10,000 search results (0.054 seconds)
  1. the Blue Cabin - Unknown license
  2. Bold Metal Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    An image of a vintage, hand-cut metal stencil with just a set of bold numerals inspired the design of Bold Metal Stencil JNL. The typeface is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  3. Western Sans JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Take a classic Western wood type where the horizontals are thicker than the verticals and remove the slab serifs… The result is Western Sans JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  4. Fair Play JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Inspired by hand lettering on a 1939 World’s Fair Poster, Fair Play JNL is a bold, condensed design with spurred serifs and some flared characters… and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  5. Lumberyard Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Lumberyard Stencil JNL was inspired by the image of an antique brass stencil that was probably used for marking various wood products by a lumber company. It's available in both regular and oblique versions.
  6. Denso by Stefano Giliberti, $15.00
    Denso is a font family delivering great force using minimum space. It supports 111 languages, features a total of 309 glyphs and includes an outlined and italicized version for each of the 3 weights.
  7. Contra Condensed by Wiescher Design, $16.50
    Contra Condensed is the condensed version of my Contra family of fonts. It is very condensed, but not yet narrow. It is well suited in all situations were one needs to save space. Enjoy!
  8. Karamboule by Bogstav, $17.00
    ALL CAPS font with an organic crunchy look. Very good for posters and stuff that needs a organic look. Multilingual support and 6 different versions of each letter - these cycles automatically AS you type!
  9. Show Card Roman JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Art Nouveau serif capitals and numerals in the 1917 instructional book “A Roman Alphabet and How to Use It” were the inspiration for Show Card Roman JNL; available in both regular and oblique versions.
  10. Vista Slab by Emigre, $69.00
    The Sans Narrow and Slab versions were added to the Vista family in 2008, extending this super-family to a total of 108 fonts. For more information, see the original Vista Sans Design Information.
  11. Anubis by DSType, $19.00
    Anubis, the first DSType font at MyFonts is back in an improved Pro version. AnubisPro, a slab serif font with a contemporary feel, with Central Europe diacritics, swashes and ligatures, available in OpenType format.
  12. Revelry Deco JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The namesake for this type design was the dust jacket for the 1926 book “Revelry”. A classic Art Deco thick-and-thin design, Revelry Deco JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  13. Refinery Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A vintage brass stencil used for marking oil drum lids for the Standard Oil Company of Kentucky served as the model for Refinery Stencil JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  14. Magic Ramen by Nicky Laatz, $20.00
    Say hello to Magic Ramen - an oddball sans serif font with weird contrast! Playful and strange - perfect for unusual avant-garde branding and projects. Includes Opentype Kerning. Available in both solid and outline versions.
  15. Pavement JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Pavement JNL is Jeff Levine's version of the extra-condensed lettering used on roadway information signs as revised by the U.S. Government in 2000. A companion font to this style is Endless Journey JNL.
  16. Headline Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered title for the 1890s book called “The Octopus” featured extra bold Art Nouveau lettering with rounded serifs. This is now available as Headline Nouveau JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  17. Lucky Lunch by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    A font to boost your creative work - handmade strokes and a scribbled 3d effect! Use the 4 different versions to create cool effects. With, or without shadow and with or without the worn effect!
  18. Mighty Oaks by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Mighty Oaks is a collection of stylized oak leaves. There are 47 oak leaves located under the character set keys. There is a flopped version of each leaf located under the shift+character key.
  19. Protocol by Rômulo Gobira, $11.99
    Protocol is an experimental pixelated font, which allows you to easily experiment and to combine it with other typefaces. This version (1.0) comes with 580+ glyphs, multiple language support and some unique emoji characters.
  20. Turquoise Tuscan by Resistenza, $59.00
    A new Version of Turquoise Roman Capitals. With specials Tuscan Serifs to add more engraving feel. Turquoise Tuscan is full of ligatures and awesome alternates. Perfect for big headlines, logos, branding and wine labels.
  21. Vista Sans Narrow by Emigre, $69.00
    The Sans Narrow and Slab versions were added to the Vista family in 2008, extending this super-family to a total of 108 fonts. For more information, see the original Vista Sans Design Information.
  22. Sodbuster NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Another William H. Page classic, Gothic Dotted, provided the pattern for this bold and brassy typeface. Both versions of this font support the Latin 1262, Central European 1250, Turkish 1254 and Baltic 1257 codepages.
  23. Lancashire Stencil JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The Butterfly Brand [from the UK] manufactured some lettering stencils (circa the 1950s) with a distinctively British look and feel. These inspired Lancashire Stencil JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  24. Rushing Pass JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Rushing Pass JNL is the italicized companion font to Forward Passed JNL and Return Pass JNL. This package includes a bonus solid version of the font (Forward Passed Black JNL) at no extra charge.
  25. Slab Compact JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Slab Compact JNL was based on the printed title found on the box cover of a 1950s-era word games set called “Lex-O-Grams” and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  26. KG Primary Dots by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    A dotted font perfect for teaching penmanship to students. With handwriting lines and without, perfect for making worksheets and projects for classrooms. This style matches KG Primary Penmanship, a solid version of this font.
  27. Family Deco JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Family Deco JNL was inspired by the bold Art Deco hand lettering of the movie credits for the 1936 Laurel and Hardy comedy “Our Relations”, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  28. Arcato by Stefano Giliberti, $15.00
    Arcato is a font family shaped from spherical curves inspired by celestial bodies. It supports 114 languages, features a total of 508 glyphs and includes an italicized version for each of the 5 weights.
  29. Road Repair JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Road Repair JNL is a bold (hand lettered) sans serif stencil font based on the opening credits from the 1954 film “Drive a Crooked Road” – and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  30. Paper Cutout Pro by Kimmy Design, $10.00
    Paper Cutout Pro is a playful typeface inspired by paper letterforms cutout by scissors. It's imperfect letters create the feel of an authentic hand-cut school project. It comes in regular and round versions.
  31. AcornSwash by Ingrimayne Type, $9.95
    Sans-serif with ornate, swashy capitals, AcornSwash is an elegant decorative face. The differences between the two versions of the font are in letters I, Z, a, e, f g, j, k, and o.
  32. Champions by TypeDrift, $15.00
    Champions is our best-selling typeface that has been completely rebuilt, from the ground up. Now featuring special characters, alternate glyphs and a sans serif version. This is the font champions are made of.
  33. Freie Initialen-AR by ARTypes, $35.00
    Freie Initialen are derived from initials made for the Stempel Garamond series. The type was issued in 1928 in three sizes (36, 48, and 60 pt); the AR version follows the 60-pt design.
  34. Bucanera Antiqued by Corradine Fonts, $24.95
    Bucanera Antiqued is the black ship of Bucanera's family, sure you will use it in any dark or dirty project. Try the Open Type version to reach its numerous swashes, flourished and alternate characters.
  35. Anodina by Stefano Giliberti, $15.00
    Anodina is a font family with human features but symmetric in its soul. It supports 114 languages, features a total of 508 glyphs and includes an italicized version for each of the 5 weights.
  36. Apice by Stefano Giliberti, $15.00
    Apice is a font family made for precise bursts of data. It supports 111 languages, features a total of 310 glyphs and includes an italicized and outline version for each of the 3 weights.
  37. Sleepy Head by PizzaDude.dk, $15.00
    Sleepy Head is a comic sans serif with slightly geometric curves, Perfect for anything that has the need for a casual display font. Comes with 5 different versions of each letter and multilingual support!
  38. PF DIN Stencil Pro by Parachute, $65.00
    DIN Stencil Pro on Behance. DIN Stencil Pro: Specimen Manual PDF. Despite the fact that over the years several designers have manually created stencil lettering based on DIN for various projects, there had never been a professional digital stencil version of a DIN-based typeface until 2010 when the original DIN Stencil was first released. The Pro version was released in 2014 and adds multiscript support for Cyrillic and Greek. DIN Stencil Pro was based on its original counterpart DIN Text Pro and was particularly designed to address contemporary projects, by incorporating elements and weights which are akin to industries such as fashion, music, video, architecture, sports and communications. Traditionally, stencils have been used extensively for military equipment, goods packaging, transportation, shop signs, seed sacks and prison uniforms. In the old days, stencilled markings of ownership were printed on personal possessions, while stencilled signatures on shirts were typical of 19th century stencilling. Two companies dominated the market in the mid-twentieth century: the Marsh Stencil Machine Company in the United States and the Sächsische Metall Schablonen Fabrik in Germany. Ever since the late 1930s, it was the German Sächsische Metall Schablonen Fabrik which used heavily the new DIN 1451 standard font (introduced in 1936), attempting to overthrow the reign of the Didot-style modern roman which was at the time the most common stencil letter in Germany. These letters were manufactured mainly as individual zinc stencils which could be ordered in sizes between 10 and 100mm. The DIN Stencil family manages to preserve several traditional stencil features, but introduces additional modernities which enhance its pleasing characteristics which make it an ideal choice for a large number of contemporary projects. Furthermore, the spacing attributes of the glyphs were redefined and legibility was improved by revising the shape of the letterforms. The DIN Stencil Pro family is an enhanced version of the popular DIN Stencil. It consists of 8 diverse weights from the elegant Hairline to the muscular Black and supports Latin, Cyrillic, Greek, Eastern European, Turkish and Baltic. The new version 3.0 includes several additions such the recently unicode encoded character of the German uppercase Eszett (ẞ), the Russian currency symbol for Rouble (₽), Ukrainian Hryvnia (₴), Azeri and Kazakh letterforms.
  39. Rolphie by Aah Yes, $9.95
    Rolphie can be your go-to sans-serif, with 16 easy-to-read weights and 10 versions for each weight, and the subtlety of choice that represents. The versions contained in each weight are: Regular; Condensed; Half-Condensed; Expanded; Small Capitals: and their italic counterparts. (At heavier weights particularly it seemed to be justified to have two Condensed versions). Plus there's 20 funky versions with the letters all shook up (that would make a good title for a song), or jumbled around, plus some Shadow, Doubled-Up, College, and other FX versions. In total there's 180 variations, giving a comprehensive selection of both standard and funky fonts, and that subtle degree of choice of weight. To make things easier, the weights are put in ascending numerical order from 01 to 16, and the FX versions have been stuck in the 80s and 90s, (like two musicians I know). There are grouped packages available for certain weights (which have 10 fonts in them) and the complete family package (180 fonts) which represent better value than the individual fonts, and there's a basic package containing the Normal and Italic versions of all 16 weights (32 fonts). A limit of 5 sub-family packages has been imposed, unfortunately, which precludes a more comprehensive selection. To let you know what's in the font that you might otherwise never know about . . . With Discretionary Ligatures on, you get special characters if you type Mc St. Rd. Bd. Ave. c/o No. (p) (P) - include the full-stop/period. With Stylistic Alternates switched on, you get plenty of extra characters - including a WiFi symbol (type Wifi or WiFi) / bullet numbers instead of ordinary numbers / that different U-dieresis / special characters for c/o No. Mc / an upside down ~ / a huge bullet, and different forms for cent, dollar, percent, per-thousand. As you'd expect, there's all the accented characters for all Western European scripts using Latin letters, and standard ligatures, plus other Open Type features including Class Kerning, Slashed-Zero, Historical Forms, Sub- and Superscript numbers, fractions for halves, thirds and quarters, Ornamental forms giving bullet numbers, etc. There's also the main mathematical operators, symbols like card-suits and male/female signs and so on, and some more obscure stuff like schwa and O-horn, U-horn - and there's lots more if you can Access All Alternates. Much will depend on what your software recognises. The Small Caps versions have (intentionally) lost the ligatures for lower case ff, fi, fj, fl, fr, fu, ffi, ffj, ffl, ffr, ffu. The names for the weights are not absolute - we had to make up some names to make them stretch out to sixteen - so rather - see them as relative to each other, being in ascending numerical order by weight.
  40. Techari by Letterjuice, $35.00
    Techarí comes from a commission in which the brief consisted of the creation of a typeface family to be used for the design of the third disc of the band called Ojos de Brujo based in Barcelona. This disc was called Techarí, which means “free” in Caló, the language of the Spanish gypsies. The starting point of the design was the music of this band, the meaning of the disc 's name, and three words given by the band as key concepts: ethnic, baroque and graffiti. Techarí is a mixture of lots of influences, which give it its unique personality. From its technical viewpoint designing Techarí was a challenge, on the one hand it had to have lots of personality, and on the other it had to work in text at 9 or 10 pt size. Its goal is precisely that, while keeping a strong personality it works in text size. The typeface also contains a Stencil version for use in display sizes which keeps Techarí's innovative spirit. The way it has been “cut" is unconventional, it has been carefully done to keep the freshness of the typeface by taking advantage of the letterforms' flow. Techarí extra complements the typeface by taking a classical typographic form, the ornament, and making it a contemporary graphic tool, vindicating this wonderful typographic element.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing