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  1. MetropolisNF - Unknown license
  2. Lemiesz - Unknown license
  3. ChippewaFallsNF - 100% free
  4. HighFive - Unknown license
  5. PhattPhreddy - 100% free
  6. SpacePatrol - Unknown license
  7. HappyCampersNF - Unknown license
  8. Poltergiest - Unknown license
  9. Geoblox by Warnetype, $8.00
    A geometric display font contains upper & lowercase characters, all punctuation and numerals. Fun and blocky, it has a contemporary but playful feel.
  10. Seashells by Okaycat, $29.50
    Seashells is a picture font, containing all pretty sea shells. Each shell appears in outline form and also as a solid graphic.
  11. Morgy by Creativemedialab, $16.00
    Morgy is a unique font that displays a cheerful and dynamic impression, suitable for all modern design concepts from posters to branding
  12. Zero_G by fontkingz, $19.00
    Type/Usage: Technoid Display Font for spacecraft visual identification in high and low gravitation. Mixes well with all other kinds of GROTESKES.
  13. Rikos by Fenotype, $19.95
    Rikos is an Alien-influenced unicase font family from the future. Use all the five members of the family for maximum impact!
  14. Noteworthy by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Noteworthy is an all caps, bold, contemporary, sans serif font. It is ideal for headlines, titles, branding and small blocks of text.
  15. CA Kink by Cape Arcona Type Foundry, $20.00
    CA Kink was originally created for a book cover. Mostly suitable as a headline font and for all kind of "space" themes.
  16. LD Remington Portable by Illustration Ink, $3.00
    This font represents the type style created by this very famous classic typewriter. Remington was considered the father of all typewriter companies.
  17. Higakles by Edignwn Type, $16.00
    The font collection is called "Higakles", it is a display font for logotype. These collections contain serif and sans serif font. Every font comes with 4 style typefaces (regular, rounded, rough and stamp). Higakles give more extras 24 mystic and mythology illustrations. This stamp style has unique vintage handmade looks. The Higakles matches apply in some designs such as the logo, poster, label, badge, packaging, t-shirt, branding, quotes and more custom design. Higakles features : 4 style typefaces (regular, rounded, rough and stamp) Uppercase, lowercase, numeral, symbol, punctuation in serif font All-caps, numeral, symbol and punctuation in sans serif font Multilingual PUA Encoded Higakles includes : 9 fonts (serif, sans serif and dingbat) 24 hand-drawn illustrations in dingbat If you have any questions, please contact (edignwn11@gmail.com)
  18. Sonrisa by CastleType, $59.00
    Sonrisa is a design that evolved from my sketches of the skeletal structure of Jakob Erbar’s Koloss, trying to discover its underlying essence without all the contrast and bulkiness of the original design. Sonrisa Thin was the resulting font, from which the other weights of the family were developed. Gentle curves, open counters, generous x-height, and sleekly tapered terminals give Sonrisa a very legible, modern, elegant appearance. When she saw the first draft of this typeface, the smile on my friend Jennifer’s face gave me the idea to call it “Sonrisa” (Spanish for “smile”). Jennifer, a clinical psychologist, described Sonrisa’s personality as: "happy, clean, clear, open, joyful, spacious, playful, calm. I can see it being used for body product lines such as oils and lotions. Can see it being used in home/travel magazines or even Architectural Digest. Yoga magazine, definitely." Sonrisa is what some foundries call a “Pro” typeface family with all the bells and whistles that provide typographic versatility: true small caps, oldstyle numerals, arbitrary fractions, discretionary ligatures, and other powerful OpenType features. All fonts in the family, except Sonrisa Titling, support most European languages, including modern Greek and languages that use the Cyrillic Alphabet. (Cyrillic glyphs designed in consultation with Ukrainian type designer, Sergiy S. Tkachenko.) Sonrisa is available in the original Thin, monoline version as well as six weights (Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Extra Bold, Black), and a Titling font that is essentially a display font construction kit. If you enjoy using Sonrisa even half as much as I enjoyed creating it, then I know you will have a “sonrisa” (smile) on your face!
  19. Quarter Braille by Echopraxium, $20.00
    Presentation QuarterBraille (Abbreviated as "QB" thereafter) is a decorative, steganographic and lattice font. Its core design concept is that Braille dots are represented as "quarters of a square"[1]. This is illustrated by posters 1 and 2 (NB: these glyph parts will be called "QB dots" thereafter). The other glyph parts (see poster 3) are purely decorative and meaningless in terms of Braille dots encoding[2]. All glyph parts are meant to generate a wide variety of patterns from horizontal and vertical combinations of glyphs. There is also a graphic convention to differentiate uppercase from lowercase letters with the presence or absence of shape subparts (in the "endings", "quarter of a circle with a ring" and "quarter of a diamond with a small square in the middle") like shown by poster 4. This font is suitable for very short texts (e.g. logos, acronyms, quotes, ambigrams, pangrams, palindromes, etc...) but on the other hand it may be used for steganographic purpose like geocaching as well as fictive alphabets (e.g. Alien/SciFi/Fantasy/Antique civilizations). Posters 1. Font Logo: the displayed text is " Quarter " followed by " Braille". There's a rainbow layer above the text to highlight the "QB dots", this is achieved by A..Z glyphs with "only QB dots" (codes 230..255) 2. Anatomy of a Glyph (L) and "QB Dots" (quarters of a square) 3. Glyphs Parts: Square and Cross (Inverted square), Circle and Inverted Circle (with or without the small circle in the middle), Diamond (with or without the small square in the middle), Inverted Square and Circle, Shape combos, Ending 4. Uppercase vs Lowercase (tiny shape subparts are shown in red) 5. Sample 1: Bathroom sink with QB tiles on the credence 6. Sample 2: Hands knuckle tatoos: "LOVE/HATE"[4] 7. Sample 3: Poker Hand: pocket Aces. It's an Ace of Hearts (Ah) on the left and an Ace of Spades (As) on the right. Like in regular cards, the card value (e.g. Ah) is displayed twice: at the top and rotated by 180 degrees at the bottom. This poster also illustrates that QB could be used to print embossed playing cards with tactile and visual display of card values. 8. Sample 4: Pangram: "Adept quick jog over frozen blue whisky mix" 9. Sample 5: Latin Magic Square: "SATOR AREPO TENET OPERA ROTAS" (NB: for compensation of the 2/3 glyph ratio, letters on each line are separated by a space: "S A T O R", ...). 10. Sample 6: Quote of Mahatma Gandhi: "Learn as if you will live forever, live like you will die tomorrow.". This is also a demonstration of border glyphs combinations. 11. Sample 7: Steganography use case: the text is a sequence of 64 aminoacids (1 Letter notation), this protein was described in a research paper "The complete Aminoacid sequence of an amyloid fibril protein AA of unusual size (64 residues) 1975". 12. Sample 8: Border Glyphs with the provided styles and mixed styles. The words are the same than in poster 9 ("SATOR AREPO TENET OPERA ROTAS"). Despite the 2/3 glyph ratio, the "TENET cross" was achieved by both inserting spaces in horizontally ("T ENE T") and by using the "thin borders glyphs". Notes a. Border glyphs[3] are meant to enhance the esthetics of text samples displayed with QB b. Special characters (e.g. *$()[].,;:&@# ...) are provided and follow the NABCC (North American Braille Computer Code) convention. c. A..Z Glyphs with only the "QB dots" are provided as demonstrated by posters 1 and 2 (A/N: this was very useful to create them). d. Glyph Map: 32..64: Special characters - 161..187: "Thin variant" of Border glyphs, 192..229: Border glyphs, 230..255: A..Z with only the "QB dots" - Codes 176 an 181 are "regular SPACE" (empty glyph). Footnotes 1. There is indeed two shapes which represent the braille dot: the "quarter of a square" and the "quarter of a cross". It's because a cross may be considered as an "inverted square" because the square corners are merged in the center. 2. That's why the SPACE glyph is only made of decorative/meaningless glyph parts (i.e. no "QB dots"). 3. For other fonts with border glyphs, please take a look at my other "decorative Braille fonts" (GoBraille, HexBraille, KernigBraille, StackBraille, MaBraille, DiamondBraille, LorraineBraille). 4. LOVE/HATE knuckle tatoos are inspired by the anthology scene from "The Night of the Hunter" movie (Charles Laughton 1955), it also appearead in "Do The Right Thing" movie (Spike Lee 1989). Disclaimer This font is not appropriate and not meant to print text documents in Braille for the blind readers audience.
  20. iNked God - Personal use only
  21. Frank Knows - Personal use only
  22. Brawl - Unknown license
  23. Glider Girls - Unknown license
  24. Goffik-Outline - Unknown license
  25. Bad Mofo - Personal use only
  26. IRON MATHBOOK - Personal use only
  27. Kitsu XD - Unknown license
  28. trop flou - Personal use only
  29. Eight Fifteen - Unknown license
  30. Jon Handwriting - Unknown license
  31. Milktop Girl - Unknown license
  32. Bonbon Bleu - Unknown license
  33. La Mamucha - Unknown license
  34. super danger - Unknown license
  35. BROKEN GHOST - Unknown license
  36. rusted plastic - Unknown license
  37. Arcade Fire - Unknown license
  38. My Nerd - Personal use only
  39. jailbIrD JenNA - Unknown license
  40. Hey Gorgeous - Unknown license
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