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  1. Save The Date by Latinotype, $40.00
    A wedding begins long before the "I Do's" on the big day—everyone works together throughout the process to make sure that everything happens as planned: details, color combinations, decorations, the way we convey the magic of the visual elements and deliver our message of love. Through this beautiful font, we would like to deliver to you that very message, you make it your own and express yourself in your own way—through the perfect invitation on your wedding day. No matter how sweet or wild your invitation looks, try to be yourself. Save the Date is a font collection consisting of 9 styles and 4 variants: Script, Sans, Serif and Small. The font set is intended to provide users with a wide range of choices for any design project. Save the Date was designed by Paula Nazal and Daniel Hernández. Digital editing by Rodrigo Fuenzalida. Photos by Mónica Muñoz. Mónica specializes in wedding photography. You can find more of her work here: www.thewildbrides.com
  2. Garamond Premier by Adobe, $35.00
    Claude Garamond (ca. 1480-1561) cut types for the Parisian scholar-printer Robert Estienne in the first part of the sixteenth century, basing his romans on the types cut by Francesco Griffo for Venetian printer Aldus Manutius in 1495. Garamond refined his romans in later versions, adding his own concepts as he developed his skills as a punchcutter. After his death in 1561, the Garamond punches made their way to the printing office of Christoph Plantin in Antwerp, where they were used by Plantin for many decades, and still exist in the Plantin-Moretus museum. Other Garamond punches went to the Frankfurt foundry of Egenolff-Berner, who issued a specimen in 1592 that became an important source of information about the Garamond types for later scholars and designers. In 1621, sixty years after Garamond's death, the French printer Jean Jannon (1580-1635) issued a specimen of typefaces that had some characteristics similar to the Garamond designs, though his letters were more asymmetrical and irregular in slope and axis. Jannon's types disappeared from use for about two hundred years, but were re-discovered in the French national printing office in 1825, when they were wrongly attributed to Claude Garamond. Their true origin was not to be revealed until the 1927 research of Beatrice Warde. In the early 1900s, Jannon's types were used to print a history of printing in France, which brought new attention to French typography and the Garamond" types. This sparked the beginning of modern revivals; some based on the mistaken model from Jannon's types, and others on the original Garamond types. Italics for Garamond fonts have sometimes been based on those cut by Robert Granjon (1513-1589), who worked for Plantin and whose types are also on the Egenolff-Berner specimen. Linotype has several versions of the Garamond typefaces. Though they vary in design and model of origin, they are all considered to be distinctive representations of French Renaissance style; easily recognizable by their elegance and readability. Garamond Pemiere Pro was designed by Robert Slimbach, and released in 2005."
  3. FM Thank You by The Fontmaker, $20.00
    FM Thank You consists of 26 ‘thank you’ hand letterings - all custom made and handwritten. Now you have 26 unique ways to say ‘thank you’, adding a personal touch to your message.
  4. P22 Posada by P22 Type Foundry, $24.95
    Mexican printmaker Jose Guadalupe Posada (1851-1913) created a massive variety of material—broadsheets, cards, advertisements, posters, etc.—which largely represented a defense of the common man and a manifestation of the horrible and gruesome events of the day. Posada often cut his own lettering that looked like more decorative versions of Gothic wood types. His most notable imagery comes from his Calaveras celebrating the Day of the Dead. Calaveras often represent effigies of living people depicted as skeletons going about their daily activities. These are often humorous and playful in a way that helps bridge this world with the beyond. This font family contains two small caps style fonts and one Extras font containing 60 images.
  5. Spring Heart by Yoga Letter, $14.00
    This font is called "Spring Heart" which combines spring and a cozy heart. This font is a very beautiful, unique, and very easy to use calligraphy font. The embellishments on the letters are very easy to use, and besides that, there are instructions on how to use them as well. This font is perfect for spring, wedding, mother day, father day, patrick day, easter, earth day, and other projects.
  6. Open Range by FontMesa, $20.00
    Open Range is a new font design based on an old classics sans serif font from the 1800s. Some may say that this font looks like a western version of the more modern Benguiat but samples of lettering from the 1800s show a similar design to Benguiat and may have been the inspiration for that font.
  7. Fontenay Fancy - Personal use only
  8. ITC True Grit by ITC, $29.99
    ITC True Grit is the work of American designer Michael Stacey, a bold distinctive typeface. An enthusiastic collector of vintage graphic design, Stacey says that he is especially intrigued by lettering styles from the days when most display typography was done by hand. The style for ITC True Grit was taken from the 1930s and updated for digital imagine. Stacey say his goal was to retain the casual feel of handlettering yet impart the crisp finish of current precision typography." ITC True Grit is a hybrid design, a cross between German Blackletter and brush script with a hint of Jugendstil thrown in."
  9. Independant - Small Caps - Unknown license
  10. Epidemic by Gatype, $10.00
    Epidemic is a bold display font that is simple and unique looking.This customizable font will look great on a variety of design ideas such as Christmas themes,valentines, posters, invitations, weddings, branding projects, social media posts, magazines, book covers and more.This will add a fun and friendly touch to any of your projects.This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all the glyphs and sweeps easily.
  11. Homela by Gatype, $12.00
    Homela is a bold script font that is simple and unique looking. This customizable font will look great on a variety of design ideas such as Christmas themes, valentines, posters, invitations, weddings, branding projects, social media posts, magazines, book covers and more! This will add a fun and friendly touch to any of your projects! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all the glyphs and sweeps easily.
  12. Soothing Along by Mvmet, $18.00
    Soothing Along is a fun and playful grunge handmade font. You can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts, book designs, and greeting cards to stickers and posters, or anything that needs a casual touch. If you want to use it for Christmas or Valentine themed designs, it will be your perfect font to pick. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style, and use it to create lovely designs!
  13. Groovy Christmas by Mvmet, $16.00
    Groovy Christmas is a playful script display font. You can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts, book designs, and greeting cards to stickers and posters, or anything that needs a casual touch. If you want to use it for Christmas or Valentine themed designs, it will be your perfect font to pick. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style, and use it to create lovely designs!
  14. Bold Heart by Mvmet, $16.00
    Bold Heart is a bold and fun handwritten font that you can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts, book designs, packaging, and greeting cards to stickers and posters, or anything that needs a casual touch, it will be your perfect font to pick if you want to use it for Valentine. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style, and use it to create lovely designs!
  15. Comic Adore by Mvmet, $16.00
    Comic Adore is a fun script display font. You can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts, book designs, and greeting cards to stickers and posters, or anything that needs a casual touch. If you want to use it for Christmas or Valentine themed designs, it will be your perfect font to pick. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style, and use it to create lovely designs!
  16. Sugar Holiday by Mvmet, $16.00
    Sugar Holiday is a fun skinny font that you can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts, book designs, and greeting cards to stickers and posters, or anything that needs a casual touch. If you want to use it for Christmas or Valentine themed designs, it will be your perfect font to pick. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style, and use it to create lovely designs!
  17. Technerd JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The quest for an identity in the 1980s world of personal computers is the best way to describe Technerd JNL, a retro-style monoline font with clinically mechanical letter structure and a personality only a dot matrix could love. Picture if you will columned reports, interoffice memos and other paper ephemera of the day with this perfect form-and-function typeface, simply reeking of early 80s know-how!
  18. Elsewhere by Comicraft, $29.00
    Someday, a long time from now, in a galaxy not so very far away, you'll find yourself Suddenly transported to the nether-realms of Elsewhere, bathed in the light of the mystic moons of Meanwhile... While you're waiting for that day, check out this font by John "JG" Roshell. It may not provide you with the same transcendental experience, but JG assures us that it really is the next best thing.
  19. Hybi11 Amigo by Hybi-Types, $12.50
    You can’t reinvent the wheel When it comes to designing a sans serif, many designers stick closely to existing models. How boring! Others try to demonstrate self-reliance by special stylistic elements – at the cost of readability or aesthetics, or both. I did chose a different way: My Font should just look pretty and friendly, being the good buddy for all days. This is how the name is explained.
  20. Independant - Unknown license
  21. Mati by Sudtipos, $19.00
    Father's Day, or June 17 of this year, is in the middle of Argentinian winter. And like people do on wintery Sunday mornings, I was bundled up in bed with too many covers, pillows and comforters. Feeling good and not thinking about anything in particular, Father's Day was nowhere in the vicinity of my mind. My eleven year old son, Matías, came into the room with a handmade present for me. Up to this point, my Father's Day gift history was nothing unusual. Books, socks, hand-painted wooden spoons, the kind of thing any father would expect from his pre-teen son. So you can understand when I say I was bracing myself to fake excitement at my son's present. But this Father's Day was special. I didn't have to fake excitement. I was in fact excited beyond my own belief. Matí's handmade present was a complete alphabet drawn on an A4 paper. Grungy, childish, and sweeter than a ton of honey. He'd spent days making it, three-dimensioning the letters, wiggle-shadowing them. Incredible. A common annoyance for graphic designers is explaining to people, even those close to them, what they do for a living. You have to somehow make it understandable that you are a visual communicator, not an artist. Part of the problem is the fact that "graphic designer" and "visual communicator" are just not in the dictionary of standard professions out there. If you're a plumber, you can wrap all the duties of your job with 3.5 words: I'm a plumber. If you're a graphic designer, no wrapper, 3.5 or 300 words, will ever cover it. I've spent many hours throughout the years explaining to my own family and friends what I do for a living, but most of them still come back and ask what it is exactly that I do for dough. When you're a type designer, that problem magnifies itself considerably. When someone asks you what you do for a living, you start looking for the nearest exit, but none of the ones you can find is any good. All the one-line descriptions are vague, and every single one of them queues a long, one-sided conversation that usually ends with someone getting too drunk listening, or too tired of talking. Now imagine being a type designer, with a curious eleven year old son. The kid is curious as to why daddy keeps writing huge letters on the computer screen. Let's go play some ball, dad. As soon as I finish working, son. He looks over my shoulder and sees a big twirly H on the screen. To him it looks like a game, like I'm not working. And I have to explain it to him again. This Father's Day, my son gave me the one present that tells me he finally understands what I do for a living. Perhaps he is even comfortable with it, or curious enough about that he wants to try it out himself. Either way, it was the happiest Father's Day I've ever had, and I'm prouder of my son than of everything else I've done in my life. This is Matí's font. I hope you find it useful.
  22. LTC Holiday Ornaments by Lanston Type Co., $24.95
    Assembled for those less commercialized holidays, LTC Holiday Ornaments features over 80 printers' ornaments from Lanston Monotype and other historical foundries such as BBS and ATF. Holidays include Easter, Valentine's Day, St. Patrick's Day, April Fool's Day, Thanksgiving and 4th of July. There¹s even a pirate to represent international "Talk Like a Pirate" day. LTC Holiday Ornaments joins the Lanston Collection alongside the popular LTC Halloween and Christmas Ornaments. LTC Holiday Ornaments contains additional Halloween and Christmas ornaments as well.
  23. KR Heartalicious - Unknown license
  24. KG Two Is Better Than One by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    This font was created in honor of my husband for our 12th wedding anniversary. 14 years ago, I met this tall, skinny guy from Indiana in the lobby of a hotel in Hong Kong. We talked. The next day, we had lunch together. And that night we had dinner together. And the next day. And the next. We met just before my 19th birthday, and on my birthday he took me to the top of Victoria Peak, where we looked out over the city of Hong Kong- such a beautiful place to begin a lifetime of love! We spent 4 months together in Hong Kong, falling in love with each other and with the beautiful city we were privileged to call home for that short time. We married the next year. We've lived in Indiana, Texas, China, Kentucky, and Florida over those 12 years of marriage and have welcomed 2 daughters into our lives. I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that he completes my life in a way I didn't know was possible. And I know that I'm blessed beyond words to have a supportive, wonderful, encouraging husband who is also a loving, involved, caring dad to our daughters. This font is for you, Keith!
  25. Pinky Cupid by Attype Studio, $15.00
    Pinky Cupid is lovely display font, including stylistic alternates that perfect for any combination for your design. Pinky Cupid perfectly macth for design with valentine theme, any product like book cover, t-shirt, branding, promotion, social media post, quotes, wedding, photography and more. What's included: - Multilingual Support - Support OpenType features - Works on PC & Mac - Simple installations - Accessible in the Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe InDesign --- Hope you enjoy with our font! Attype Studio
  26. Little Love by Attype Studio, $14.00
    Little love is lovely display font, including stylistic alternates that perfect for any combination for your design. Little love perfectly match for design with valentine theme, any product like book cover, t-shirt, branding, promotion, social media post, quotes, wedding, photography and more. What's included: - Beginning & Ending Swash - Multilingual Support (Afrikaans, Albanian, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Icelandic, Italian, Norwegian, Portugese, Spanisch, Swedish, Zulu) --- Hope you enjoy with our font! Attype Studio
  27. Tuesday Jingle by Attype Studio, $13.00
    Tuesday Jingle is an exquisite font for Valentine theme design, with dingbats heart on character "{}[]" Fall in love with it and bring your projects to the highest levels! Tuesday Jingle is perfect for branding, logo, invitation, stationery, social media post, product packaging, merchandise, blog design, game titles, cute style design, Book/Cover Title and more. What's Included : - Tuesday Jingle.otf - Heart dingbats on character "{}[]" - Multilingual Support --- Hope you enjoy with our font! Attype Studio
  28. Hello Balcony by Mvmet, $18.00
    Hello Balcony is a lovely handmade paint font. You can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts, book designs, packaging and greeting cards to stickers and posters, or anything that needs a casual touch. If you want to use it for Christmas or Valentine or other lovely themed designs, it will be your perfect font to pick. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style, and use it to create lovely designs!
  29. Bold Heart Outline by Mvmet, $16.00
    Bold Heart Outline is a lovely handmade paint font. You can use it for anything ranging from t-shirts, book designs, packaging and greeting cards to stickers and posters, or anything that needs a casual touch. If you want to use it for Valentine or other lovely themed designs, it will be your perfect font to pick. Fall in love with its incredibly versatile style, and use it to create lovely designs!
  30. Debora Celina Script by Gatype, $5.00
    Debora Celina is a font Duo Script and Serif that is simple and unique looking.This customizable font will look great on a variety of design ideas such as Christmas themes,valentines, posters, invitations, weddings, branding projects, social media posts, magazines, book covers and more. This will add a fun and friendly touch to any of your projects.This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all the glyphs and sweeps easily.
  31. Winterfalls by Joanne Marie, $30.00
    I always like to make a heart swash font and this is my 7th. Winterfalls is a high quality, smooth, simple script font which is easy to read and ideal for anything romantic and loving. Use it on cards and notes for baby announcements, wedding stationery, birthday and thank you cards but most of all, anything for your Valentine. Winterfalls includes left and right end swashes and connecting swashes on the lowercase letters, and a set of alternate uppercase letters with heart swashes. There are a few alternate lowercase letters, such as the ‘i’ and the ‘j’ dotted with a cute little heart and many, many ligatures. As usual, this font also comes with a good set of international characters, which will come in handy when you want you entice your valentine with a little french, haha. If you use a program which doesn’t have a glyphs panel then it’s super easy to copy and paste the alternates and ligatures from Font Book (Mac) or Character Map (Windows).
  32. Radium J - Unknown license
  33. Homeward Bound by Hanoded, $15.00
    Homeward Bound is a fat, grungy slab serif font - all handmade and inspired by a well known 1934 font. Together with sidekick Homeward Bound II, this baby will lighten up your day, bring you your newspaper and do your dishes to boot. Well, that may not be an accurate description of Homeward Bound’s abilities, but I am sure it will make your work stand out, giving it that ‘handmade eroded vintage’ look.
  34. Enforcer by Tour De Force, $25.00
    Modern simple typeface expressing sharp and bright words without need for writing something really smart. Made by Dusan Jelesijevic one day when he left without anything smart to say or write, so he just grabbed a pencil and forced the paper to be cooperative. Someone said that this typeface looks like the ancient Greeks went in present future and used contemporary equipment for writing those letters. It is ideal for branding and avantgarde identities.
  35. Mirallove Restimond by MJB Letters, $20.00
    Hello everyone, we hope you have a great day. Say hi to Mirallove Restimond a new casual modern font that is very perfect for branding, wedding designs, quotes, posters, business cards, logotype, display, watermarks, signatures, etc. This font also has a special character in terms of thickness and thinness on each side, so it will give a neat handwritten impression that will make your design look very attractive and it is PUA Encoded.
  36. Printout by Hanoded, $15.00
    Font naming is not all that difficult. Take Printout for example. I was busy working on this font, when my niece came over with a poem she needed to have printed. One of her classmates had the same request (they’re writing poems for our national Remembrance Day). As I was printing out these poems, I thought the name Printout would be perfect for the font I was working on. See? It’s not rocket science! Printout is a totally awesome, completely handmade font. I used an almost dried out Japanese brush pen to get the eroded effect. Maybe I should name my next font ‘Dried Out Brush Pen’? I’ll let you know.
  37. Yuko by Thinkdust, $10.00
    Big, bold and with attitude to spare, no-one better get in the way of Yuko when it’s got something to say. Although it’s a gentle giant really, Yuko has a lot of opinions and it won’t go without being heard. Yuko is most effective when you need to say something loudly and with attitude to get people’s attention, especially if you’re competing for space.
  38. FS Brabo Paneuropean by Fontsmith, $90.00
    Worldly Even though it’s a new arrival, FS Brabo has seen the world. Designed by a Brazilian working in London and studying in Belgium under a Dutchman, it’s certainly well-travelled. And it was inspired by the extraordinary archive of early book typefaces at the world-renowned Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp, while Fernando Mello was attending Frank Blokland’s Expert class Type Design course at the Plantin Institute of Typography. It was there that Fernando became engrossed in the collection of early metal type, matrices, punches and type samples by figures such as Garamond and Granjon. So much so that he took on the mighty task of developing ‘a beautiful, functional, serifed text font’ of his own. Heroic FS Brabo’s journey from sketch to font family took an epic three years, starting in Antwerp, continuing at Fontsmith in London, and reaching its conclusion back in Fernando’s home city of São Paulo. No wonder Fernando was reminded of another titanic face-off: that of Antwerp’s Roman hero of legend, Silvius Brabo, and the evil ogre, Antigoon. Brabo came to the town’s rescue after the tyrannical giant had been charging ships’ captains extortionate taxes and chopping off the hands of those who refused to pay up. Having finally downed Antigoon after a long and terrible duel, Brabo cut off the giant’s own hand and threw it into the river Scheldt, unwittingly giving the town its name: the Dutch for ‘hand-throw’ is hand werpen. What better way for Fernando to name his literary typeface than after the hero of Antwerp’s oldest tale? The garalde factor FS Brabo is not a revival, but a very much a contemporary, personal interpretation of a garalde – a class of typeface originating in the 16th century that includes Bembo, Garamond and Plantin, with characteristically rounded serifs and moderate contrast between strokes. Brabo’s ‘ct’ and ‘st’ ligatures, upper-case italic swashes and contextual ending ligatures – ‘as’, ‘is’, ‘us’ – all preserve the beauty and character of traditional typefaces, but its serifs are chunkier than a garalde. Their sharp cuts and squared edges give them a crispness at text sizes, helping to bring a beautifully bookish personality to hardworking modern applications. A workhorse with pedigree It may give the appearance of a simple, four-weight typeface, but FS Brabo has hidden depths beneath its simplicity and beauty. OpenType features such as cap italic swashes, contextual ending swashes – programmed only to appear at the end of words – and stylistic alternatives make this a complete and well-equipped typeface. Comprehensive testing was carried out at text and display sizes, too, to prevent counters from filling in. All of which makes FS Brabo a very modern take on a traditional workhorse serif typeface: colourful and versatile enough to adorn not just editorial projects but also signage, advertising and logotypes.
  39. FS Brabo by Fontsmith, $80.00
    Worldly Even though it’s a new arrival, FS Brabo has seen the world. Designed by a Brazilian working in London and studying in Belgium under a Dutchman, it’s certainly well-travelled. And it was inspired by the extraordinary archive of early book typefaces at the world-renowned Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp, while Fernando Mello was attending Frank Blokland’s Expert class Type Design course at the Plantin Institute of Typography. It was there that Fernando became engrossed in the collection of early metal type, matrices, punches and type samples by figures such as Garamond and Granjon. So much so that he took on the mighty task of developing ‘a beautiful, functional, serifed text font’ of his own. Heroic FS Brabo’s journey from sketch to font family took an epic three years, starting in Antwerp, continuing at Fontsmith in London, and reaching its conclusion back in Fernando’s home city of São Paulo. No wonder Fernando was reminded of another titanic face-off: that of Antwerp’s Roman hero of legend, Silvius Brabo, and the evil ogre, Antigoon. Brabo came to the town’s rescue after the tyrannical giant had been charging ships’ captains extortionate taxes and chopping off the hands of those who refused to pay up. Having finally downed Antigoon after a long and terrible duel, Brabo cut off the giant’s own hand and threw it into the river Scheldt, unwittingly giving the town its name: the Dutch for ‘hand-throw’ is hand werpen. What better way for Fernando to name his literary typeface than after the hero of Antwerp’s oldest tale? The garalde factor FS Brabo is not a revival, but a very much a contemporary, personal interpretation of a garalde – a class of typeface originating in the 16th century that includes Bembo, Garamond and Plantin, with characteristically rounded serifs and moderate contrast between strokes. Brabo’s ‘ct’ and ‘st’ ligatures, upper-case italic swashes and contextual ending ligatures – ‘as’, ‘is’, ‘us’ – all preserve the beauty and character of traditional typefaces, but its serifs are chunkier than a garalde. Their sharp cuts and squared edges give them a crispness at text sizes, helping to bring a beautifully bookish personality to hardworking modern applications. A workhorse with pedigree It may give the appearance of a simple, four-weight typeface, but FS Brabo has hidden depths beneath its simplicity and beauty. OpenType features such as cap italic swashes, contextual ending swashes – programmed only to appear at the end of words – and stylistic alternatives make this a complete and well-equipped typeface. Comprehensive testing was carried out at text and display sizes, too, to prevent counters from filling in. All of which makes FS Brabo a very modern take on a traditional workhorse serif typeface: colourful and versatile enough to adorn not just editorial projects but also signage, advertising and logotypes.
  40. Keitana MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    A practical font family with 2 weights for all your day by day headlines, signage etc. An extended sans serif typeface with rounded endings that provides unique bold appearance without losing legibility.
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