hour - Personal use only
  4. Coors Script - Personal use only
  5. Best Choice Demo - Personal use only
  6. KG Ways to Say Goodbye - Unknown license
  7. Unity Dances - Personal use only
  8. VTCTattooScriptTwo - Personal use only
  9. flower1 - Unknown license
  10. Feast of Flesh BB - Personal use only
  11. Tropicana - Unknown license
  12. Coming Home - Personal use only
  13. Neighbourhood - 100% free
  14. chalkie - Unknown license
  15. Swinging - 100% free
  16. Crown Doodle {denne} - Unknown license
  17. Guede Demo - Unknown license
  18. indezonefont - creative - Unknown license
  19. Mutter - Unknown license
  20. !Sketchy Times - Unknown license
  21. Monster boxes - Personal use only
  22. Pinocchio - Unknown license
  23. Gravesend Sans by Device, $39.00
    Smart, legible and elegant, Gravesend Sans is a based on the unique typeface used for the iconic grass-green signage for the Southern Railway. In existence from 1923 to 1948, when the network was nationalised, the Southern Railway linked London with the Channel ports, South West England, the South coast resorts and Kent. The same design was also used for the ‘hawkeye’ signs on the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, differentiated by black letters on a yellow background. Reference for each letter was taken from vintage ‘target’ station nameplates and other platform signage. The rarest letters were the Q, seen in Queens Road Battersea, the X, seen in East Brixton, and the Z, used in Maze Hill, site of an infamous train crash in 1958. Being hand-made, the letters often differ in width and thickness. There was no lower case. The Bluebell Railway, a heritage steam line, runs over part of the old Southern Railway network and uses a very similar type. The design of the numbers differed considerably, but here have been taken from the Device 112 Hours font Smokebox. As well identifying platforms, they were used on the front of the steam engine’s smokebox, hence the name, and stylistically are more in keeping with the letters than some of the squarer versions that can be seen in old photographs. William Caslon IV is credited with the first Latin sans-serif type, shown in a 1816 Caslon specimen book. ‘Two Lines English Egyptian’, as it was called, was caps-only, and there are several other correlations between that type design and this one. Includes a selection of authentic arrows and manicules, plus abbreviated ligatures such as ‘St.’ (Saint or Street) ‘Rd.’ (Road) and ‘Jn.’ (Junction). The Cameo version includes many graphic banner elements that can be freely combined.
  24. somalove - Personal use only
  25. Classic Roots Personal Use - Personal use only
  26. Misuri Club - Personal use only
  27. CF Anarchy - Personal use only
  28. SkyFall Done - Personal use only
  29. Hacjiuza Dirty - Personal use only
  30. Underwood1913 - Personal use only
  31. Reprise Stamp - Unknown license
  32. KG Something to Believe In - Personal use only
  33. space bounce - Personal use only
  34. PENCIL STENCIL - Personal use only
  35. Chicago House_trial - Personal use only
  36. Paper-Mache - Personal use only
  37. ACID LABEL___ - Personal use only
  38. Pabellona (C) Tríplex - Personal use only
  39. PEIXE FRITO - Personal use only
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