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  1. Saltpetre by Magpie Paper Works, $32.00
    Inspired by late 18th century type specimens, Saltpetre is a grounded yet rustic typeface. His letters have been hand-inked with antique dip pens and playfully spaced for a charming, irregular look. In addition to a set of 26 upper case letters, the font includes a variety of period graphics, interlocking decorative borders, numerals, punctuation, currency figures and multi-lingual support. Saltpetre is extremely versatile and excels at display, as well as specialized uses such as cartography and historical reproduction.
  2. Princess Kimberli by Letterara, $14.00
    Princess Kimberli is a modern handwritten font with an incredibly friendly feel. It features gorgeous swashes and ligatures that make this script incredibly versatile. Whether you’re looking for fonts for Instagram or calligraphy scripts for DIY projects, Kimberli will turn any creative idea into a true piece of art! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the amazing glyphs and swashes with ease! It also features a wealth of special features including alternate glyphs and ligatures.
  3. Smooky by Gassstype, $23.00
    Hello Everyone, introduce our new product Smooky is Funny Playful Font. Use it for any project that needs a cheerful and playful look! Perfect for labels, quotes, posters, DIY projects, branding, packaging, greeting cards, websites, photos, photography kids,child,window art, scrapbooking, tags and so much more! Smooky is font with Unique and challenging nuances. very suitable for the title, typography, Poster, magazines, brochures, packaging,Websites and much more for your design needs, making your designs more modern and professional.
  4. Christmas Lights by Letterara, $12.00
    Christmas lights is a modern handwritten font with an incredibly friendly feel. It features gorgeous swashes and ligatures that make this script incredibly versatile. Whether you’re looking for fonts for Instagram or calligraphy scripts for DIY projects, Christmas lights will turn any creative idea into a true piece of art! This font is PUA encoded which means you can access all of the amazing glyphs and swashes with ease! It also features a wealth of special features including alternate glyphs and ligatures.
  5. Hasan Hiba by Hiba Studio, $59.00
    Hasan Hiba is an Arabic display typeface. It is useful for titles and graphic projects The font is based on the simple lines of Fatemic Kufi calligraphy. Hasan Hiba won the 5th place in Linotype’s first Arabic Type Design Competition. It supported Arabic, Persian and Urdu. In November, 2008, Hasan Hiba was upgraded by working with Mirjam Somers an award-winning Arabic type designer to the DecoType font format for use in WinSoft Tasmeem which is now bundled with InDesign CS4.
  6. WL Rasteroids Monospace by Writ Large, $5.00
    Rasteroids Monospace is a typographic flashback to computing of the mid 1980s, when 9-pin dot-matrix printers were the state of the art, and most home computer displays were TVs hooked up to RF modulators. Rasteroids not only captures the dot-matrix printer look, but recreates the rasterized appearance of text on those lower-resolution monitors. Because of its fixed character width, Rasteroids Monospace is intended for use in accents or small areas of copy rather than long documents.
  7. Feltboard JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Feltboard JNL was drawn from images of letters and numbers contained in a felt board (also known as a flannel board) sign kit from the 1940s or 1950s. The irregularity of stroke widths and character shapes is representative of the actual shapes of the die-cut pieces found within this kit. Note: The cap height is slightly smaller than normal for the respective point size. This will give the effect of wider line spacing - similar to that of hand-made signs.
  8. New Yorker Type Pro by Wiescher Design, $45.00
    New-Yorker-Type was one of the first typefaces I tried my hand at in 1985. I meant it as a revival of the typeface used by the New Yorker magazine. I did not scan it. I just looked at the type and redrew it completely by hand. Only much later did I come to know, that there is a bundle of similar typefaces of that period. Rea Irvin's design for New-Yorker magazine was just one of them, maybe the best. In the next step I repaired some of the mistakes that I made more than thirty years ago. Now on the eve of 2020 I gave the font a complete overhaul and added a set of Swash Initials, Cyrillic and Greek glyphs and many ligatures. The font now has 1075 glyphs and is all set for most latin writing systems. On top of that I made two versions, a Classic one with rounded corners and a pointed Pro version for a more up-to-date look. Take your pick. Yours sincerely, honoring Rea Irvin a great type- and magazine-designer, Gert Wiescher
  9. Daiquiri by Wiescher Design, $39.50
    Daiquiri is a revival of a handlettered font in two weights, from an ad for Puerto Rico Rum dating back to the forties or fifties. I found the ad on a French antique market on my last visit for Mardi Gras in Nice. The ad read "Breeze through the heat, be a Daiquiri fan". That's why they had this "fan" in the illustration! Did they want you to rotate like a fan when you had enough Daiquiris? Or did they just do it for that little "Jeu des mots"? Anyway I found the handlettering very pretty, so I took those few letters and made a whole font out of them. I think Daiquiri has that touch that brings those happy and uncomplicated times back when advertising was still fun. I started something like 20 years later in advertising and things had gotten more stringent. We already had to satisfy those marketing guys with their scholarly attitude. They have taken all the fun out of the job, for the creators as well as for the consumers. I would like to see more uncomplicated ads like this again, yours Gert Wiescher
  10. New Yorker Type Classic by Wiescher Design, $45.00
    New-Yorker-Type was one of the first typefaces I tried my hand at in 1985. I meant it as a revival of the typeface used by the New Yorker magazine. I did not scan it. I just looked at the type and redrew it completely by hand. Only much later did I come to know, that there is a bundle of similar typefaces of that period. Rea Irvin's design for New-Yorker magazine was just one of them, maybe the best. In the next step I repaired some of the mistakes that I made more than thirty years ago. Now on the eve of 2020 I gave the font a complete overhaul and added a set of Swash Initials, Cyrillic and Greek glyphs and many ligatures. The font now has 1075 glyphs and is all set for most latin writing systems. On top of that I made two versions, a Classic one with rounded corners and a pointed Pro version for a more up-to-date look. Take your pick. Yours sincerely, honoring Rea Irvin a great type- and magazine-designer, Gert Wiescher
  11. SF Big Whiskey SC - Unknown license
  12. Kozmik Vibez - Personal use only
  13. ESP - Unknown license
  14. Tecate - 100% free
  15. Sargento Gorila - Personal use only
  16. Ethnocentric - Unknown license
  17. Patron - Personal Use - Personal use only
  18. Mexican Tequila - Personal use only
  19. Blaster - 100% free
  20. Bitsumishi - Unknown license
  21. Zenzai Itacha - Personal use only
  22. Budmo Jiggler - Unknown license
  23. Greatday - Personal use only
  24. Banco - Unknown license
  25. Xenotron - Unknown license
  26. Cranberry Cyr - Unknown license
  27. EDGE - 100% free
  28. Holitter Spike - 100% free
  29. Oomph - Personal use only
  30. DuvallOutline - Unknown license
  31. Mops - 100% free
  32. Furia & Venganza - Personal use only
  33. Bertolt Brecht - Unknown license
  34. Seized Future - Unknown license
  35. Soda - 100% free
  36. Starstruc - Personal use only
  37. Pavement - Unknown license
  38. PR Viking 01 - Unknown license
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