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  1. Heanffe by Letterara, $12.00
    Heanffe is a one-of-a-kind handwritten font with a beautiful feel. To maintain a true, hand lettered experience, this font includes the following ligatures: Alu, at, ch, dd, ee, ff, ll, oo, pp, ss, tt, ef, es, et, eth, ily, it, ith, om, ot, on, ou, ont, th, ov, ow, sh, st, ut, zz Just use your imagination, your project will become more alive and look Elegant than ever with one of the Heanffe font. Feel free to play with all the whole alternates! Heanffe also includes full set of uppercase and lowercase letters, multilingual symbols, numerals, punctuation. The font has smooth wet ink texture, so would be perfect for all designs. You can make a greeting card or a package design, or even a brand identity, craft design, any DIY project, book title, wedding invitation, identity card, packaging, Website or any purpose to make your art / design project look pretty and trendy.
  2. Hello Girlfriend by Black Studio, $19.00
    Hello Girlfriend Font Duo is a fancy font. which comes with a combination of modern and elegant fonts, namely Script and Sans style. You can combine them to create beautiful typography. This handmade style makes it perfect to use in all your design projects be it logos, labels, packaging designs, blog titles, posters, wedding designs, social media posts, Instagram designs, invitation cards, quote art, home decor, book covers/titles , etc. Here's what's included: Hello Regular Girlfriend / Bold Script • Elegant and realistic Script font contains 108+ ligatures and substitutes, lowercase, uppercase, all punctuation & numbers. Regular / Bold Hello Boyfriend • Sans font with upper and lower case, all punctuation marks, numbers and Language support Language support • Hello Girlfriend supports the following languages; English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Indonesian, Malay, Hungarian, Polish, Croatian, Turkish, Romanian, Czech, Latvian, Lithuanian, Slovak, Slovenian. I hope you enjoy this font. If you have any questions, feel free to message me :)
  3. MFC Memoriam Initials by Monogram Fonts Co., $19.95
    The inspiration source for Memoriam Initials is the 1934 Book of American Types by American Type Founders. In that specimen book, they had created a sophisticated two color initial design they called “University Initials” which was only available in metal type at 24, 36, and 48 points. This wonderfully detailed initial style is now digitally recreated and revived for modern use. Memoriam Initials is only capable of initial or single letter monograms due to its unique design. The two color aspect of the original design has been preserved and made accessible within all programs. The Capital character slots contain the background color glyphs, and the lowercase slots hold the outline art for the letters. You can choose a color, type a capital letter, then switch to black and type a lowercase letter for the two color effect, or just type a lowercase letter on its own. It’s that easy! Download and view the Memoriam Initials Guidebook if you would like to learn a little more.
  4. Chilead by Groteskly Yours, $12.00
    Chilead is reminiscent of the early days of magazine publishing. Its elegant curves, high contrast and all-round heartwarming feel are perfect for art projects and typography across all mediums. Chilead is a sans serif font that looks great in titles, when used in larger sizes – but is not out of the place in a text either, which makes it a perfect choice for artists and designers who pursue not only the aesthetic qualities of the font, but also its functionality. Originally designed in 2019 and fully updated and expanded in 2022, Chilead offers users a large set of ligatures (both standard and discretionary) and a number of alternative forms for letters (such as a, v, w, y, etc). Chilead comes equipped with 600+ glyphs, which covers most of Latin-based scripts. Carefully kerned, Chilead is ready to be used in any project that requires a typeface that combines unique and stylish letterforms with a modern feel.
  5. Hot Pursuit by Wing's Art Studio, $18.00
    Hot Pursuit: A Hand-Drawn Grind-house Roller Derby Font A grungy hand-drawn font with attitude inspired by comic books, Roller Derby and bad Grindhouse movies. Hot Pursuit is a boiling pot of pop-culture references ranging from 70s chase movies to Roller Derby, horror comics to Grindhouse cinema. All combining to create a hand-drawn font for grungy designs with maximum punch. Supplied in regular and italic styles, it creates titles that race off the page, perfectly suited for dynamic movie posters and headlines. Along with the 4 font styles you’ll also find a host of original comic art by Christopher King, plus symbols and underlines to compliment your type. Hot Pursuit contains unique uppercase and lowercase characters, numerals, punctuation and language support. It’s a bad-ass font ready for your t-shirts, posters, stickers, movie titles, YouTube videos and more! Check out the visuals to see it in action for yourself.
  6. American Favorite Script by Great Studio, $20.00
    American Favorite is a luxury font. which comes with a combination of modern and elegant fonts, namely serif and signature style. You can combine it to make beautiful typography. This hand display style makes it perfect for use in all your design projects be it logos, labels, packaging designs, blog titles, posters, wedding designs, social media posts, Instagram designs, card invitations, art quotes, home decor, book / cover titles , etc. Already matched up and ready to be used together for your next design! Here’s what’s included : -American Favorite Script Regular / Bold -Thin and realistic signature fonts containing 52 automatic ligatures, lowercase letters, uppercase letters, all punctuation & numbers American Favorite Serif -An all-caps Serif font containing uppercase, all punctuation & numerals. Language Support • Supports the following languages; English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Indonesian, Malay, Hungarian, Polish, Croatian, Turkish, Romanian, Czech, Latvian, Lithuanian, Slovak, Slovenian. I hope you enjoy this font. Thank you for your purchase!
  7. Balcony by Shaily Patel, $10.00
    Balcony is a decorative display typeface inspired by the patterns of metal safety grills. Its highly geometric features may be used to identify it as Art Deco. It is a monospaced type family with all characters confined in a square frame. The main idea of Balcony is to create a grill-like pattern when letterforms are placed together. This creates an illusionary experience for the reader. The best way to use this typeface is without leading, as shown in the visuals. Balcony also comes with two stylistic sets. The first stylistic set contains most characters with more decorative elements and the second one includes Dingbats. These Dingbats are motifs with simple geometric patterns that may be used for any kind of ornamentation. The diacritics letterforms are geometrically squeezed within the square frame to include the accents. This experimental typeface comes with about 650 characters and four weights (Thin, Light, Regular and Bold). The font family supports Western and Central European languages.
  8. Babetta by Viktor Nübel Type Design, $-
    Babetta is a display typeface that comes with some decorative typographical features. Alongside a set of arrows and flower icons, it also includes an alternative ›E‹, some special diacritic marks, a wavy ›S‹ and a series of ligatures. It features 5 weights, a special ›Neon‹ version and supports a wide range of Latin languages. This typographical tool box provides a large and playful variety of options for headlines and logotypes. Babetta supports Latin and Cyrillic languages. The initial inspiration for Babetta was an illuminated vintage shop sign—that of a famous bookstore in Berlin called Karl-Marx-Buchhandlung that dates back to the days of East Germany. During the course of the design process, this slightly shabby historical original was kissed by an Italian Art Deco beauty and has blossomed into a new typeface with its own special charm. The aim was not to preserve the original lettering, but to use it as a starting point for typographical exploration.
  9. Pop Manta by Kickingbird, $24.00
    Pop Manta delivers the perfect punch when impact is needed. Useful on everything from boxes of bubble gum to pro wrestling posters. Pop Manta has been described as "Morris Fuller Benton meets Roy Lichtenstein". Benton's 1903 neo-grotesque letter shapes set to a Pop Art beat. With over 650 glyphs, characters, symbols and ornaments, Pop Manta is a complete design kit in one font. A full range of accents and extras allows Pop Manta to speak well over 70 languages. Including: Afrikaans, Basque, Breton, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, Gaelic, German, Icelandic, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Sami, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Croatian (Latin), Czech, Estonian, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Romanian, Serbian (Latin), Slovak, Slovenian, Turkish, Afar, Azerbaijani, Belarusian (Latin), Chichewa, Croatian (Latin), Gikuyu, Greenlandic, Guarani, Igo/Igbo, Kuskokwim, Luba (Ciluba), Malay, isiNdebele, Oromo, Pilipino/Tagalog, Setswana, Sidamo, Somali, Sotho (Northern and Southern), Swazi, XiTsonga, Tuareg, Uzbek (Latin), Vietnamese, Welsh, isiXhosa, Yoruba, and isiZulu.
  10. Darkones by Alit Design, $19.00
    The “DARKONES” font is a unique combination of blackletter and dynamic serif styles, making it perfect for magazine designs, tattoo art, socoal media ads and clothing. It features a total of 756 characters, including swashes, special ligatures, and alternative characters. This font is designed to support PUA unicode and is multilingual, allowing it to be used for various projects in different languages. Its distinct and bold appearance makes it an excellent choice for designs that require a strong and edgy look. Overall, the “DARKONES” font is a versatile and expressive typeface that can add character and personality to any project it is used for. Language Support : Latin, Basic, Western European, Central European, South European,Vietnamese. In order to use the beautiful swashes, you need a program that supports OpenType features such as Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe Photoshop CC, Adobe Indesign and Corel Draw. but if your software doesn’t have Glyphs panel, you can install additional swashes font files.
  11. Beauty Athena by 38-lineart, $19.00
    Introducing the OpenType font ‘Athena’, the beautiful calligraphy script. It’s inspired by Athena, goddess of wisdom, courage, inspiration, mathematics, strength, strategy, the arts, crafts, and skill. Athena font is a font that comes with very beautiful changing characters, a kind of classic decorative copper script with a modern touch, designed with high detail to bring stylish elegance, clean, feminine, sensual, glamorous, simple and very easy to read, because there are many letter connections. This is the representative of two styles; you can use it for modern minimalism and also classic expert penmanship styles. Both of these style can be applied in various formal forms such as invitations, labels, restaurant menus, logos, fashion, make up, stationery, novels, magazines, books, greeting / wedding cards, packaging, letterhead, labels or any type of advertising purpose. ‘Athena' has a lot of alternate characters, including various language support and numerals & punctuation. Please contact me if you need any help by drop a messages. So… Enjoy Athena and best regards. - 38.lineart studio
  12. Newercastle by Chank, $49.00
    Newercastle is the new incarnation of a popular Chank font formerly known as "Newcastle". A consistent fan favorite since its initial release in 2005, the distressed blackletter font is new and improved. This sinister script is now bulked up with all-new capital letters, a bit of punctuation, and smattering of new crowns, griffins and other heraldic doodads. Designer Kevin Hayes opted for an assortment of gritty old icons instead of more traditional punctuation, because he felt that's just the way this type of font could perform best for you, the font enthusiast. "At-signs and percentile glyphs just aren't believable in fraktur-style fonts," says Kevin. You benefit by getting a bit of clip art with the new font instead of boring old punctuation. Use the new bats indiscriminately to add a regal air to even the most mundane newsletter. Or use layer upon layer to add a rustic richness to a poster project. Enjoy this wicked, textural type and use it with extreme force.
  13. Bodoni Classic Cyrillic by Wiescher Design, $55.00
    One day shortly after Christmas 2004, the art-director of Vogue Moscow called me. Would I maybe make a Cyrillic version of my Bodoni Classic Text typeface? Well, since I had been thinking about doing it since a long time, this was the perfect reason to finally do it. It was not an easy venture, since I do not have the faintest idea of Russian but, together with those nice people in Russia and a fellow helpful type designer in Kiev, I managed. I did an enormous amount of kerning, thanks to the help of the Moscow Vogue office. Here the fonts are now for all of you: five text cuts, plus one standard roman cut that has no Cyrillic letters but an extra set of medieval numbers. At Vogue they are happy with the fonts, even though I did not quite adhere to Bodoni's originals in this case. Nastarowje (or whatever you say in Russia), Gert Wiescher
  14. Pignatelli by Create Big Supply, $17.00
    Unleash your creativity with Pignatelli and explore its versatility. Whether you're designing stunning wedding invitations, crafting beautiful stationery art, or creating engaging social media posts, this font will add a touch of refinement and charm to your projects. Its seamless blend of uppercase and lowercase characters, combined with its extensive set of numbers and punctuations, ensures a seamless and cohesive visual experience. Pignatelli Script Font is not bound by language barriers. With its multilingual support, you can express your creativity in various languages, reaching a global audience. Additionally, the font is PUA encoded, granting you effortless access to its wide array of amazing glyphs and ligatures. Add a touch of uniqueness to your designs and explore the endless possibilities. Elevate your typography game with Pignatelli Script Font. Its full character set offers a comprehensive range of symbols, ensuring you have everything you need to create visually stunning designs. Embrace the elegance and grace of Pignatelli Script Font and let your designs speak volumes.
  15. Beethink by Gassstype, $25.00
    Bee Think This is a Rough Brush Typeface that is written casually and quickly. comes in two mode Standart this font are made with brushes on Procreate. Then crafted carefully drawn into vector format. That is why Bee Think has Rough and strong characteristic more natural look to your text with a more modern look to your text. You can activate Ligature OpenType panel to make these two styles. Bee Think is perfect for homeware designs,branding projects, Logo design, Quotes product packaging, especially with horror and scary themes Bee Think a natural Hand Drawn feel. This handmade font will make your design has a beautiful natural touch for each details. It is perfect for any design project as Invitation,logo, book cover, craft or any design purposes,photos, photography overlays, signs, window art, scrapbooking, tags and so much more! That is has charming, authentic and relaxed characteristic more natural look to your text.
  16. Tellumo Variable by Monotype, $313.99
    Tellumo, a new humanist geometric sans serif typeface, has all the attributes you need for a workhorse sans with a few surprising details. It has moderate proportions, a low stroke contrast, open apertures, and an x-height that makes it drive with ease in running text. A modest range of six weights, from Thin to ExtraBold, make it versatile without being overwhelming. The lightest and heaviest weights are best saved for headlines and subheads. It features a set of swash caps that can add magnitude and sparkle to short headlines, making it excel in packaging designs. Tellumo feels at home with Mid-century Modern and Art Deco aesthetics. It looks precise, tidy, and welcoming for architecture and home goods. It looks clean, fresh and modern for beauty and wellness, or elegant and approachable for fashion. It has a balance of clarity and personality, suitable for branding and advertising of all kinds, print & digital design alike. Tellumo radiates warmth, charm, and joyfulness from its geometric foundation.
  17. Mon Nicolette by Sudtipos, $49.00
    This is a digital revival by Cristóbal Henestrosa based on an experimental typeface named Charter, designed – yet never fully accomplished – by the prominent William Addison Dwiggins. It is an upright italic, unconnected script typeface, whose main features are a pronounced contrast, condensed forms and exaggerated ascenders. While Dwiggins worked on this project from 1937 to 1955, he only completed the lowercase and a few other characters. However, it was used to set a specimen in 1942 and a short novel in 1946. The sources that Cristóbal used for Mon Nicolette were the original sketches by WAD as well as printing trails kept at the Boston Public Library, and a copy of the 1946 edition of The Song-Story of Aucassin and Nicolette. This gorgeous typeface can be used successfully in headlines, subheads and short passages of text from 12 points onwards, in applications such as fashion magazines, soft news, advertising, poetry, albums, and book covers. This project started ten years ago, while Cristóbal was studying the Type@Cooper Extended Program at New York City. A previous version was selected to be part of the Biennial Tipos Latinos 2018, and now Mon Nicolette is finally ready for commercial distribution with Sudtipos… and we are very proud of it! Festina lente.
  18. Kometa by Kiril Zlatkov Type Foundry, $40.00
    Kometa Sans is a contemporary grotesk with a certain personality. She has a steady geometric skeleton, but its appearance is rather humanistic. The precise details of the artwork, the carefully drawn true italics, the six types of numerals, the variety of alternates, the broad range of open-type features and the extensive glyph set can meet most of the contemporary typographer’s demands for a neutral, but not boring type family for both long text and display use. Among the distinctive qualities of Kometa are also the forms of ligatures (both default and discretionary). They follow the natural constructive transitions between oval parts and stems, which is an advantage to mark, at least for designers who respect the beauty of clean forms. Note the specially designed Kometa Unicase sub-family, substantially enough to exist as a separate typeface. Its elegant and expressive letterforms are boosting further the power to create outstanding design work. Kometa Unicase has original and playful, yet reasonable approach to letterforms variety. Kometa has a very broad usability range – from logotypes and poster designs to corporate identities and complex editorial projects. The contemporary Cyrillics of Kometa allows easily completion of graphically consistent multilingual corporate and artistic design projects. Designed by Kiril Zlatkov and Vassil Kateliev.
  19. Berndal by Linotype, $29.99
    Bo Berndal, the master Swedish typographer, is the eponymous designer of Berndal, a contemporary text family with five different styles. This family represents a new achievement for Bo Berndal, who has spent many years working to optimize text legibility in the printed media. Several small tricks make the Berndal family an interesting milestone in legibility. Berndal's letterforms contain large x-heights. Large x-heights open up the counterforms of letters, making text appear lighter on a page, but their correspondingly shorter ascenders and descenders can hinder legibility. This does not occur in Berndal at all! Coupled with this experiment, Berndal's various font weights display a certain softness and roundness. The letterforms themselves are relatively wide, with an overall consistency in width. The calligraphic nature of the strokes has been minimized, yet a contrast stroke-thickness is still to be noticed within the alphabet. Berndal's five styles offer almost everything that one could want from a good text family. The Regular weight may be paired with Small Caps, Italic, Bold, and Bold Italic. All styles ship in the OpenType format, and include tabular and old style figures. The two italic weights are made up of true italics, not obliques. The Berndal family is a part of the Take Type 5 collection from Linotype GmbH."
  20. Seriguela by Latinotype, $29.00
    Seriguela is an ultra condensed sans serif typeface with a unique personality. It comes in normal and display versions, each with 9 weights, as well as italics and reverse italics totaling 54 fonts. Seriguela is flavor in motion and each part of its system works together to captivate you, combining emotion and usability, allowing you to create attractive and unique designs. Seriguela followed a very distinctive recipe to design its alphabet: it started with a grotesque base and applied movement and joy in a very original way. The blacker and more contrasted, the tastier. The contrast in its display version is one of the most important features of Seriguela: the unconventional relationship between thick and thin lines, as it does not strictly follow any historical model of contrast construction and makes it noticeable. Its high contrast is not present in every single character and it is often in the “wrong” places. The original charm of Seriguela is maintained throughout all its styles. With peculiar details: the verticality and its proportions, as well as terminals that resemble hooks in some curves, a characteristic that breaks with the vertical modular rhythm. Seriguela is a versatile font system, designed primarily for display uses with a need of visual impact.
  21. Sister Pamella Font Cyrillic Duo by Ira Dvilyuk, $18.00
    Sister Pamella font duo Cyrillic is a pair of script and sans serif fonts, which perfectly complement one another. With a handwritten script font and a modern sans serif Sister Pamella font duo Cyrillic will be perfect for use in all your design projects be it logos, signatures, labels, packaging design, blog headlines. Also, it will look great on mugs, cards, gorgeous typographic designs, wedding stationery and much more. The Cyrillic part of the font contains the uppercase letters and lowercase letters and 17 ligatures, giving a realistic hand-lettered style. Sister Pamella script Cyrillic includes a full set of uppercase 2 sets of lowercase letters, numerals, a large range of punctuation and 38 ligatures, giving a realistic hand-lettered style. Sister Pamella sans serif containing uppercase only characters, numerals and a large range of punctuation. Creates a perfect contrast with the Sister Pamella script font. Multilingual Support for 32 languages: Afrikaans, Albanian, Basque, Bosnian, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Filipino, Finnish, French, Galician, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Malay, Norwegian Bokmål, Portuguese, Slovenian, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Turkish, Welsh, Zulu. And Cyrillic glyphs support for Russian, Belorussian, Bulgarian, Ukrainian and Kazakh languages. Works perfectly on the Canva platform. For Cricut & Silhouette recommended.
  22. Rougon by VanderKeur, $30.00
    The reason for Nicolien van der Keur to design the Rougon font was the translation of twenty novels written by Emile Zola, a French writer, and translated by Martine Delfos. It follows the lives of the members of the two titular branches of a fictional family living during the Second French Empire (1852–1870) and is one of the most prominent works of the French naturalism literary movement. This series deserved a font with French roots and corresponded to the period in which Zola’s books were written and published, the period between 1870 and 1893, the end of the nineteenth century. Extensive research into French historical typefaces has led to a type specimen from the French type foundry Deberny et Cie in Paris around 1907. It turned out to be good and helpful source as it contained a sample of a typeface that reflected the content and style of the novels, but also represented the period in which the books were written in France. A large part of the novels are about the generations of Rougon, so it seemed a natural choice to give the font that name. It is available in one weight and contains stylized portraits of Emile Zola and the French Marianne. This font also contains various ornaments.
  23. Scotch by Positype, $29.00
    Clean, crisp, rational, familiar, modern… serifed. Positype Scotch reaches back to history just enough to produce something warm and easy on the eyes. No corners were cut, no quick tricks… this type suite was drawn for specificity: Text, Display, and Deck… ALL in 3 widths that now include Condensed and Compressed. Each unique, each inter-connected, each part of the whole. Scotch Text is offered in 6 weights with matching true italics. Drawn for economy and an easy read, the family is a workhorse for long-passage text settings. 4 sets of numerals, well-proportioned small caps, and a plethora of extras round out each font. Scotch Display is not just a thinner version of Scotch Text wrapped in a higher contrast. Display sports shorter ascenders and descenders, a unique footprint, great contrast, and a more folded, calligraphic italics. Display subtly oozes sophistication and provides an attractive, exhuberant companion to Scotch Text. Scotch Deck rounds out the offering by choosing to be specific to its offering. Deck utlitizes traits and proportions shared between Text and Display, but alters its overall mass to balance out the needs for settings that require subheadlines, callouts and other similar uses. Essentially, something not so high-contrast and not so stress dense that works great for middle-sizes.
  24. Robur by Canada Type, $24.95
    It shouldn't be a surprise to anyone that these letter shapes are familiar. They have the unmistakable color and weight of Cooper Black, Oswald Cooper's most famous typeface from 1921. What should be a surprise is that these letters are actually from George Auriol's Robur Noir (or Robur Black), published in France circa 1909 by the Peignot foundry as a bolder, solid counterpart to its popular Auriol typeface (1901). This face precedes Cooper Black by a dozen of years and a whole Great War. Cooper Black has always been a bit of a strange typographical apparition to anyone who tried to explain its original purpose, instant popularity in the 1920s, and major revival in the late 1960s. BB&S and Oswald Cooper PR aside, it is quite evident that the majority of Cooper Black's forms did not evolve from Cooper Old Style, as its originators claimed. And the claim that it collected various Art Nouveau elements is of course too ambiguous to be questioned. But when compared with Robur Noir, the "elements" in question can hardly be debated. The chronology of this "machine age" ad face in metal is amusing and stands as somewhat of a general index of post-Great War global industrial competition: - 1901: Peignot releases Auriol, based on the handwriting of George Auriol (the "quintessential Art Nouveau designer," according to Steven Heller and Louise Fili), and it becomes very popular. - 1909-1912: Peignot releases the Robur family of faces. The eight styles released are Robur Noir and its italic, a condensed version called Robur Noir Allongée (Elongated) and its italic, an outline version called Clair De Lune and its condensed/elongated, a lined/striped version called Robur Tigre, and its condensed/elongated counterpart. - 1914 to 1918: World War One uses up economies on both sides of the Atlantic, claims Georges Peignot with a bullet to the forehead, and non-war industry stalls for 4 years. - 1921: BB&S releases Cooper Black with a lot of hype to hungry publishing, manufacturing and advertising industries. - 1924: Robert Middleton releases Ludlow Black. - 1924: The Stevens Shanks foundry, the British successor to the Figgins legacy, releases its own exact copies of Robur Noir and Robur Noir Allongée, alongside a lined version called Royal Lining. - 1925: Oswald Cooper releases his Cooper Black Condensed, with similar math to Robur Noir Allongée (20% reduction in width and vectical stroke). - 1925: Monotype releases Frederick Goudy's Goudy Heavy, an "answer to Cooper Black". Type historians gravely note it as the "teacher steals from his student" scandal. Goudy Heavy Condensed follows a few years later. - 1928: Linotype releases Chauncey Griffith's Pabst Extra Bold. The condensed counterpart is released in 1931. When type production technologies changed and it was time to retool the old faces for the Typositor age, Cooper Black was a frontrunning candidate, while Robur Noir was all but erased from history. This was mostly due to its commercial revival by flourishing and media-driven music and advertising industries. By the late 1960s variations and spinoffs of Cooper Black were in every typesetting catalog. In the early- to mid-1970s, VGC, wanting to capitalize on the Art Nouveau onslaught, published an uncredited exact copy of Robur Black under the name Skylark. But that also went with the dust of history and PR when digital tech came around, and Cooper Black was once again a prime retooling candidate. The "old fellows stole all of our best ideas" indeed. So almost a hundred years after its initial fizz, Robur is here in digital form, to reclaim its rightful position as the inspiration for, and the best alternative to, Cooper Black. Given that its forms date back to the turn of the century, a time when foundry output had a closer relationship to calligraphic and humanist craft, its shapes are truer to brush strokes and much more idiosyncratic than Cooper Black in their totality's construct. Robur and Robur Italic come in all popular font formats. Language support includes Western, Central and Eastern European character sets, as well as Baltic, Esperanto, Maltese, Turkish, and Celtic/Welsh languages. A range of complementary f-ligatures and a few alternates letters are included within the fonts.
  25. ITC Tyfa by ITC, $29.99
    Some words from the designer, Frantisek Storm... Designed by Josef Tyfa in 1959, digitalized by F. Storm in 1996. This Roman and Italic are well-known perhaps to all Czech graphic artists and typographers ever since their release. Although this type face in some details is under the sway of the period of its rise, its importance is timeless, in contradistinction to other famous types dating from the turn of the sixties which were found, after some time, to be trite. The italics live their own life, only their upper-case letters have the same expression as the basic design. Thin and fragile, they work excellently, emphasizing certain parts in the text by their perfect contrast of expression. When seen from a distance they are a little bit darker than the Roman face. Tyfa Roman was released in 1960 by Grafotechna in Prague for hot setting. Later on, Berthold produced letter matrices - "rulers" for Staromat devices, used for manual photosetting of display alphabets. In the eighties it was available on dry transfers of Transotype and today it is offered also by ITC. The meticulously executed designs of the individual letters in the 288 point size are arranged into a set of signs on a cardboard of about B2 in size. The yellowed paper reveals retouches by white paint on the ink. Blue lines mark the baseline, the capital line, the ascender and descender lines and the central verticals of the letters. With regard to the format of the flat scanner, the designs had to be reduced, with the use of a camera, to the format A4, i.e. to the upper-case letter height of about 30 mm. These were then scanned in 600 dpi resolution and read as a bitmap template to the FontStudio programme. The newly created bold type faces derive from Tyfa's designs of the letters "a", "n", "p", the darkness of which was increased further, approximately by 3%, to enhance their emphasizing function. The text designs have hairstrokes thickened by one third; the contrast between thin and thick strokes has been modified, in order to improve legibility, in sizes under 12 points. We have used electronic interpolation to produce the semi-bold designs. Josef Tyfa himself recommends to choose a somewhat darker design than the basic one for printing of books.
  26. Fucked Olympia J - Unknown license
  27. Senegal by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A Large and Small cap design great for Headlines Sub heads and even works great in text. A unique look. Allows you to fit a lot of copy in a small space.
  28. April Blossom by Angele Kamp, $22.00
    April Blossom is a sweet, brush font with a playful character. This fun will look gorgeous on all your branding materials, cards, quotes, and any other lovely projects you are working on.
  29. Ekaliptus by Yinon Ezra, $9.90
    Ekaliptus, Display Condensed and Humane Typeface, Containing 4 Weights + 4 Matched Italics, Can be used for Headlines and Logos. Two Styles that work well together to form a better tool for you.
  30. Recruitment JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A 1916 recruitment poster from World War I seeking men to join the Army’s Signal Corps provided the lettering inspiration for Recruitment JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  31. Westwood by ITC, $29.99
    Westwood is the work of American West Coast designer David Westwood, a bold display typeface featuring a fine linocut effect. Westwood exhibits a dramatic, eye-catching style with a rough-hewn look.
  32. Aimchestar by FHFont, $18.00
    Aimchestar is script with a hand-lettered brush style, and includes OpenType features. It is suitable for designs, weddings, events, t-shirts, logos, badges, sticker, and more to make your work awesome.
  33. Curvede Pro by Oleg Gert, $20.00
    Сurvede Pro – is a sophisticated multilingual typeface with fine details on the letters. Great for working with headlines for magazines, newspapers, creating logos. The font also has Cyrillic, Latin and many ligatures
  34. Standgrow by FHFont, $19.00
    Standgrow is script font with authentic clean brush style, this font basically script calligraphy with vintage style. Suitable for design, element design, wedding, event, t-shirt, logo, badges, sticker, and awesome work.
  35. Firefly by Canada Type, $24.95
    Firefly was designed by Miranda Hopper during her time in Patrick Griffin's type design class of 2010 at Humber. It is a light, narrow alphabet that works well in casual, leisurely design.
  36. Clarenwood JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Based on some examples of a Clarendon-inspired wood type design, Clarenwood JNL is a bold and effective titling font which harkens back to old times and advertising on a grander scale.
  37. Edessa JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Edessa JNL is a Greek-styled alphabet found in an old book used by sign painters. Its simple, angular lines and clean approach add a taste of the past to your work.
  38. Beauty Festival by Rockboys Studio, $15.00
    The Beauty Festival Font Duo is a handwritten script that is combined with a slick yet playful looking sans. The duo works very well for a lot of different types of projects.
  39. Regulaire by PizzaDude.dk, $16.00
    Regulaire is my laid back comic font, inspired by graffiti and my everyday regular handwriting. Works quite nice for kids products, comics, party posters - or anything that needs a casual comic look!
  40. Wonderfebia by FHFont, $15.00
    Wonderfebia is Script Wedding Font with modern calligraphy style so much opentype feature include of the font. Suitable for design, element design, wedding, event, t-shirt, logo, badges, sticker, and awesome work.
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