8,984 search results (0.076 seconds)
  1. Cristal True by Johannes Krenner, $5.00
    »Cristal True« is an elaborate matrix display font. It contains 645 letters per font style and some Open Type features: Different stylistic alternates, small caps, various font styles and different sets of numerals. It is monospaced and therefor easy to handle, if you want to simulate the look and feel of a LCD display. The basis of this font is a Union-Jack or sixteen-segment display (SISD). It is expanded by another 10 segments for a wider range of languages supported (this should cover all European regions). »Crystal True« is perfected for the quick, easy and precise use in modern graphic design applications. Try »Cristal Text« for more text-heavier usages.
  2. Free Zone by Aboutype, $24.99
    A Sans serif design that follows a continental style with design characteristics that combine condensed and open counters. The lowercase has tall ascenders. Family includes common capitals and alternate lowercase characters. FreeZone requires subjective display kerning and compensation.
  3. True Black by Gleb Guralnyk, $14.00
    This vintage steam-punk look font named "True Black" consists of a Clean and a textured Rough version with multi-lingual support.
  4. Antique Three by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century, suitable for text.
  5. Three Candy by Mazkicibe, $11.00
    Three Candy Font is Sans Serif and modern font combined with a sweet touch and beautifully curved each letter. using a touch of soft curves so that it is pleasing to the eye. Three Candy Font Spirit is great for: Wedding invitations, fashion magazines, logos, signatures, and suitable for watermark photography.
  6. KR Valentine Dings 2002 - Unknown license
  7. KR Get Well Dings - Unknown license
  8. KR Christmas Dings Two - Unknown license
  9. KR Birthday Cake! Dings - Unknown license
  10. Head-Ding Maker BRK - Unknown license
  11. KR Christmas Dings One - Unknown license
  12. KR First Years Dings - Unknown license
  13. KR Lil Ween Dings - Unknown license
  14. KR Silly Art Dings - Unknown license
  15. KR Lotsa Time Dings - Unknown license
  16. KR Party Time Dings - Unknown license
  17. Elephants in Cherry Trees - Unknown license
  18. KR Oh Christmas Tree - Unknown license
  19. Fontazia Christmas Tree 2 by Deniart Systems, $24.00
    Add more flair to the holiday season with Fontazia Christmas Tree 2 featuring 62 elegantly simple tree illustrations. These stylish tree motifs are sure to add elegance to all your holiday designs.
  20. DIN Schablonierschrift - Unknown license
  21. DIG DUG - Personal use only
  22. FF Dig by FontFont, $41.99
  23. Normalise Din by Mecanorma Collection, $45.00
  24. DIN 1451 by Linotype, $40.99
    DIN stands for Deutsche Industrienorm, German Industrial Standard. In 1936, the German Standard Committee settled upon DIN 1451 as the standard font for the areas of technology, traffic, administration, and business. The committee chose a sans serif font because of its legibility and easy-to-write forms. This font was not seen in advertisements and other artistically oriented uses, and there were disagreements about its aesthetic qualities. Nevertheless, this font was seen everywhere on German towns and traffic signs and hence made its way into advertisements because of its ease of recognition.
  25. FF DIN by FontFont, $104.99
    Dutch type designer Albert-Jan Pool created this sans FontFont between 1995 and 2009. The family has 20 weights, ranging from Light to Black in normal and condensed styles (including italics). It is ideally suited for advertising and packaging, editorial and publishing, logo, branding and creative industries, poster and billboards, small text, wayfinding and signage as well as web and screen design. Looking for the new Thin and Extra Light weights? They are available through fontshop.com, linotype.com and fonts.com. FF DIN provides advanced typographical support with features such as case-sensitive forms, fractions, super- and subscript characters, and stylistic alternates. It comes with a complete range of figure set options – oldstyle and lining figures, each in tabular and proportional widths. As well as Latin-based languages, the typeface family also partly supports the Cyrillic and Greek writing systems. In 2011, FF DIN was added to the MoMA Architecture and Design Collection in New York. This FontFont is a member of the FF DIN super family, which also includes FF DIN Round.
  26. DIN 2014 by ParaType, $47.00
    A contemporary interpretation of the famous DIN typeface. Regular style suits for long texts, while Light and Bold variations work well in large sizes. The typeface includes 24 styles: 6 upright and 6 normal-width italics, as well as 6 Narrow and 6 Condensed styles. The typeface was designed by Vasily Biryukov and released by Paratype in 2015. The set of Condensed styles was added by Alexander Lubovenko and Isabella Chaeva in 2022.
  27. Din Condensed by ParaType, $30.00
    Designed at ParaType (ParaGraph) in 1997 by Tagir Safayev. Based on a condensed style of DIN type family (Linotype Staff designers). That is a group of sans serif faces made to conform to the German Industrial Standard. Based on geometric style, they vary in width but not in weight. Light style was added in 2014 by Manvel Schmavonyan. Demi Bold style was added in 2020 by Isabella Chaeva.
  28. URW DIN by URW Type Foundry, $49.99
    The digital outline fonts, DIN 1451 Fette Engschrift and Fette Mittelschrift were created by URW in 1984 and are the basis for all DIN font families. Both typefaces were designed for the URW SIGNUS system and were mainly used for the production of traffic signs. They have since become so popular in other areas that we have developed a complete DIN font family with 48 styles in OpenType Pro: URW DIN. It is semi-condensed, which is unique among the DIN fonts, so it has a broad spectrum of typographic uses. Its large x-height makes it perfect for use in e-publishing (web, apps, e-Books etc) and its adjusted stroke width between the regular and bold weights enhances its quality and distinguishability in print.
  29. DIN Next by Monotype, $56.99
    DIN has always been the typeface you root for—the one you wanted to use but just couldn’t bring yourself to because it was limited in its range of weights and widths, rendering it less useful than it could be. The century-old design has proven to be timeless, but modern use cases demanded an update, which resulted in DIN Next—a versatile sans serif family that will never go out of style. This classic design turned modern must-have includes seven weights that range from light to black, each of which has a complementary italic and condensed counterpart. The family also included four rounded designs, stretching the original concept’s range and core usability. DIN Next also boasts a suite of small capitals, old style figures, subscript, superscript and several alternate characters. A quintessential 20th-century design, its predecessor DIN was based on geometric shapes and was intended for use on traffic signs and technical documentation. Akira Kobayashi’s update made slight changes to the design, rounding the formerly squared-off corner angles to humanize the family. Rooted in over 100-years of history, it’s safe to say that there will always be a demand for the DIN design, and thanks to DIN Next, now it’s as usable as it is desired. Wondering what will pair with it perfectly? Check out Agmena™, Bembo® Book, Cardamon™, Joanna® Nova, FF Quadraat® and Quitador™. Featured in: Best Fonts for Logos, Best Fonts for Websites, Best Fonts for Tattoos
  30. Tre Giorni by Eurotypo, $60.00
    Tre Giorni, is a variant of the "Due Giorni" font with the possibility of combining between the two. This useful writing font is very expressive, fresh, agile and organic. It comes in two styles: Solid and outline (just a little shine) Each font contains 571 glyphs with many OpenType features: standard and discretionary ligatures, stylistic alternates, decorative characters, old-style figures, small caps, titles, case sensitives, and ornaments. Specially designed for creating eye-catching headlines, logos, packaging, greeting cards, advertisements and websites. It also has good readability for longer texts.
  31. Tee Franklin by Suomi, $19.00
    The British Vogue commissioned this typeface for their magazine re-design in 2001. After studying the originals of Morris Fuller Benton and the existing versions, this font was designed with all new thin weights. Just when the family was finished, Vogue informed that they had decided to use American Typewriter instead. Bastards. But here is a true classic typeface with a facelift. The pun intended. Tee Franklin has seven weights with obliques, the Heavy being just slightly heavier than the existing versions from Adobe and ITC, and moving down to totally new Ultra Light, using Luc(as) de Groot's formula to keep the weights optically correct. The glyphs are the same as the Morris Fuller Benton's original from 1902, except for the upper case Q, which was re-designed with a loop in the counter for added differentiation.
  32. Kemuri - Unknown license
  33. BAHAMAS TWO PERSONAL USE - Personal use only
  34. Two Wingy Dingy - Unknown license
  35. Kings of Pacifica - Personal use only
  36. king cooL KC - Personal use only
  37. Ming Gothic JJCR - Personal use only
  38. King Xmas Trial - Unknown license
  39. Ming Gothic JJCR - Personal use only
  40. KR Mood Ring - Unknown license
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing