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  1. RMU Kontrast by RMU, $30.00
    F. H. Schneidler’s ‚Kontrast‘, released by Weber in 1930, revived.
  2. Furia & Venganza - Personal use only
  3. Velour by SilkType, $35.00
    Velour is an elegant display typeface, with thin, bracketed serifs. The typeface’s main features are the curved crossbar on ‘A’ and ‘H’, the long, sophisticated legs of ‘K’ and ‘R’ including an alternative ‘k’ automatically substituted in appropriate places, providing a consistent flow of text and a romantic feel. The typeface comes with a beautiful set of both standard and old-style numerals, two different ampersands and alternates with less complicated letterforms. Velour is available in 6 weights, from Thin to Bold, and supports Western, Central and South Eastern European languages.
  4. Compliment by profonts, $39.99
    Compliment is a script design which is obviously based on H. Matheis' typeface designed for Ludwig & Mayer in 1965.Ralph M. Unger redrew and digitized this font in 2004. His work is based on artwork taken from old East German font catalogues.
  5. CG Triumvirate by Monotype, $40.99
    CG Triumvirate was designed for use on the Compugraphic phototypesetting system. The CG Triumvirate font family is very similar to Helvetica, and is an ideal font choice for text and display use.
  6. Aura by Monotype, $29.99
    Aura was designed by Jackson Burke for the Linotype foundry in 1960. Aura is a sans serif display font, very similar to Helvetica Inserat. Use the Aura font for headlines and posters.
  7. Schneider Kontrast by Intellecta Design, $9.00
    a naive interpretation of the F. H. Ernst Schneidler's art deco font...
  8. Erasmus by Red Rooster Collection, $45.00
    Based on the S. H. de Roos design, Amsterdam Foundry circa 1923.
  9. Hockeynight Sans by XTOPH, $20.00
    Hockeynight Sans with its round corners is the smoothest sports-font you will find. Its the helvetica under the college fonts. Spice it up and mix some of the alternative glyphs in! Hockeynight comes in 7 Weights and each one available as an Italic. Use it big and bold on your sports-poster, space it up to get that dirty look or use some alternate glyphs for your logodesign. Look out for the Brush Versions and the Slab Version of Hockeynight
  10. R21 hSq by 103cia, $10.00
    R21-h sq is stand for "Ratio 2:1 in horizontal square"; a comparison in making a glyph typography, horizontally in the form of a square. R21-h sq font consists of bold-retro typeface with its own unique funky style. Suitable for app design, games, toys character face, storybook covers, logos, advertisements, branding, poster, or anything that needs a daring and fresh typography. Font include: R21-hSq-Latin (+extended) font R21-hSq-Cyrillic font R21-hSq-Greek font* * Additional Light font for Greek only. All styles include Latin standards (except for free/demo version). The glyph 6, 8, 9, x, O, Q and X on display are for commercial version (the free/demo version are different).
  11. French Plug by HiH, $8.00
    Frank H. Atkinson was a popular Art Nouveau sign painter in Chicago, Illinois. He designed signs for the Cadillac Motor Car Co., Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and the department store Marshall Field. Oddly enough, he even designed signs for other sign painters. In 1908 he published a book, Sign Painting, which sold well. French Plug, a bold, rounded, all-cap design in an American Art Nouveau style from that book. It has a relaxed, easy-going informality that is useful for ads and flyers. It also would have fit very nicely with many French posters of the period.
  12. Bradley Dingies by Intellecta Design, $27.90
    Digitization of some of classic William H Bradley's characters, from America vintage heritage
  13. WildWest-Normal - Unknown license
  14. Paladium Gothic by BA Graphics, $45.00
    A next generation gothic with that clean legible corporate look, very simple yet very dignified. Great for text and head lines, just about any application. If you are tired of seeing Helvetica try Paladium Gothic.
  15. Tonky - 100% free
  16. Write Like Jesse - Unknown license
  17. Rogers2 - Unknown license
  18. Melbylon - 100% free
  19. Strobo - 100% free
  20. Loosh - 100% free
  21. Hygiene - 100% free
  22. Weirdmojo - 100% free
  23. Squeeg - 100% free
  24. Night Life JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Night Life JNL follows the classic lettering forms of the Art Deco era of the 1930s and 1940s. On the upper case letters, the A,B,E,F,H,K,P and R have extended horizontals, while the lower case a,b,e,f,h,k,p and r have those extensions removed and are more traditional in design.
  25. Northfork JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Northfork JNL is based on a William H. Page wood type alphabet called Parisian, circa 1857-58.
  26. Wacamóler Caps - Personal use only
  27. Germanica - 100% free
  28. MLB Tuscan - Unknown license
  29. ThunderBay - Unknown license
  30. Schmalfette Fraktur - Personal use only
  31. AdPro by Linotype, $29.99
    Roman Sehrer, a seasoned German advertising professional, digitized his handwriting to create this family of three fonts. Sehrer recommends this family for posters, logos, and restaurant menus. It works well with traditional sans serifs such as Helvetica or Univers.
  32. Triplex by Emigre, $39.00
    Although initially designed as a rational/geometric font, Triplex developed into one of Zuzana Licko's most intuitive typeface designs at the time. Its first extensive use was in Emigre magazine #14, a special issue devoted to Swiss designers published in 1990. Triplex was intended as a friendly substitute for Helvetica. The name Triplex refers to the three versions that make up the entire family; Triplex, Triplex Serif and Triplex Italic. Each version of the typeface comes in light, bold and extra bold. The italic was designed and drawn by type designer and sign painter John Downer, and was designed to work with both the serif and sans serif versions. See also Triplex Italic OT.
  33. Grudblitter - 100% free
  34. Back In The USSR DL - Personal use only
  35. Impact by Microsoft Corporation, $89.00
    Geoffrey Lee designed Impact font for the Stephenson Blake foundry in 1965. The sans serif display typeface is very heavy and condensed in the grotesque style, similar to Helvetica Inserat. Use Impact font in display situations requiring a strong statement.
  36. Impact by Monotype, $40.99
    Geoffrey Lee designed Impact font for the Stephenson Blake foundry in 1965. The sans serif display typeface is very heavy and condensed in the grotesque style, similar to Helvetica Inserat. Use Impact font in display situations requiring a strong statement.
  37. Heldustry by URW Type Foundry, $35.99
    Heldustry is a sans serif design with letterforms partway between Helvetica and Eurostile. The Heldustry font family has a large x-height and wide characters, making it ideal for situations where there is not much copy but pages must be filled.
  38. Eden CT by CastleType, $39.00
    Eden Light, originally designed by the American type designer Robert H. Middleton in 1934, was commissioned by Publish magazine for a redesign in 1990. When I found a specimen of Eden Bold a couple years later, I decided to digitize it also. Subsequently, I created a Medium weight. Very squared and compact with thin slab serifs, Eden includes support of all European languages that use the Latin alphabet.
  39. VINTAGE COLLEGE DEPT_DEMO_worn - Personal use only
  40. De Fonte Plus by Ingo, $39.00
    A variation of ”Helvetica according to the blur principle.“ The underlying typeface is ”Helvetica“, the only true ”run-of-the-mill“ typeface of the twentieth century. The distortion principle used simulates the photographic effect of halation and/or overexposure. The light weight, »DeFonte Léger«, nearly breaks on the thin points, whereas on those points where the lines meet or cross, dark spots remain. The characters are ”nibbled at“ from the inner and outer brightness. On the normal and semibold typestyles, »DeFonte Normale« and »DeFonte Demi Gras«, the effect is limited almost exclusively to the end strokes and corners, which appears to be strongly rounded off. The bold version »DeFonte Gros« is especially attractive. As a result of ”overexposure“, counters (internal spaces) are closed in, while characters become blurred and turn into spots; new characteristic forms are created which are astoundingly legible. The fat version »DeFonte Gros« is particularly appealing. “Overexposure” leads to drifted counters, letters blur into spots; new characteristic forms emerge, which are surprisingly easy to read.
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