8,376 search results (0.057 seconds)
  1. Super Snorty Laughter - Unknown license
  2. Tingle Institute - Unknown license
  3. Kwekel - Unknown license
  4. Waking the Witch - Unknown license
  5. DuckyCowgrrrlLuvsRudyCowboy - Unknown license
  6. fragments of eter - Unknown license
  7. Curlmudgeon Italic - Unknown license
  8. Saltwater - Unknown license
  9. BPilialena - Unknown license
  10. Licorice Strings BRK - Unknown license
  11. the Gingerbread House - Unknown license
  12. JoliScript - Unknown license
  13. fuu - Unknown license
  14. Curlmudgeon - Unknown license
  15. A Yummy Apology - Personal use only
  16. Pavadee - Unknown license
  17. Liturgisch - Personal use only
  18. Calinastiya by Patria Ari, $15.00
    Calinastiya is a curly playful display typeface with some beautiful cursive glyphs. Calinastiya is perfect for branding projects, logo, book cover, social media posts, advertisements, product packaging, product designs, label, and any projects that you work on.
  19. Turbayne Running Hand - Unknown license
  20. Ingenious by Heyfonts, $18.00
    Ingenious Groovy font is a type of display font that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s during the psychedelic era. It features bold, curvy lettering with an exaggerated cursive style, incorporating elements such as swirls, loops, and curves. The Groovy font is designed to give off a sense of retro vibrancy, and it is often used in advertising, music covers, and other whimsical design projects. The font is available in a variety of colors, including bright yellow, orange, and pink, adding to its playfulness and funkiness.
  21. KG Ways to Say Goodbye - Unknown license
  22. Jellyka, End_less Voyage - Personal use only
  23. ITC Slimbach by ITC, $29.99
    ITC Slimbach font is the work of California calligrapher and type designer Robert Slimbach. Inspired in part by German fonts and the work of Hermann Zapf, Slimbach created a "contemporary text font with a progressive look", combining clean serif shapes with the warmth of calligraphic forms.
  24. Diorite by Three Islands Press, $24.00
    Diorite is modern face built on classical letterforms -- but left with a bit of residual roughness. Some might call Diorite forthright, others brutal. (It reminded the designer of the dark, hard igneous rock of the same name, treasured by the ancient Egyptians for statuary.) The typeface has a relatively chunky, four-style family; the italics are true cancellaresca corsiva, also writ heavy. "The cancellaresca is of course a Gothic design," notes the designer. "Just use a broader pen, and you'll see!" Has four styles: regular, bold, cursive, and cursive bold.
  25. Partenkirchen NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    In Lewis F. Day’s 1910 classic, Alphabets Old and New, the author presented the inspiration for this typeface as an example of German monumental lettering, most likely to suggest not that the typeface was really big, but that it had been found on German monuments. Bold yet charming, the face takes its name from a picturesque village in the Bavarian Alps which was the ancestral home of the Gröbl line of Curtii forebears. Both versions of this font include the complete Latin 1252 and CE 1250 character sets, with localization for Romanian and Moldovan.
  26. Cocosignum by Zetafonts, $39.00
    Cocosignum takes inspiration from the typography of the italian thirties. The imperial uppercase with its propaganda deco overtones is softened by a cursive lowercase geometric script in the Corsivo Italico version. It comes in two styles and five weights, covering over forty languages using latin alphabet, as well as Greek and Cyrillic.
  27. Veljovic Script by Linotype, $103.99
    ITC Veljovic Script was designed by Jovica Veljovic and displays an obvious calligraphic heritage. The designer was strongly influenced by German designer Hermann Zapf and Israeli designer Henri Friedlander. ITC Veljovic Script exhibits a crisp precision, as if the letters were cut in stone rather than drawn with pen and ink.
  28. Zapf Renaissance Antiqua by Linotype, $29.99
    The Zapf Renaissance Antiqua type family was designed by Hermann Zapf for the German Scangraphic Dr. Böger GmbH in Hamburg, from 1984–1986. The typefaces were engineered for use in digital CRT phototypesetting. This version was based on Scangraphic SH version (For Display use) and not on the SB version (for text use).
  29. Declaration - 100% free
  30. Le chant des Albatros - Personal use only
  31. Cream Cake - Personal use only
  32. Berillia__s_Gaze - Unknown license
  33. Mistress Script - Unknown license
  34. Garton - Personal use only
  35. Lyrics Movement - Personal use only
  36. Goose Creek JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered credits from the 1942 British film comedy “The Goose Steps Out” became the model for Goose Creek JNL, a simple sans serif design available in both regular and oblique versions. According to the Internet Movie Database (imdb), “A bumbling teacher turns out to be the double of a German general. He is flown into Germany to impersonate the general and cause chaos and hilarity in a Hitler Youth college.” The title is a parody of the “goosestep” style of marching by German soldiers during World War II. As a variant on the movie’s title, the font was named for Goose Creek, South Carolina – a charming community just northeast of historic Charleston.
  37. Rundgotisch by HiH, $10.00
    One of my favorites. Rundgotisch is a easy to read for eyes that are accustomed to roman letterforms, yet keeps in touch with its blackletter roots. It was released around 1900 by Schelter & Giesecke of Leipzig, Germany. Can be used to set short text passages and pairs easily with many different decorative initials of the period. A very useful typeface. Don't leave home without it. According to Bringhurst, Schelter & Giesecke was formed in 1819 by Johann Gottfied Schelter and Christian Friedrich Giesecke. This old German printing house was sucked up by state-owned Typoart in 1946, after Marshall Zhukov and the Red Army had established Soviet dominion over East Germany.
  38. Durer Display by iframe, $28.00
    Durer is a modern font, its soft curves and refined details create a sense of elegance. Inspired by the work of Albrecht Dürer (21 May 1471 – 6 April 1528), who was a German painter, printmaker, and theorist of the German Renaissance. Born in Nuremberg, Dürer established his reputation and influence across Europe in his twenties due to his high-quality woodcut prints. 551 Glyphs Upper / lower case, numbers, punctuation Language support: Latin / Greek Designed by iframe type foundry
  39. Geiny by CoastalType, $15.00
    Geiny, is a modern display typeface with flared serif and horizontal emphasis as its characteristics. alternative styles with curved crossbar, curved tails, and catchwords when you activate Discretionary Ligatures to create interesting typography composition. Features 296 glyphs Stylistic Alternate & Discretionary Ligatures Accented characters Multiple Languages Supported : Afrikaans, Albanian, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Icelandic, Italian, Norwegian, Portugese, Spanisch, Swedish, Zulu
  40. 1538 Schwabacher by GLC, $38.00
    This 1538 Schwabacher was based on a font used by Georg Rhau in Wittemberg (Germany) to print Des Babsts Hercules [...], a German pamphlet against roman catholicism written by Johannes Kymeus. The original font has a relatively complete set of characters including “long s”, but also the special german types like k, fl or ‰, ˆ, ¸.... A few omissions were remedied, and accented letters were added. A render sheet, enclosed with font files, help to identify them on keyboard. It can be used as web-site titles, posters and fliers, editing ancient texts, menus or greeting cards as a very decorative font... Although this font remains clear and easy to read from 8 or 9 points on screen, it is clearly designed for print works.
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