10,000 search results (0.018 seconds)
  1. Pussycat - Personal use only
  2. MeninBlue - Unknown license
  3. funk - Unknown license
  4. Broken Toys - Unknown license
  5. Bifurk - Unknown license
  6. Hullunkruunu - Unknown license
  7. moebius - 100% free
  8. Aerosol - Unknown license
  9. Tenby Five - Unknown license
  10. Nu School Munitions - Unknown license
  11. Weekend Warrior - 100% free
  12. Captain Kidd Demo - Unknown license
  13. Bandwidth Bandless BRK - Unknown license
  14. Metalic Avacodo - Unknown license
  15. Ishirkian - Personal use only
  16. Independence - Unknown license
  17. URAL 3d - Unknown license
  18. OhMyGodStars - Unknown license
  19. Sylar Stencil - Unknown license
  20. Occoluchi Minicaps - Personal use only
  21. Zig Zag ML - Personal use only
  22. Ganz Egal - Personal use only
  23. BN Manson Nights - Unknown license
  24. Monster Paparazzi - Unknown license
  25. Chizz Wide High - Unknown license
  26. Effloresce - Unknown license
  27. Pilsen Plakat - Unknown license
  28. MicroMieps - Unknown license
  29. Mechanical Fun - Unknown license
  30. HVD Poster - Unknown license
  31. Saigon by The Paper Town, $25.00
    Saigon is a minimalist condensed serif family. With clean lines and tight curves, its personality dwells in its simplicity making it a timeless editorial typeface. As the italic breaks with the traditional strokes and embrace a more modest yet modern look, it blends in nicely with its upright sister, thus creating an harmonious rhythm which emphasis the minimalist approach of Saigon. The low contrast serif is created to look great in both display and text. Whether it’s bold headlines of descriptive paragraphs, Saigon aims to be as versatile and functional as possible. It supplies 6 weights from thin to bold allowing you to elevate your typography designs in a minute while keeping it simple. Cause great design should be simple. The type family supports major Latin-based languages along with opentype features such as fractions, old style numerals, ligatures, case sensitive punctuation, stylistic alternates symbols and more.
  32. Annlie by ITC, $29.99
    Annlie™ Extra Bold and Annlie Extra Bold Italic are two display faces designed by Fred Lambert in 1966 for the Annlie type family. These two samples from the Annlie family are both fat faces. Fat faces were offshoots of the modern, or Didone, typefaces that were de rigueur during the early 1800s. These fat faces were among the first typefaces to be used solely for advertising purposes. Naturally, they were always used in larger point sizes, in display functions. Annlie could be called an optimization of these old advertising typefaces. With high x-heights, ultra contrast between thick and thin strokes, and perfectly engineered drawing techniques, Annlie is a highly crafted typeface. Give it a spin in your next advertising campaign! Annlie’s fine thin strokes are very graceful in their appearance, and lend a strong, yet soft, feminine feeling to anything they touch.
  33. Lyra by Canada Type, $39.95
    Lyra is an Italian Renaissance script that might have developed if metal type had not broken the evolution of broad pen calligraphy. It lies in the area between the humanist bookhand and the chancery cursive, combining the fullness and articulation of the Roman letters with a moderate italic slant and condensation. A steep pen-angle allows use of a broader pen relative to the x-height, giving the letters more contrast with light verticals and heavy curves. Lyra embodies the Renaissance spirit of refining technical advances of the late middle ages with reintroduction of ancient classical principles. Based on the moving penstroke with constantly changing pen-angle, it brings the vitality of handwriting to the ordered legibility of type. Lyra is a formal italic, too slow for copying books. By eliminating the element of speed, digital technology opens up a new level of calligraphy, bringing it into the sphere of typography as would naturally have happened if metalworkers had not controlled the process. If classical Western traditions are respected, digital calligraphy has the potential to recapture the work of the past and restart its stalled evolution. There is of course no substitute for the charm of actual writing, with each letter made for its space; but the tradeoff is for the formal harmony of classical calligraphy as every curve resonates in tune with every other. This three-weight font family marks Philip Bouwsma's much-requested return from a three year hiatus. It also reminds us of his solid vision in regards to how calligraphy, typography and technology can interact to produce digital beauty and vesatility. Each of the three Lyra fonts contains almost three character sets in a single file. Aside from the usual wealth of alternates normally built into Bouwsma's work, Lyra offers two unique features for the user who appreciates the availability of handy solutions to subtle design space issues: At least three (and as many as six) length variations on ascending and descending forms, and 65 snap-on swashes which can be attached to either end of the majuscules or minuscules. The series also offers 24 dividers and ornaments built into each weight, and a stand-alone font containing 90 stars/snowflakes/flowers, symmetric contstructs for building frames or separators, masking, watermarking, or just good old psychedelia.
  34. Sansumi - Unknown license
  35. Earth's Mightiest 3D - Unknown license
  36. SF Quartzite - Unknown license
  37. SF Juggernaut - Unknown license
  38. Minya Nouvelle - Unknown license
  39. SF Technodelight - Unknown license
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