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  1. BB Manual Mono (Pro) by Bold Studio, $49.00
    BB Manual Mono™ (Pro) visualizes the work of painters: Craftsmanship, precision, professionalism and their tools. The special features of the Font emphasize the work process. ● Flow: visible process ● Alignment: contextual monoline ● Accuracy: individual modularity ● 5 Variants (TX (Text), IT (Italic), ST (Standard), HL (Headline), CR (Cover) ● 40 OT-Features/Style ● 60 Styles ● 100 Stylistic-Sets (20/Variant) ● 122 Languages Support (Latin, Greek, Cyrillic) ● 86,100 Glyphs (1,435/Style)
  2. Captura Now Core Edition by TypeThis!Studio, $50.00
    Carefully refined shapes and sensitively balanced spacing and kerning create the gentle rythm that grants Captura its warm-hearted face, perfect in form and shape. www.typethis.studio This version covers all the essentials of Captura 265 Characters 8 Styles, including Italics Western European Language Support Numbers Symbols Punctuation If you need more features like small caps, special symbols, Cyrillic or Vietnamese language support, you may review the expert version of CapturaNow.
  3. Quiche Flare by Adam Ladd, $25.00
    Quiche Flare is a high-contrast, flared serif typeface featuring foxtail ball terminals, swash capitals, and geometric proportions. With weights ranging from Thin to Black with matching italics, it’s useful for a variety of display applications across products, packaging, labels, invitations, stationery, fashion, etc. The design exhibits both elegance and a touch of whimsy with the foxtail terminals and the flared serifs add more interest, beauty, and movement to the characters.
  4. Selina by ParaType, $30.00
    A universal text type was designed by Natalia Vasilyeva for ParaType in 2007. The type family is consist of 8 styles. Also corresponding decorative italic with calligraphic swash capitals was developed. The type has low contrast characters and narrow proportion. It is rather space-saved but very legible even in small sizes. For use in text and display typography. The upgraded version with extended character set was released in 2010.
  5. Serona by Balevgraph Studio, $16.00
    Serona - Beautiful Duo with Ornaments We are so exited to present Serona, a combination of sans serif fonts and signature styles complemented by beautiful ornaments, Serona with Modern Elegant Style is perfect for branding, logos, invitations, Magazine and more. Serona Features: Multilingual Ligatures Alternates Swashes PUA encoded Files Included: Serona Regular Serona Italic Serona Signature Serona Signature Slanted Serona Ornaments We are ecstatic if our fonts can help your project.
  6. Headliner No. 45 by KC Fonts, $34.00
    Headliner No. 45 is an ode to the 1940’s-era news headline. The Headliner No. 45 Family is simply two fonts: Regular & Italic. Headliner No. 45 has a very classic look to its features; worn out by a touch of grunge. This font will work with any of your design needs! For a customized look, switch between uppercase and lowercase for a change of erosion on the letters.
  7. Herzchen by Font-o-Rama, $25.00
    Herzchen is a well developed sans serif font. The curving and swinging letter forms remind a little of serif fonts, on closer inspection, however, they rather remind of upright italics. Playful details give charm to the typeface and make Herzchen lively and distinctive. With four cuts the typeface is suitable for simple corporate and editorial design projects. In addition there are many ligatures in the expert-set for individual use.
  8. Molecula by Northeast Type Foundry, $22.99
    Molecula is grotesque sans serif of slightly condensed proportions and humanist-grotesk features. The family features 9 weights from Thin to Black, each of which has an italic. The character set is robust, covering extended latin. All completely equipped with opentype features, alternative glyphs, fractions, lining numbers, small caps, subscript and superscript. Molecula has been designed for advertising, branding, packaging or anywhere a clean and contemporary voice is needed.
  9. Schoiffer Sans by Jeremie Hornus, $20.00
    Schoiffer Sans is a contemporary humanist sans serif, inspired by the historical font Enschedé English-bodied Roman N0.6. also known as the Scheffers (or Quentell) types. Schoiffer Sans displays warmth through its rounded and curved letterforms, and modernity while respecting the structure of the historical model. It has an extended Latin languages support and comes in 3 roman styles with one italic, all with fractions and multiple figures sets.
  10. Qidango by Sealoung, $21.00
    Introducing, Qidango is a serif typeface created with elegance and luxury, exuding femininity and glamour, but also a side of beauty with many alternatives to help you create endless variations for your creative needs. Featuring an italic style with striking contrasts and subtle details, as well as luxurious strokes and voluptuous curves, it creates a beautiful and powerful statement for any typographic composition, combining glamor with a contemporary aesthetic.
  11. Graffick by Graffiti Fonts, $12.99
    Graffick is a mechanical style created by merging a little traditional type design & typography with a little basic graffiti lettering theory. Extra ascenders and descenders have been added to many of the capital letters to add a more varied & specialized appearance. This layered type system provides for the easy creation of outline/fill effects with regular, italic, wide and outline styles as well as baseline & caps-height alignment options.
  12. Artigo Display by Nova Type Foundry, $40.00
    Artigo Display is the odd sister of Artigo text typeface. It is a contemporary interpretation of handwriting shapes in a display version of the italic. It is more expressive and it has its own personality. It was renovated with five new weights that bring more flexibility to use the typeface in different mediums. Artigo Display has won a Certificate of Typographic Excellence from the Type Directors Typeface Competition in January 2018.
  13. Betm Rounded by Typesketchbook, $39.00
    The typeface of Betm Rounded is based on the successful Betm font family by font foundry Typesketchbook. Font designer Chatnarong Jingsuphatada created Betm as a Rounded version to Betm. Both type families consist of ten weights plus with italic versions. Betm’s typeface has a friendly and modern sans serif appearance. This modern geometric font is very legible and can be used for headlines as well as small and long text.
  14. Quebra Expa by Vanarchiv, $55.00
    Quebra Expa (Expanded) is an extend display sans-serif font family, available with four widths (Extra Condensed, Condensed, Normal and Expanded) and ten weights, italics versions are available. The main strokes contain small breaks simulating modulated variations on the letterforms, these details are more present on large body sizes. All font versions contain Latin and Cyrillic encoding characters and also ligatures, case-sensitive forms, fractions, oldstyle and finally tabular figures.
  15. Cobe by Stawix, $39.00
    The result of reducing elements of letterforms to only its necessity in lowercase is mostly influenced by the ideal of Aerodynamics. The true intention behind the design of Cobe is to construct a fluid typeface while maintaining a strong structure of uppercase that possessed distict forms, shapes and corners, resulting in an eye-pleasing texture when forming a sentence. Cobe comes in 9 consecutive weights with italics and standard features.
  16. Akueila by Sensatype Studio, $15.00
    Akueila is a Luxury font that we created special for elegant, elegant, modern, wedding, branding needs, font that you can combine to get any variations and unique shapes easily just in seconds with choose alternates of them. What's Included: Character set A-Z Normal & Italic Style Numerals & Punctuation Accented Characters (West Europe) Stylistic Ligatures Works on PC & Mac Recommended using Adobe Illustrator or Adobe Photoshop. Wish you enjoy our font. :)
  17. Nauka by Slide Shoot, $12.00
    Nauka Serif is a an elegant and smooth combine typeface regular and italic serif font. He has a beautiful character. It fits perfectly with invitation card designs, company logos, movie titles, movie names, business cards, book titles, brand names and various other designs. Nauka Serif is a subtle serif font that exudes sophistication and elegance. Its stylish alternations and ligatures make this font the perfect partner for any project.
  18. Filora by Slide Shoot, $12.00
    Filora Serif is a an elegant and smooth combine typeface regular and italic serif font. He has a beautiful character. It fits perfectly with invitation card designs, company logos, movie titles, movie names, business cards, book titles, brand names and various other designs. Filora Serif is a subtle serif font that exudes sophistication and elegance. Its stylish alternations and ligatures make this font the perfect partner for any project.
  19. Edicia by Tour De Force, $-
    Edicia is modern serif family with 5 weights and matching Italics. Distinctive and recognizable, Edicia stands out clearly with charming details. Characterized by asymmetric serifs, Edicia is designed with special care for ink-traps. Contains extended Latin and Cyrillic character set equipped with left & right side Borders, Localised Forms, Denominator & Numerator, OldStyle Figures, Tabular Figures, Tabular OldStyle Figures, Superscript, Subscript, Stylistic Alternates. Thin weight is available for free.
  20. Blauth by Latinotype, $29.00
    Blauth—a versatile and contemporary sans serif typeface—comes in 8 weights, ranging from Thin to Black, with matching italics and contains a set of alternate characters. Its small x-height gives it an elegant feel that reminds us of classic typefaces. Blauth is well-suited to continuous text and its uppercase set is ideal for high-impact headlines while its softened corners give your designs a warm and contemporary look.
  21. Superpop by Resistenza, $39.00
    Superpop is sweet and gentle, a rounded geometric sans with a brushy script twist. Soft and refreshing like a soda, this font gets fizzy when geometric letterforms get mixed with script shapes you wouldn’t expect in a Sans Serif. A display family with two styles ( regular and italic ), 5 weights and an outline version for each style. Opentype Features: https://www.rsztype.com/article/how-to-use-opentype-features-adobe-microsoft-pages
  22. Cuanky by Kereatype, $14.00
    Cuanky is a super fun, retro-style sans serif font with subtle serifs. It possesses a recognizable flair and evokes a sense of warm nostalgia. Available in both regular and italic styles, Cuanky also features a playful hint of the future. Cuanky is perfect for headlines or food-related designs, such as pizza, burgers, and restaurant themes. Additionally, it's well-suited for creating eye-catching posters with a cool aesthetic.
  23. Metroland by takoliko, $15.00
    Metroland inspired by urban and modern life on a metropolis city. Metroland have a Subway vibe and a transportation theme that relate to our routine. Metroland is simple and modern sans serif display family font. it has a monoline geometric, and simple atmosphere. Metroland came with 9 weight and 9 italic fonts. It can easily be matched to an incredibly large set of projects, and good for communicating your brands.
  24. Friendly by Sensatype Studio, $15.00
    Brother is a High-Contrast font that we created special for elegant, luxury, modern, wedding, branding needs, font that you can combine to get any variations and unique shapes easily just in seconds with choose alternates of them. What's Included: Character set A-Z Normal & Italic Style Numerals & Punctuation Accented Characters (West Europe) Stylistic Ligatures Works on PC & Mac Recommended using Adobe Illustrator or Adobe Photoshop. Wish you enjoy our font. :)
  25. Ysobel by Monotype, $29.99
    The Ysobel™ typeface family is not only elegant; it is also exceptionally legible and space economical. A collaborative design effort between Robin Nicholas, as lead designer and project director, Delve Withrington and Alice Savoie of Monotype Imaging, the project had the primary design goal of creating a typeface family for setting text in newspapers and periodicals. The result, however, is also ideal for any application that requires quick and easy assimilation of text. According to Nicholas, “The idea for the design started when I was asked to develop a custom version of Century Schoolbook. I wanted to give the design a more contemporary feel, although the client ultimately decided to keep their typeface closer to the original. The project nevertheless gave me ideas for a new design. Since designing Nimrod, some 30 years ago, I had wanted to make a more modern typeface family for newspapers and magazines – this seemed the ideal candidate.” Ysobel (pronounced “Isabel”) has the soft, inviting letter shapes of Century Schoolbook but contrasts these with more incised serifs and terminals. Its capitals are also narrower than those of Century Schoolbook, and care was taken to ensure that they harmonize perfectly with the lowercase. Ysobel’s x-height is full-bodied without disrupting lowercase proportions. In addition, curved terminals, such as those in the “C,” “c” and “e,” were drawn more open as an aid to legibility and readability in text copy. Weight stress is near vertical, and hairlines are robust to ensure character fidelity in small point sizes. Development began with the text version of the family, which has four weights, each with an italic companion. All weights feature lining and old style numerals, fractions, superiors and extended Latin language coverage. Small caps are also available in the Roman Regular design. Ysobel Display is a completely redrawn version of the typeface; it is narrower, and has a slightly smaller x-height, thinner hairlines and subtle design changes to improve its appearance when set at large sizes. The Display Italic received particular attention to make it ideal for setting headlines, subheads and short blocks of copy. Changes include a slightly greater italic angle and more cursive treatment of some letter shapes. Alternative styles of capital “J” and “Q,” to provide variation, are available in all weights.
  26. Octin Sports by Typodermic, $11.95
    Octin Sports is a typeface that commands attention and exudes a sense of strength and resilience. The seven available weights—light, book, regular, semi-bold, heavy, and black—provide a range of options for designers looking to add a bold, dynamic element to their work. But make no mistake, this typeface is not just for the sports world. Octin Sports has a versatility that extends beyond the playing field and can lend a rugged, no-nonsense vibe to a variety of themes. Whether you’re designing for a school, construction site, or law enforcement agency, Octin Sports is up to the challenge. The sleek, angular lines of this typeface give it a distinct sporty feel, making it an ideal choice for designs that seek to convey energy and excitement. The bold weight options are particularly striking and provide a strong visual impact that demands attention. Overall, Octin Sports is a solid choice for designers who want to infuse their work with a sense of toughness and vitality. Its versatility and sporty design make it a font that can rise to any challenge, whether it’s on the field or in the boardroom. Check out the rest of the Octin families: Octin College, Octin Prison, Octin Stencil, Octin Vintage & Octin Spraypaint. Most Latin-based European writing systems are supported, including the following languages. Afaan Oromo, Afar, Afrikaans, Albanian, Alsatian, Aromanian, Aymara, Bashkir (Latin), Basque, Belarusian (Latin), Bemba, Bikol, Bosnian, Breton, Cape Verdean, Creole, Catalan, Cebuano, Chamorro, Chavacano, Chichewa, Crimean Tatar (Latin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dawan, Dholuo, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Filipino, Finnish, French, Frisian, Friulian, Gagauz (Latin), Galician, Ganda, Genoese, German, Greenlandic, Guadeloupean Creole, Haitian Creole, Hawaiian, Hiligaynon, Hungarian, Icelandic, Ilocano, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Jamaican, Kaqchikel, Karakalpak (Latin), Kashubian, Kikongo, Kinyarwanda, Kirundi, Kurdish (Latin), Latvian, Lithuanian, Lombard, Low Saxon, Luxembourgish, Maasai, Makhuwa, Malay, Maltese, Māori, Moldovan, Montenegrin, Ndebele, Neapolitan, Norwegian, Novial, Occitan, Ossetian (Latin), Papiamento, Piedmontese, Polish, Portuguese, Quechua, Rarotongan, Romanian, Romansh, Sami, Sango, Saramaccan, Sardinian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian (Latin), Shona, Sicilian, Silesian, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Sorbian, Sotho, Spanish, Swahili, Swazi, Swedish, Tagalog, Tahitian, Tetum, Tongan, Tshiluba, Tsonga, Tswana, Tumbuka, Turkish, Turkmen (Latin), Tuvaluan, Uzbek (Latin), Venetian, Vepsian, Võro, Walloon, Waray-Waray, Wayuu, Welsh, Wolof, Xhosa, Yapese, Zapotec Zulu and Zuni.
  27. Oo-la-la by Emboss, $26.95
    Inspired by old French poster art. This typeface was cut from an old rubylith.
  28. Garalda by TypeTogether, $49.00
    Type designer Xavier Dupré’s Garalda is a charming 21st century family that renews a legacy of finesse. As paragraphs on a page, Garalda’s overall impression is of a workaday personality, committed to the main purpose of the job: easy long-form reading. But setting it in display sizes proves something different: This reinvented Garamond is anything but basic. The Garalda story begins with the serendipitous finding of a book typeset in a rare Garalde, called Tory-Garamond, with which Dupré was not immediately familiar. This Garamond was used in bibliophile books in the decades surrounding 1920, but after that it became déclassé for an unknown reason. Dupré found the italic styles especially charming and discovered the family was probably the mythical Ollière Garamond cut from 1914. He obtained low resolution scans of the typeface and used them, rather than high resolution scans, as the basis for his new type family. This allowed Dupré the mental freedom to experiment and remix as he saw fit, culminating in a contemporary family with heritage. As seen in the simplistic rectangular serifs, Garalda is a humanist slab serif, but with a mix of angles and curves to give the classic shapes a fresh, unorthodox feeling. While almost invisible in paragraph text, these produce a graphic effect in display work. The set of ligatures in the roman and italics lend themselves to unique display use, such as creating lovely logotypes. In the italics, some swashes inspired by different historic Garamonds are included, sometimes breaking their curves to be more captivating. Just look at how the italic ‘*-s’ ligatures create ‘s’ with a cursive formation rather than merely a flowing slant. And how the roman ‘g’ link swings as wide as a trainer’s whip. These are all balanced by squared serifs in the roman to keep an overall mechanised regularity. The Garalda family comes in eight styles, includes some of the original arrows and ornaments, and speaks multiple languages for all typesetting needs, from pamphlets to fine book printing. The complete Garalda family, along with our entire catalogue, has been optimised for today’s varied screen uses.
  29. LFT Etica Mono by TypeTogether, $35.00
    Milan-based Leftloft studio has produced a third leg to its hit Etica font family: LFT Etica Mono. Meant to be a coder’s go-to font for everyday use as much as a designer’s way to invoke a certain genre, it is part of a broader and more versatile family that already contains almost 80 sans and serif fonts. LFT Etica Mono’s ten weights carry the same modern, recognisable DNA of the Etica family while hewing to the defined requirements of a coding typeface: space, density, distinct forms, and clarity. It uses the same instroke on the ‘c’ and open form of the ‘a’ for which the Etica family is famous, but adds something new in the form of an additional italic style. Monospaced fonts usually incorporate slanted letters as italics, as does LFT Etica Mono, but its default italics have warmer, cursive shapes while the alternate italics are simply slanted. The default ‘a’ is a simplified bowl and stem instead of a two storey shape; the ‘d, f, i, l, t, y’ and others gain an outstroke tail; the ‘e’ is one smooth stroke; and the default ‘k’ is looped. These characters have basic, slanted alternates if the cursive look isn’t desired, and includes a set of arrows and geometric shapes. The monospaced design, by nature, makes the typeface useful in coding and in low readability situations. And how does LFT Etica Mono work from the designer’s perspective? The starting point was the need for a monospaced Etica companion intended for technical applications: captions in graphic layouts, small text, confined or predefined space, and overall tone. Flat terminals and counters maintain the colour and versatility of the original typeface, but choosing between the organic cursive or blunt slanted alphabet will give every layout its own character. Of particular aesthetic interest may be the & and % symbols. Designed to be applied to the common visual environment, the new LFT Etica Mono font family completes a more complex system. One benefit is to give an expressive tone — less serious and more friendly — to something inherently technical, to bytes and bots, to encode the beautiful life.
  30. Varius by Linotype, $29.99
    The shapes of the f-holes on a violin reminded German designer André Maaßen of an italic letter "f". Maaßen used these captivating contours as the theme for his type family, Varius. The name "Varius" is an homage to the manufacturer of the violin that inspired Maaßen's project, Antonio Stradivarius, the most famous manufacturer of violins in music history. Varius has three separate styles. Varius 1 and its italic are the base style of the family, and are typefaces in the baroque serif manner. Varius 2 and its italic are slab serif egyptiennes, slightly heavier than Varius 1's more classical forms. Varius 3 and its italic are semi serif faces; their characters are serifed, but some of the serifs have been cut off. The family is rounded out with two pi faces: an ornaments font (which can be used in conjunction with the text fonts, or on its own to create beautiful borders or individual decorative elements), and a font of musical symbols and notations. Each of the six text fonts has dozens of supplemental ligatures included in their character sets. When these fonts are used in an OpenType-supporting application, such as Adobe InDesign, these ligatures automatically appear in text when the "Discretionary Ligatures" feature is activated. Additionally, the character sets include added alternate glyphs, such as a swash "m" or "n" to finish off a line of text. These can be inserted manually in applications that include glyph palettes (e.g., Adobe InDesign or Illustrator CS). All of the Varius family's letterforms appear slightly narrow, and traces of the wide-nibbed pen can be seen within their forms. Additionally, the shape of a violin's f-hole is a reminiscent element within all of the family's curves. Varius is particularly suited for use many applications, such as body text, newspaper text, display text, headlines, posters, books, screen design, and corporate identity. Use in sizes ranging from body copy text to display and poster format allow the different facets of the typeface to effectively present themselves. The effects can be as versatile as the possibilities! Due to its special character, the typeface could be used in the design of a logo, or within an appropriate corporate design context, to particularly stress individuality.
  31. Urban Brigade - Personal use only
  32. Psacstroj - Personal use only
  33. Dyer - Unknown license
  34. MB TyranT - Personal use only
  35. MCapitals - 100% free
  36. Dead Hardy - Personal use only
  37. Dot.com - Unknown license
  38. BPchubby - Unknown license
  39. BattleLines - Personal use only
  40. LED BOARD REVERSED - Unknown license
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