4,935 search results (0.025 seconds)
  1. Lohengrin - Personal use only
  2. Gunship Laser Italic - Unknown license
  3. MigraineSerif - Unknown license
  4. Xephyr Expanded Italic - Unknown license
  5. samarin - Unknown license
  6. Pandemonious Puffery Light - Unknown license
  7. Reclame - Unknown license
  8. Flying Leatherneck Outline - Unknown license
  9. pectopah - Unknown license
  10. Xephyr Shadow Italic - Unknown license
  11. Petiote - Unknown license
  12. disco 3 - Unknown license
  13. MigraineSans - Unknown license
  14. Flying Leatherneck Light - Unknown license
  15. genotype - Unknown license
  16. Drid Herder - Unknown license
  17. Airacobra - Unknown license
  18. Pandemonious Puffery Italic - Unknown license
  19. Kosmonaut - Unknown license
  20. D3 Coolbitmapism - Unknown license
  21. Flying Leatherneck Expanded - Unknown license
  22. Phonetica - Unknown license
  23. PGF Americas by PeGGO Fonts, $27.90
    PGF-Americas is a font family, created by Pedro González for Peggo Fonts between 2015 and 2021. Inspired by Rudolf Koch’s Carved Letter design artwork. PGF-Americas delivers a readable, playful, and versatile experience through a font-weight range that goes from thin to ExtraDark plus two Inline weights, an Initials set, one set with ornaments and the other with weather theme dingbats that follow a coherent rhythm and proportions of the family core. An expressive tool that can consistently be applied as decorative complements to solve label, books & movie cover design, headlines, posters and friendly educational products. It adds generous OpenType features with the same spirit as the default versions. Access All Alternates Glyphs Composition/Decomposition Localized Forms Subscript Scientific Inferiors Superscript Numerators Denominators Fractions Ordinals Linig Figures Proportional Figures Tabular Figures Oldstyle Figures Case-Sensitive Forms Discretionary Ligatures Standard Ligatures Full Widths Swash Stylistic Alternates Stylistic Set 1, Stylistic Set 2, Stylistic Set 3, Stylistic Set 4 It supports over 300 Latin based languages: Abenaki, Afaan Oromo, Afar, Afrikaans, Albanian, Alsatian, Amis, Anuta, Aragonese, Aranese, Aromanian, Arrernte, Arvanitic (Latin), Asturian, Atayal, Aymara, Azerbaijani, Bashkir (Latin), Basque, Belarusian (Latin), Bemba, Bikol, Bislama, Bosnian, Breton, Cape Verdean Creole, Catalan, Cebuano, Chamorro, Chavacano, Chichewa, Chickasaw, Cimbrian, Cofán, Cornish, Corsican, Creek, Crimean Tatar (Latin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dawan, Delaware, Dholuo, Drehu, Dutch, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Filipino, Finnish, Folkspraak, French, Frisian, Friulian, Gagauz (Latin), Galician, Ganda, Genoese, German
  24. PF DIN Stencil Pro by Parachute, $65.00
    DIN Stencil Pro on Behance. DIN Stencil Pro: Specimen Manual PDF. Despite the fact that over the years several designers have manually created stencil lettering based on DIN for various projects, there had never been a professional digital stencil version of a DIN-based typeface until 2010 when the original DIN Stencil was first released. The Pro version was released in 2014 and adds multiscript support for Cyrillic and Greek. DIN Stencil Pro was based on its original counterpart DIN Text Pro and was particularly designed to address contemporary projects, by incorporating elements and weights which are akin to industries such as fashion, music, video, architecture, sports and communications. Traditionally, stencils have been used extensively for military equipment, goods packaging, transportation, shop signs, seed sacks and prison uniforms. In the old days, stencilled markings of ownership were printed on personal possessions, while stencilled signatures on shirts were typical of 19th century stencilling. Two companies dominated the market in the mid-twentieth century: the Marsh Stencil Machine Company in the United States and the Sächsische Metall Schablonen Fabrik in Germany. Ever since the late 1930s, it was the German Sächsische Metall Schablonen Fabrik which used heavily the new DIN 1451 standard font (introduced in 1936), attempting to overthrow the reign of the Didot-style modern roman which was at the time the most common stencil letter in Germany. These letters were manufactured mainly as individual zinc stencils which could be ordered in sizes between 10 and 100mm. The DIN Stencil family manages to preserve several traditional stencil features, but introduces additional modernities which enhance its pleasing characteristics which make it an ideal choice for a large number of contemporary projects. Furthermore, the spacing attributes of the glyphs were redefined and legibility was improved by revising the shape of the letterforms. The DIN Stencil Pro family is an enhanced version of the popular DIN Stencil. It consists of 8 diverse weights from the elegant Hairline to the muscular Black and supports Latin, Cyrillic, Greek, Eastern European, Turkish and Baltic. The new version 3.0 includes several additions such the recently unicode encoded character of the German uppercase Eszett (ẞ), the Russian currency symbol for Rouble (₽), Ukrainian Hryvnia (₴), Azeri and Kazakh letterforms.
  25. Lindau - Unknown license
  26. TootSweetBistroNF - 100% free
  27. Antherton Cloister - Unknown license
  28. Basecoat by Jonathan Ball, $19.00
    Basecoat is a handcrafted, geometric sans serif inspired by sign painting and influenced by modern gothics. It has a subtle organic feel without sacrificing legibility. The design of the uppercase began with chalk marker lettering for a side project and eventually grew into a small type family. Basecoat comes in three weights and includes more than 500 glyphs with European language support. It has popular OpenType features plus catchwords in multiple languages and arrows for all your sign making needs.
  29. Nouveau Signage JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Occasionally a type design is started - then set aside for whatever reason - before eventually being completed. More often than not, the original source material is forgotten, so proper attribution cannot be made. Such is the case for a hand lettered Art Nouveau alphabet likely found within the pages of an early Speedball lettering book from around the 1920s. This playful and casual design is now digitally reproduced as Nouveau Signage JNL, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  30. Dope Jam - Unknown license
  31. Bionic Comic Condensed - Unknown license
  32. Letters - Unknown license
  33. Bionic Type Slant - Unknown license
  34. Neon - Unknown license
  35. Bionic Comic Italic - Unknown license
  36. Bionic Type Italic - Unknown license
  37. Bionic Type Shadow - Unknown license
  38. Haunted - 100% free
  39. MamaRound - Unknown license
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