10,000 search results (0.015 seconds)
  1. Candyful - Personal use only
  2. Hyundai - Personal use only
  3. SF Solar Sailer Outline - Unknown license
  4. SF Espionage Medium - Unknown license
  5. Suicide - Unknown license
  6. SF Espionage Light - Unknown license
  7. SF Eccentric Opus - Unknown license
  8. SF Eccentric Opus - Unknown license
  9. SF Espionage Heavy - Unknown license
  10. SF Americana Dreams Upright - Unknown license
  11. SF Americana Dreams SC - Unknown license
  12. SF Solar Sailer - Unknown license
  13. SF Solar Sailer Extended - Unknown license
  14. Tokyo Honey Chan - Unknown license
  15. CHANL - Unknown license
  16. Entropy - Unknown license
  17. Grand Canyon by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    Based on an early wood type design. An original creation, that kept growing...!
  18. Pretorian DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    A revival design by Ron Carpenter and Malcolm Wooden of DTP Types Limited.
  19. LD Underwood 5 by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    This font represents the type style created by this very famous classic typewriter.
  20. Brawn by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A soft serif for any type application; packs a good punch; great look.
  21. Janda Spring Doodles by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    Doodles ranging from cute animals to Easter eggs to flowers of various types.
  22. Eingraviert by Intellecta Design, $29.90
    Eingraviert is based on old books capitals, with a wood type engraving style
  23. Elisar DT by DTP Types, $49.00
    An original design by Malcolm Wooden and Lisa Wooden of DTP Types Limited.
  24. Topanga JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Topanga JNL is based on an ultra-condensed sans serif wood type design.
  25. ThaiType by Oporto Design, $39.90
    Latin characters were turned into Tha-like types to create the ThaiType font.
  26. Brute Aldine by Intellecta Design, $12.90
    a revival of a classic wood type font, in many family variations provided
  27. Sitcom by GroupType, $19.00
    If there was an American Typeface Hall of Fame, Bank Gothic, designed by the great Morris Fuller Benton would hold a place of special distinction considering this design has survived so many trends in typographic fashion since being introduced in 1930. It's just as desirable today as it was over eighty years ago; arguably more. Today, Bank Gothic is a very popular choice as a titling face for science fiction books, posters and countless television and movie titles. It is also a popular typeface for use in computer games and digital graphics. GroupType’s 2010 revival of this American classic is true to the design, the period, and Benton’s aesthetic. GroupType worked with some of the most talented and experienced type designers that were historically grounded and sensitive to this design project. Fortunately, Mr. Benton has left us a large selection of other great typefaces for insight and guidance. GroupType’s new revival includes the original three weights in regular and condensed style but also a new small cap and lowercase in each font necessary for 21st century typography.
  28. Bank Gothic by GroupType, $29.00
    If there was an American Typeface Hall of Fame, Bank Gothic, designed by the great Morris Fuller Benton would hold a place of special distinction considering this design has survived so many trends in typographic fashion since being introduced in 1930. Its just as desirable today as it was over eighty years ago; arguably more. Today, Bank Gothic is a very popular choice as a titling face for science fiction books, posters and countless television and movie titles. It is also a popular typeface for use in computer games and digital graphics. GroupType’s 2010 revival of this American classic is true to the design, the period, and Benton’s aesthetic. GroupType worked with some of the most talented and experienced type designers that were historically grounded and sensitive to this design project. Fortunately, Mr. Benton has left us a large selection of other great typefaces for insight and guidance. GroupType’s new revival includes the original three weights in regular and condensed style plus two new distressed fonts. All have a new small cap and lowercase in each font necessary for 21st century typography.
  29. Flexion Pro by Red Rooster Collection, $60.00
    Flexion developed out of design philosophy and ambigramatic artwork of John Langdon. Based on the contents in John’s book Wordplay, author Dan Brown hired John to create ambigrams for his forthcoming novel Angels & Demons. Mr. Brown was so impressed with his work he even named the main character Robert Langdon after John. After the success of Angels & Demons, Dan Brown wrote The Da Vinci Code. When the movie adaptation of that book was in the works, Dan suggested that John create titles for the movie based on ambigrams. John contacted Hal Taylor to create a font based on the lettering treatment to be used for the credits at the end of the movie. Unfortunately, it was decided that the film was running long and the original title concept was scrapped. By this time, Hal was well into developing a full type family, including small caps, alternate characters, lining and ranging figures. John was impressed with the way the design was turning out and decided that it had enough merit to be released as Flexion.
  30. Totemic by Canada Type, $29.95
    Jim Rimmer’s first typeface was originally published in 1970 as a basic film type alphabet through a small, independent type house in central California. Its sources of influence (now calligraphic type standards by Dair, Goudy and Zapf) are ones that remained with Jim for the rest of his career. If you squint at Totemic in just the right way, you can see some recognizable themes Jim would later flesh out and make his own in later works throughout his career as a type designer and printer. Totemic is now available for the first time as a digital font, of the refined and expanded kind now expected from Canada Type. It comes with quite a few standard advanced typography features: Small caps, caps-to-small-caps, automatic fractions and standard ligatures, stylistic alternate sets, six kinds of figures, case-sensitive forms, and extended Latin language support. It also comes with a very unique and unprecedented feature: Variably stackable totem poles. Simply enable the discretionary ligatures feature, type any unique three-digit combination using numbers between 1 and 4, and watch the magic happens. With a name like Totemic, we just couldn't help ourselves. Many thanks to Andrew Steeves of Gaspereau Press for finding Jim’s lost gem in a most unexpected place, and for helping us bring it back to life 45 years after its analog birth. 20% of Totemic’s revenues will be donated to the Canada Type Scholarship Fund, supporting higher typography education in Canada.
  31. Corpo Sans by Borutta Group, $19.00
    Corpo Sans is REFRESHED version of my old font Korpo Sans. Corpo Sans is a sans type family with a friendly feel. This type contains 12 variants with 6 weights.The high contrast and high x height is perfect for headlines and display uses. Corpo Sans is great complement for Corpo Serif.
  32. Calasans by Letterhend, $13.00
    Calasans is a sans serif font with 7 layered style. You can create a 3D look without using any add-ons, only with fonts! This font is suitable for a vintage poster, 3d type, or retro. Including numbers and punctuations, also support multi-language. Create your own 3D type now!
  33. Penny Arcade by Solotype, $19.95
    A popular caps-only type of late Victorian times was called Mural, brought out by Boston Type Foundry in 1890. We always liked it, drew a lowercase for it, and then strengthened it by adding a bit of weight. It now has a nice, understated retro look for paragraphs of copy.
  34. Runic by Monotype, $29.99
    This 1935 design from Monotype is an extremely condensed display font that has a slight flavor of nineteenth-century wood type. Runic Condensed font is tall and lean with a huge x-height and hairline serifs. It is an ideal display type for eccentric pieces where space is at a premium.
  35. Chase by Device, $39.00
    Type that preserves the over- and under-inked textures of true old-fashioned wood faces, now available without ink on your fingers straight from your keyboard. Based on samples taken from early and mid Nineteenth century Clarendons, the font carefully preserves all the battered idiosyncracies of vintage print shop type.
  36. HT Maison by Dharma Type, $19.99
    HT Mason is bold and hand painting font. This font is retrospective and decent, but it is also funny and cute. Holiday Type Project offers retro hand drawing scripts. Inspired by retro script on shopfront lettering, wall paint advertisements in Italy around 1950s. Check out the script fonts from Holiday Type!
  37. BM spiral Cap Cyr - Unknown license
  38. Eyeballs by Bitstream, $29.99
    Eyeballs was designed at Bitstream by designer David Robbins. Its beginnings can be found in Bitstream’s Old Dreadful No. 7, where Mr. Robbins first conceived the capital I. He was later asked by Bitstream to develop the entire character set. The result is a humorous meld of cartoon and typography. A word of caution: Watch how you use it!
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