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  1. Doris by Fontsphere, $16.00
    Introducing DORIS: A Sweet Handwritten Font Family. DORIS is a stunning new font designed to add a touch of sweetness and charm to your designs. It was originally created for a series of children's books, then it was expanded with additional glyphs and additional thicknesses were added.. --- Key Features:. Handwritten Charm: DORIS captures the beauty and warmth of handwritten lettering, bringing a personal and intimate feel to your designs. Its imperfect lines and organic shapes radiate authenticity and evoke a sense of genuine connection. . Versatile Usage: Whether you're designing coloring books, creating beautiful illustrations, making invitations, or crafting nicely-made quotes, DORIS adapts beautifully to various applications, providing endless creative possibilities. . Feminine and Playful: With its soft curves and whimsical strokes, DORIS exudes a feminine and playful essence. It is a font that effortlessly brings a touch of joy to any design, making it perfect for creating illustrations, invitations, and other projects aimed at capturing a sense of happiness. . Multiple Thickness Options: The availability of five different thicknesses in the DORIS font family allows you to choose the perfect stroke weight for each project. Whether you need a delicate touch or a bold statement, DORIS has you covered. . --- Usage Recommendations:. Children's Books and Illustrations: DORIS is an excellent choice for children's books, illustrations, or any other project targeting a young audience. Its playful and friendly aesthetics will capture the hearts of kids and adults alike. . Invitations and Greeting Cards: Create stunning invitations and charming greeting cards with DORIS. Its sweet and friendly style sets the right tone for special events, celebrations, or heartfelt messages. . Nicely-Made Quotes: Give your quotes a personal and endearing touch with DORIS. Whether it's motivational quotes, lovely sayings, or inspiring messages, DORIS will add warmth and authenticity to every word. . Personal Branding: Incorporate DORIS into your personal branding materials, such as business cards, logos, or website headers, to showcase your unique personality and create a lasting impression. . --- Let DORIS bring a touch of sweetness and handwritten charm to your designs. With its delightful handwritten style, multiple thickness options, and endless usage possibilities, DORIS is the perfect companion for creating projects that are full of happiness and joy.
  2. Doris PP - 100% free
  3. Niki Dorie by Pandastock, $12.00
    Niki dorie is modern display fonts with visual elegance, smooth curves, and beautiful ligatures clear, making your work look true and attractive. A versatile font that works in both large and small sizes. This font is suitable for a wide variety of projects such as invitations, logos, branding, magazine, photography, card, product packaging, mugs, quotes, poster, labels, signatures, and more. Font which is perfect for all business sectors including personal projects, studio, corporate, creative agency, industrial, company, etc.
  4. Mories by MlkWsn, $15.00
    Mories is an elegant display serif with unique letter shapes to complete any designs, especially in fashion, branding, and for logos.
  5. Doric by Wooden Type Fonts, $15.00
    A revival of one of the popular wooden type fonts of the 19th century, suitable for text.
  6. Dorris by Creativemedialab, $20.00
    Dorris - Swirly font family Unique, cute and versatile serif family with alternates and ornaments to create a more stunning display. Try capital letters for groovy vintage style look or Capitalize for a happy, cute and beauty. This Family has 9 weights from thin to black with a soft and curly tail that makes this font look funky and fresh. Suitable for use in many design forms, for example, magazines, DIY projects, quotes, ice cream, postcards, logos, vintage look badges, old classic music, the 60s, 70s, 80s era, stickers, label, kids, baby, wedding projects and many more. We recommend using Adobe Programs.
  7. Doric by Linotype, $29.99
    Originally released by the Stephenson Blake foundry in England, Doric is modeled on one of the sans serifs of William Caslon IV, who was the first to interpret sans serif letterforms into a typeface (1816). Doric Bold has large, heavy capitals with uniform letter widths. It is often used for classified advertising in newspapers because these qualities coupled with a large x-height allow greater legibility at small point sizes.
  8. Dorige by Issam Type, $20.00
    Dorige is a modern retro serif typeface for branding, logo design and retro designs, This font comes with joining ligatures that give it a fancy and unique style. Dorige typeface comes with regular, italic, bold and bold italic font styles. Uppercase & lowercase letters, numbers, punctuation, ligatures, alternates Multilingual support. If you have any questions, please feel free to get in touch. Thank you
  9. Moris by Katatrad, $29.00
    Moris™ is a family of modern sans serif typeface with simple and condensed proportions. Moris is recommended for publication, screen and Corporate use. This new font family includes nine weights with true italics, numeric tabular function and Opentype features.
  10. Tory by Matteson Typographics, $19.95
    Frederic Goudy designed Tory in the spirit of the ‘lettres batarde’ found Geoffry Tory’s Champ Fleury. He was looking to create a romantic type for which to typeset the book Auccasin et Nicolette. It was one of Goudy’s favorite typefaces of his own creation and it is digitized by Steve Matteson to preserve that legacy.
  11. Dopis by Tour De Force, $25.00
    Dopis (Допис on Cyrillic) is neo grotesque family available in four weights and in two widths. It is universal and neutral typeface, fully applicable in every situation. Contains extended Latin character set with Cyrillic support.
  12. Doria by Autographis, $39.50
    Doria was developed from my handwritten script Xan that has a definite Japanese touch. By making Doria really slick it became a font that is perfect to be used on labels and for many packaging jobs.
  13. Cori by HiH, $8.00
    You wrote on your school notebooks, didn't you. Of course, just about everyone did. And those that didn't are probably in therapy trying to overcome the repression and guilt. Balloon letters are fun, easy to draw and have a light-hearted presence. With little autonomy, what young person can resist the opportunity to make a public, personal statement on their notebook. Guess what! Adults do it too - with our cars, our houses, our toys, our accessories and so on. And how "grown-up" are we really? Anyway, my niece, Cori, made this nice, colorful, hand-drawn birthday card. It was so vibrant and fun - in warm circus colors - that I could not resist making it into a font. Use it for positive, fun stuff, stuff with a light touch - an invitation for an informal party perhaps, but probably not a formal dinner at the White House. This font is not comfortable in a bowtie. But don't be fooled. Casual as Cori is, you can set at least twelve major European languages with it, in addition to English: Albanian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish and Swedish. Cori Valentine adds a decorative Valentine border to the upper case of Cori. By leaving out the bow in the upper center of the border we were able to fit the border around the accented caps. Similarly, we omitted the butterfly for the Ccedilla glyph. Blank versions of the regular border & the bowless border are provided at positions 135 & 137 in case you want to put a border around your signature or something like that. Just for reference, the letterforms for Cori Valentine are 75% the size as the regular Cori font. We would like to assure you that it is permissible to use Cori Valentine to create a romantic card, flyer or note during any month with less the 32 days.
  14. Nori by Positype, $49.00
    First, the important information…Nori is a hand-lettered typeface that contains over 1100 glyphs, 250 ligatures, 487 alternate characters, 125+ swash and titling alternates, lining and old style numerals. To make sure it is perfectly clear—Nori is the result of brush and ink on paper. The textures produced in each glyph are real and the imperfections are intentional and add to the sincerity of the letters. I say this to be as blunt as possible in order to avoid confusion and to frame what this typeface represents—calligraphic, handwritten letters captured digitally for their warmth and poetic variation for print and screen. Like my handwritten, calligraphic or brush-driven faces before it (the Baka series and the TDC2 2010 winning typeface, Fugu), Nori is a product of my analog and digital hand. To view the words and sentences formed by this typeface is to look at how my hands, yes hands, make letters. The fluidity, as well as the irregularity, is human, honest and intentional—to do so lets the brush I am holding breathe life into each letter. Once digital, any number of points and repetitive processes can’t mask its influences—and I like that. The brush, a simple instrument, my tool, my friend designed to emulate traditional Japanese sumi-e brushes... the Pilot Japan Kanji Fude brush pen. Each letter, each variation was written over and over again until I found the right combination. From there, each was scanned, digitized and optimized. Points were removed in order to ‘clean’ the glyphs up some but I did not want to compromise the integrity of the actual brush stroke. Once this base set of characters (about 350) were completed, the thoughtful manipulation of the glyphs, their gestures and forms were further expanded to solidify the embellishments used within the ligatures, alternates, swashes and additional features. This process was admittedly self-indulgent to an extent. I wanted the words created with this typeface to have the flexibility of variation and cohesiveness of movement that someone fluidly producing these letters by hand might have.  I hope you enjoy this typeface as much as I did during the six months working on it. A specimen and style guide is included with the purchased of Nori.
  15. Doki Doki Tokimeki by Megami Studios, $12.50
    Designed with visual novels and romantic text in mind, Doki Doki Tokimeki (taken from the Japanese sound for a heartbeat and the word heartbeat itself) is a romantically-inclined sans serif. From playful, yet friendly letters to a range of dingbats and a series of alternate heart-shaped glyphs, it’s sure to make your heart go pitter-patter as well!
  16. Hunky Dory NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Here's a page from the Page Company, circa 1850, originally called Doric. This version is reasonably faithful to the original, but streamlined for better reporduction at a variety of sizes. Both versions support the Latin 1252, Central European 1250, Turkish 1254 and Baltic 1257 codepages.
  17. Gilgongo Doro - Unknown license
  18. Dora Fonna by Ws Studio, $15.00
    Dora Fonna is a new modern script font with an irregular baseline. Trendy and feminine style. Dora Fonna looks beautiful for branding, logo, wedding supplies, greeting cards, fashion, lookbooks, marketing promotions. Includes initial and terminal letters, alternatives, ligatures and multiple language support. Dora Fonna also has a strong neoclassical serif typeface with high contrast, cool style and look, unique with alternative fonts, Ligatures, and multilingual support.
  19. Boris Brush by Hanoded, $20.00
    Boris is my son: he was born on January 7th and he is as cute as can be. Boris Brush font is a very loud, very useful brush typeface, which I created using some fine-haired brushes and black paint. It is all caps, but lower and upper case are different and can be freely interchanged. Comes with all the diacritics you need.
  20. Dobi Hand by Tugrul Peker, $5.00
    Dobi Hand is a fat, bold, fun, cartoon like and has variable contrast handmade typeface. Dobi Hand that can be used for graphic design like food packaging, children books, birthday invitations, greeting cards etc. Dobi means in Turkish "fat, fatty" (in street language)
  21. FF Dora by FontFont, $68.99
    The family has 5 weights, including a Display style, and is ideally suited for book and magazine design as well as small text. FF Dora provides advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, small capitals, alternate characters, case-sensitive forms, fractions, and super- and subscript characters. It comes with a complete range of figure set options – oldstyle and lining figures, each in tabular and proportional widths.
  22. Doire Royal by Evertype, $20.00
    Doire is a monowidth font based on the face used on the old Royal Gaelic manual typewriter. Doire Royal is a “rough” version of that font. Doire was first digitized in 1993 by Michael Everson and originally used the MacGaelic character set on the Macintosh platform, and ISO/IEC 8859-14 on the PC. In 2008 Doire version 3 was released in OpenType format, completely compliant with Unicode encoding and with an extended character set.
  23. Core Bori by S-Core, $59.00
    CoreBori is a soft Serif font. The Korean alphabet is designed into ovals, and it is also reflected in English alphabets. With oval shape and condensed width of initial and final consonants are distinguishing factors in hangul. Supported codepages are MS Windows 1252 Latin1 and MS Windows 949 Korean consisting of 11,172 Korean letters and Symbols except Chinese. We Suggest to use this font to fairy tale books, t-shirts, posters, logos and other items.
  24. Noris Script by Linotype, $29.99
    Drawn by master German calligrapher Hermann Zapf in the 1970s, Noris Script captures the magic of the irregularities of pen strokes. The idea behind Noris Script was to bring the spontaneity of a quick handwritten script using a broad-edged pen into the modern typesetting environment. Noris is the Latin name for the German city of Nuremberg, where Hermann Zapf was born and raised. Nuremberg has something special about it, aside from Hermann Zapf, it has a great tradition of writing masters, such as Johann Neudörffer (1497-1563), Wolfgang Fugger (1515-1568), and Rudolf Koch (1876-1934).
  25. Linotype Rory by Linotype, $29.99
    Linotype Rory oblique is part of the Take Type Library, selected from contestants of Linotype’s International Digital Type Design Contests of 1994 and 1997. The font was designed by Canadian Tad Biernot with strictly constructed forms. The similarly formed figures seem mechanically created and their light slant gives the impression of strenght and dynamism. Linotype Rory oblique should only be used in the shorter texts of headlines in larger point sizes.
  26. Mister Dorky by PizzaDude.dk, $20.00
    Mister Dorky is a grungy, jumpy and warm handwritten font made with an inky pen!
  27. St Lorie by Stereotypes, $29.00
    St Lorie is inspired by handmade lettering in logos, but it was drawn completely by the digital method.
  28. JFC - Unknown license
  29. Dona Doni Script by Nk Studio, $14.00
    Dona Doni Modern Calligraphy Script font with a subtle, handwritten style. Equipped with 350 glyphs. Dona Doni is perfect for branding projects, homeware design, product packaging, use in business cards, invitation cards, etc. Simply as a stylish text overlay onto a background image or anything that requires a touch of elegance.
  30. Shmulik Dorit MF by Masterfont, $59.00
  31. FF Dora Display by FontFont, $62.99
    FF Dora Display is the Display version of FF Dora. It provides advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, small capitals, alternate characters, case-sensitive forms, fractions, and super- and subscript characters. It comes with a complete range of figure set options – oldstyle and lining figures, each in tabular and proportional widths.
  32. XXII Gory Bastard by Doubletwo Studios, $25.99
    The Bastard is the cheap alternative for you to easily create a logo for your band or whatever. It comes with a basic characterset and a little bunch of symbols and signs often used in the extreme music sector. Some classical stuff from Death- and Blackmetal like pentagrams and crosses, roots and branches and lots of other things. With all of these you’ll be able to customise your logo to the look of your interest. Open it up in your graphic-editing-application and be creative, play with it and find out what’s possible. Check out the PDF in the Gallery for detailed information. Or on behance.net .
  33. TOMO Dora Sans by TOMO Fonts, $15.00
    TOMO Dora is a new face designed by TOMO FONTS. Dora is a condensed style-driven sans serif typeface made by hand, adding unique and a sweet touch. A family of 4 styles + awesome icons! Enjoy!
  34. Flora Dora NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    Long before there was Scooby Doo, there was scooby-dooby. This exuberant font is based on the works of whacked-out 50s album-cover artist Jim Flora, whose imaginative illustrations defined hot jazz and cool cats. The Opentype version of this font supports Unicode 1250 (Central European) languages, as well as Unicode 1252 (Latin) languages.
  35. ZP A Dorky Print by Illustration Ink, $2.00
    This fun and whimsical font features a very youthful lettering with a bit of toggle and bounce in the baseline.
  36. Mini Pics by NicePrice Font Collection, $4.99
  37. Bits Pics by Bitstream, $29.99
  38. MSung PRC by Monotype HK, $523.99
    Song style typefaces originated in the age of woodblock printing in Song Dynasty. Being an essential Chinese type style for printing and publishing all since Ming Dynasty. Based on the Kaishu calligraphic script, its structure has evolved, regularised and standardised with thick stems (豎), thin horizontal strokes (橫) and triangular finials. Dots (點), hooks (勾) and downstrokes retained some features of calligraphy, hence an appropriate choice for continuous reading. The typeface is equipped with a variety of stroke weights, all highly legible .
  39. Pic Format by Device, $29.00
  40. MFC Semicirculus Monogram by Monogram Fonts Co., $19.95
    The inspiration source for Semicirculus Monogram is a stylish sans serif letterset from a vintage embroidery publication which combines to create a semi-circular form monogram. Originally intended to adorn handkerchiefs, it has so many other possibilities. Ornaments from numerous antique specimen books were combined with the letter set to accent and complete its form. This is one of many monogram designs for the early 1900s which fall into a two letter format that is either adorned or interwoven with ornamentation. Download and view the MFC Semicirculus Monogram Guidebook if you would like to learn a little more.
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