2,538 search results (0.016 seconds)
  1. Phino - Unknown license
  2. Digital Readout Upright - Unknown license
  3. Ubahn - 100% free
  4. KARINE - Personal use only
  5. Lane - Cane - Unknown license
  6. Flames - Unknown license
  7. Pixel Power - 100% free
  8. Digital Readout Thick - Unknown license
  9. Grange - Unknown license
  10. Lane - Upper - Personal use only
  11. Morohashi - Unknown license
  12. Ashley - Unknown license
  13. Lane - Narrow - Personal use only
  14. Martian Hull Markings - Unknown license
  15. Digital Readout Expanded - Unknown license
  16. Digital Readout Condensed - Unknown license
  17. Digital Readout CondUpright - Unknown license
  18. Lane - Posh - Personal use only
  19. Digital Readout ExpUpright - Unknown license
  20. Ransahoff CT by CastleType, $19.00
    A very light, elegant, condensed typeface, which must be used very large (at least 100 points).
  21. Wedding Text by Bitstream, $29.99
    Morris Fuller Benton’s version of the standard American nineteenth century blackletter made for ATF in 1901.
  22. Vasetters by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    In Vasetters the letters are cut from the shape of a tessellating vase. To get the tessellating effect, the two sets of letters (and numbers and some symbols) must alternate, and this is done automatically in applications that support the OpenType feature of Contextual Alternatives (calt). Vasetters is monospaced and comes in two weights. The regular weight is tightly spaced, which should not be a problem at large point sizes. At small point sizes adjacent letters can be colored differently or the character spacing can be increased. The lighter weight can be used alone or layered above the regular weight to create the effect of hollow lettering. Vasetters is is fun, bizarre, weird, and obviously a decorative display font.
  23. LTC Creepy Ornaments by Lanston Type Co., $24.95
    In researching historic decorative material offered by Lanston Monotype as well as other metal foundries such as Barnhart Brothers and Spindler, there were occasionally ornaments that defied description. Perhaps it was a Victorian sense of humor or someone really thought these were a good idea or perhaps popular taste has just changed so much over the last hundred years, or our forbearers were completely insane. In any case, LTC is somewhat proud to present a collection of the most bizarre, disturbing and baffling printers ornaments we could find. Along with mutant fowl-children and frolicsome amphibians, there are also Masonic and other secret fraternal symbols that may not be creepy to everyone, but just enough to be moderately disturbing.
  24. Slippery Fishes by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    SlipperyFishes alternates two letter sets to create an undulating line of text that reminds me of a slippery fish. It resembles Undulate, another typeface that uses the OpenType feature of contextual alternatives (calt) to alternate letters, but while the tops and bottoms of letters in Undulate trace parallel paths, the tops and bottoms of letters in SlipperyFishes trace reflecting paths. SlipperyFishes is monospaced with tight letter spacing to accentuate the ripple pattern. The family has four members: regular, outlined, condensed, and condensed outlined. The outline styles that can be used in a layer with their base styles to add color.Slippery fishes is bizarre and weird and can be used in places where those attributes will create attention-grabbing lettering.
  25. Duktus by Eurotypo, $49.00
    Duktus is a script typeface with a 1940’s flavour. It is a delicate script with letters not quite connected, having large, flourished capitals and small lowercase with long ascenders and descenders. It has a crisp, precise appearance, but is not rigidly formal. The design was inspired by the typeface Donatello by Wagner & Schmidt in 1935 and published by Società Nebiolo, Torino. Some other Influences: 1927 Trobadour by Wagner & Schmidt 1927 Liberty Script by Willard T. Sniffin 1933 Trafton Script by Howard Allen Trafton, 1937 Coronet designed by Robert Hunter Middleton Duktus fonts come with plenty of alternates small caps, old style numerals, ornaments and swashes. They include also CE language support.
  26. id-Kaiou-LightOT - Personal use only
  27. Blue Highway - Unknown license
  28. DeRoos - Personal use only
  29. Jumbo Outline - 100% free
  30. Commerciality - Unknown license
  31. Sci Fied X - 100% free
  32. PostageStamps - Unknown license
  33. bithand - Unknown license
  34. Atlantis MF - Unknown license
  35. CHR32 - Unknown license
  36. BB Standard by bb-bureau, $60.00
    Grid inspired typefaces in 6 weights: 20, 40, 60, 80, 100 and 120 language: all latin glyphs
  37. Ongunkan France Glozel Runic by Runic World Tamgacı, $100.00
    In March 2010, Émile Fradin, a modest peasant farmer from central France, died at the age of 103. To his grave he took the secret behind one of the most controversial archaeological discoveries of the 20th century. A discovery which put into question the very origins of the written word and the paternity of European culture. It was the uncovering of peculiar artefacts would come to be known as the Glozel runes. The discovery of the Glozel runes On the first day of March 1924, a not yet 18-year-old Fradin was ploughing his family’s field in the hamlet of Glozel, when his cow stumbled into a hole. When he and his grandfather, Claude, looked closer, they discovered a mass of broken stone, under which lay an underground chamber. Within, they discovered pottery fragments, carved bones, and a peculiar clay tablet covered in bizarre characters that neither of the two could decipher. The family requested a subsidy for excavation works to be carried out, but were refused by the regional authority. With that disappointment, it seemed as though the discovery would fade into obscurity. However, the following year, news of Fradin’s unusual clay tablet reached the ears of the physician and amateur archeologist, Antonin Morlet. By the end of May 1925, Morlet began the first of his excavations.4 Within the first two years alone, he had amassed some 3,000 finds.
  38. Athletic - Unknown license
  39. id-Kaze2OT-Light - Personal use only
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