10,000 search results (0.035 seconds)
  1. Fleurons V by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    Fleurons are embellishments and here is my fifth set. I again found some nice old ones and made them completely new. These very elaborate ones go extremely well together with my scripts Nadine and Ellida!!! Yours in an elaborate mood, Gert Wiescher
  2. Stone Print by Stone Type Foundry, $54.00
    Stone Print is a "green" typeface. It uses less space than the most popular text typefaces without sacrificing legibility. Made for the reader, the environment, and whoever pays the bills. Together with Cycles, SFPL, and Arepo it makes up a superfamily of typefaces.
  3. Wolf Fangs Graffiti by Sipanji21, $15.00
    Wolf Fangs is an incredibly unique and chunky lettered display font with graffiti basic feel, its suitable for logotype, design grafics, e-sport, apparel, wall art, etc. Add this font to your favorite creative ideas and notice how it makes them come alive!
  4. Barila by Irina Vascovet, $16.00
    Barila is a fun hand written font that is perfect for projects like games, apps, books, holiday cards, and nursery art projects. It is very readable while keeping it's fun and whimsical personality. Multilingual characters are included for international customers as well.
  5. Pensle Caligraf by Ingrimayne Type, $8.95
    PensleCaligraf is a wild and exuberant calligraphic script. It may lack the elegance for formal invitations and certificates but its quirkiness may make it suitable for invitations and documents that are casual or humorous such as children's birthday announcements or participation awards.
  6. Stenciling Cards JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Stenciling Cards JNL is the digital equivalent of the individual letter and number stencils used to paint markings on walls, crates, boxes, etc. Use this type design when you want a reversed stencil look. Kern it super tight for a continous word stencil.
  7. Gecko by Mans Greback, $59.00
    Gecko is a clean and original typeface. It has a full alternate alphabet and support Latin languages, as well as Greek and Cyrillic. Swash versions of all Latin letters, multiple ligatures and small caps are some of the other functions of this typeface.
  8. Rafter by Vertigo, $18.00
    Rafter is a new, sans font family, with modern, narrow line, graphically attractive with both upper and lower case letters. Spaced and mastered for optimal readability, Rafter plays well in a wide range of projects and applications. The typeface provides multilingual support.
  9. Mile High by Letters by Wordsworth, $29.00
    Mile High is an airy and elegant font featuring exceptionally thin and tall characters suitable for text as well as display. Featuring 4 weights and italics, Mile High offers versatility for cohesive graphics applications. Especially lovely is text set in all caps.
  10. Gingar by Melli Diete, $42.00
    Gingar – a headline face, playful and classic – a proper font. Gingar includes swash-characters and ligatures in a wide range of weights from UltraLight to ExtraBlack, plus Italics. Typeface for life, fashion, food, wellness, magazines, corporate design projects and more. Rock with Gingar!
  11. Arrus BT by Bitstream, $29.99
    Arrus was designed at Bitstream by Richard Lipton and first released in 1991. Arrus is based on Lipton’s own hand-lettered calligraphic alphabets that draw their influence from classic inscriptional forms. Arrus has small cap and extension typographer sets available as well.
  12. Coronation Street NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Here's an unusual take on a "modern" typeface, based on a 1936 release from England's Stephenson, Blake foundry, which serves well for interesting headlines. Both versions of this font support the Latin 1252, Central European 1250, Turkish 1254 and Baltic 1257 codepages.
  13. Rigaster by Iwm Design, $10.00
    Rigaster is a font that encompasses four distinct styles, skillfully blending elements from classic serif fonts with those from modern typography. This fusion results in dynamic characteristics that lend themselves perfectly to contemporary designs as well as those with a retro aesthetic.
  14. P22 Bramble by IHOF, $24.95
    Bramble is a lively organic font that draws reference from Roman characters rather than Italic forms. Use Regular for small point-size setting to retain legibility. For invigorating display settings try combining Regular and Wild. Warning: you may become attached to Bramble!
  15. Simeon by astype, $40.00
    Simeon is well suited for setting an short and medium amount of text with an historic impression. OpenType features: - over 650 glyphs - Central European faces - stylistic alternates and historical forms - ornaments, signs, zodiac, symbols - proportional & mediaeval numerals - numerators, denominators and fractions - Roman numerals
  16. Brushtip C by JOEBOB graphics, $19.00
    Slightly erratic straight up brush tip handwriting script that was written with an ‘intoxicated’ hand, with a lot of very unique characters as a result. The overall font looks wild yet very readable. It includes all eastern European, Baltic, Scandinavian and Turkish characters.
  17. Tough Cookie by Hanoded, $15.00
    Tough Cookie is a handmade font that looks like it has been cut out. It comes in three varieties that work together really well. Use it for your book covers and product packaging, or (if you’re a tough cookie) for your christmas cards…
  18. Babaloo by Lisa Holtzman, $9.00
    Originally executed using a stick and sumi ink, Babaloo is Lisa's first digital font. While great in larger point sizes, Babaloo is surprisingly legible in small point sizes as well. Its quirky, spontaneous nature makes it ideal as a casual, fun, display font.
  19. Curser by Morganismi, $12.00
    Curser is an oldish-looking typewriter font, decayed and scary. The special characters give an expression that they have been made using the common keys and moving the paper. Curser supports West and Central European languages as well as Baltic, Turkish and Romanian.
  20. Kripke by Haiku Monkey, $10.00
    Kripke is a slab serif with rounded corners. It's readable and soft at small sizes, strong and friendly at large sizes. It's got a Greek and Cyrillic glyphs, as well as a large complement of accented characters. Try it on your designs!
  21. Finto by ARToni, $14.00
    Finto is a display typeface inspired by a jet plane, styled to give a feeling of aerodynamic speed. It is carefully handcrafted to preserve detail and smooth shapes. It is suitable for sports, adventures and more. It includes multi-lingual support as well.
  22. Creative Signature by Jorsecreative, $16.00
    Creative Signature includes upper and lower case letters, numbers and punctuation, as well as alternative stylistic characters and ligatures. OpenType features can be accessed using intelligent OpenType programs such as Adobe Photo Shop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Indesign, Corel Draw and Microsoft Office.
  23. Olympus Mons by AvarType, $28.00
    Olympus Mons is a geometric display font, characterized by sharp edges and straight lines, designed to support all European languages. It is intended to be used for headings as well as smaller information, by brands associated by masculinity, power, and ambitious goals.
  24. Levnam by ParaType, $30.00
    Levnam is a sans-serif family with quite wide proportions, slightly thickened terminals and wide sidebearings. The font is well suitable for setting text in small point sizes, similar to Bell Centennial or Verdana. Designed by Manvel Shmavonyan. Released by ParaType in 2015.
  25. Floz by Dominik Krotscheck, $6.50
    Floz is a simple and clean condensed all-caps sans serif font. It comes in two weights: regular (which is already pretty bold) and bold (which is even bolder). It works well for logos, headlines and other short texts. It's also quite cheap.
  26. BD Aubergin by Typedifferent, $15.00
    The typeface with a slice: BD Aubergin is somehow reminiscent of the bauhaus era but with a modern twist, great for the use in titling and giving character to your print and screen work. The variable version morphs from filled (flat) to sliced.
  27. DJ Parade by ParaType, $25.00
    An original display typeface was designed in 2000 by Vladlen Erium for the series of international musical events. A wide Sans of distinctive letterforms with rounded corners is well used in advertising of teenage goods and modern technologies. Licensed by ParaType in 2003.
  28. Brandegoris by Scriptorium, $12.00
    Brandegoris is a set of traditional split-pen capitals with two forms for most of the letters. It is excellent for headers and titles, especially on web pages and also works well as initial characters in combination with a serif text face.
  29. Cast And Crew JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Cast and Crew JNL is a condensed monoline font that lends itself well to any text project where more copy needs to fit into a limited space. A perfect example of this is a movie poster's cast, director, producer and other acknowledgements.
  30. Astrospy JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Astrospy JNL is a square-shaped, futuristic techno-style font from Jeff Levine. It is very well suited for short phrases, but caution should be used in setting too many words with it because of legibility issues. Best used in larger point sizes.
  31. HT Orologiaio by Dharma Type, $19.99
    HT Orologiaio is made by sharp and thin lines with a retro mood. 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!
  32. Kapra by Typoforge Studio, $15.00
    To design a font Kapra, I was inspired by a You And Me Monthly published by National Magazines Publisher RSW „Prasa” that appeared from Mai 1960 till December 1973 in Poland. The font Kapra is designed in eight versions – lower and uppercase characters.
  33. Truncheon by Cool Fonts, $24.00
    Truncheon is a grunge font with hair on its chest. Like its namesake it beats you over the head with enough attitude to leaves you confused and spinning. Upper and Lower case characters have variations like filled counters to keep things random.
  34. Losta Nova by Creativemedialab, $20.00
    Minimal and modern sans serif consists of 10 weights from hairline to black as well as variable versions. Works great for branding, fashion, modern, and casual valentine design theme. Designing a logo is made easy with lots of alternates to play with.
  35. Gaby Pro by RMU, $35.00
    Inspired by the 1947 Weber font Gabriele, Gaby Pro is a freshly designed versatile and everyday cursive font that can be used for a wide range of printed products and for web design as well. The font was carefully extended for multilingual use.
  36. Antonietta by Latinotype, $59.00
    Antonietta is Mauricio Astete Brito's first typeface, which is inspired by the eccentricity of the rococo style and Queen Marie Antoinette's wild personality. This project, supervised by Latinotype Team, was born from the idea of turning lettering into a digital typeface. Antonietta is based on the Copperplate style and inspired by the works of, among others, Hermann Zapf, Ricardo Rousselot and Herb Lubalin. The font comes in the following variants: Antonietta Script, Antonietta Caps, Antonietta Caps Illuminated, Antonietta Caps Shadow, Antonietta Caps Inline and Antonietta Ornaments. Antonietta Script is characterised by a big x-height, condensed proportions, and short ascenders and descenders, which can be modified by using the contextual alternates included in the set. Antonietta Caps, a companion font to the Script, is an all-caps typeface with rational structure and high contrast between thin and thick strokes. Antonietta is a 7-weight typeface well-suited for logotypes, labelling, headlines and short text. The Script variant contains a set of 878 characters that provide a wide range of contextual alternates to fit any project. The typeface also comes with an 'Ornaments' variant, which includes dingbats, borders and catchwords that complement the rest of the fonts.
  37. Sutro Shaded by Parkinson, $25.00
    My affection for Slab Serifs began in the early 1960s in Kansas City when Rob Roy Kelly was at the Kansas City Art Institute, teaching and writing his book on American Wood Type. I got to know him just well enough to gain access to his fabulous collection of wood type and wood type catalogs. Later, in the1970s, I tried to re-create a Nebiolo Egiziano for Roger Black at New West magazine. And again for Roger, in the 1980s, I designed a Slab Serif logo for Newsweek Magazine. Finally, in 2003, designed the Sutro Family. There were things I didn't like about it, so, over time, I’ve been adding some things and dressing it up a little. Sutro Shaded has existed for a few years as a one color, outlined, drop-shadowed display font. It seemed like it was just dying for a little color. I added five more fonts: Fill, Gradient, Hatching, Rules and HiLite. These fonts can be used in different combinations to achieve various effects. There is a downloadable SUTRO SHADED USER MANUAL PDF in the Gallery section for this family.
  38. 1509 Leyden by GLC, $49.00
    This script font was inspired by the type used in Leyden by Jan Seversz to print Breviores elegantioresque epistolae [...], author Francesco Filfelo, circa 1509. The original font contains all lower case characters, except w, eth, thorn, lslash, oslash and so... and almost upper case. In addition, one set of small lombardic initials were also nearly complete. It take place instead of the Bold style (in only one package)offering a real and rare complete historical printing set... The original small "a" hight was 2,8 mm !, the upper case hight no more than nearly 5 mm, the initials hight almost 15 mm, covering nearly two lines. This font includes "long s", naturally, as typically medieval and also a few ligatures, but not any variants. We have entirely recreated some characters, upper, lower and initials, to fill gaps. It is used as variously as web-site titles, posters and fliers design, publishing texts looking like ancient ones, or greeting cards, all various sorts of presentations, menus, certificates, as a very decorative, elegant and unusual font, besides its historical scrupulous reality... This font supports enlargement as well as small size.
  39. P22 Glaser Kitchen by P22 Type Foundry, $24.95
    Milton Glaser’s Kitchen Typeface from the mid 1970s exemplifies the bold 3-D art deco revival genre that was a trademark of the Glaser style. This typeface resulted from his involvement in the design of the The Big Kitchen in the World Trade Center’s concourse in New York City. The new P22 Glaser Kitchen takes on the technical challenge of overlapping 3-D shadows by offering two styles. P22 Glaser Kitchen Regular is spaced out so that the shadows do not overlap the white spaces of the neighboring letters. Whereas the P22 Glaser Kitchen 3D Fill and 3D Shadow can be used layered on top of one another to achieve the tight spacing intended by Glaser. P22 Glaser Kitchen was based on original drawings and phototype proofs from the Milton Glaser Studios archives. Typographic punctuation and sorts were imagined by James Grieshaber to work with Glaser’s design, as well as diacritics to accommodate most European languages. Over the years there have been many typefaces that borrowed heavily from the Glaser designs, but these are the only official fonts approved by Milton Glaser Studio and the Estate of Milton Glaser.
  40. King Tut by Canada Type, $24.95
    King Tut is a restoration and expansion of the original Egyptian Expanded, a single bold face cut in 1850 by Miller & Richard, the famous Edinburgh founders. This aesthetic, though originally issued to help drive simple print advertising of those days, is perhaps the longest lasting genre of typeface. This aesthetic flourished in the later part of the 19th century, helped by the surge of similar faces from England (such as Figgins' Antique 6 and Expanded Antique), and became the defining index of the old American wild west that continues to this very day. King Tut serves up its impact through a balance between the wide, compact letterforms and elegant curvature that manages to come through even in confined areas. The family's weight variety allows for more options in counterspace use as well as precision in the amount of curve definition and contrast needed by the typographer. The lighter weights completely oppose that 19th century boldness and expose the alphabet's skeleton in a strive for simplicity that fits modern applications. With generous language support to boot, King Tut's diverse offerings make it an essential addition to today's designer repertoire.
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing