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  1. Line Art Eclectrice Aligned by DJ THINK, $95.00
    Thanks for checking out LineArt ECLECTRICE (pronounced EHCK-LEHCK-TREES) Light Aligned font by Rene Toussaint (otherwise known as DJ THINK) of LineArt Foundry and Brand. This font is designed in the vein of graffiti art with stylings of hip-hop and hieroglyphic appearance. Try it in a preview window and check out if it will meet your needs for something cool and hip for your next flyer design or other type of graphic art image. Keep in mind that this is a light design and may require extra thickening in your vector program of choice with outline thickness options.
  2. Montix by Linotype, $49.00
    Montix is a narrow, constructed type family that developed by the German designer Diana Fischer in 2003. With five weights (light, light italic, regular, regular italic, and bold), Montix is a particularly effective small family, especially when used for headline or display purposes. Montix's letterforms have relatively long ascenders and descenders, which compared with its horizontally compact body gives it its unique style. Words or lines of text set in Montix would look best when some amount of white space is left around them. Because of this, the faces are well suited for logos and corporate identity uses.
  3. Hoban by District, $40.00
    The light and the bold. The thick and the thin. Laverne and the Shirley. Peanut Butter and the Jelly. Hoban is about contrast. Hoban wants to be noticed, but only after a second glance. A friend of a friend to the didones, it has smaller, tapering serifs, slightly calligraphic traits, and spindly little terminals that go where they please. It’s a headline face. Period. Set it big and bold. Or light and airy. But preferably next to something with flair. Cuff links, canapés, or corvettes–it’s up to you. Distinct ligatures, ornaments, and swashy alternates provide plenty of character to tailor your style.
  4. CapitalisTypOasis - Unknown license
  5. VALENTINEHEARTS - Unknown license
  6. D3 Euronism Bold - Unknown license
  7. Sholom - Unknown license
  8. D3 Archism - Unknown license
  9. D3 Roadsterism Italic - Unknown license
  10. Pinocchio - Unknown license
  11. D3 Superimposism Outline - Unknown license
  12. D3 Euronism italic - Unknown license
  13. D3 Spiralism Outline - Unknown license
  14. D3 Globalism italic - Unknown license
  15. D3 CuteBitMapism TypeA - Unknown license
  16. Becker - Unknown license
  17. D3 Superstructurism Outline - Unknown license
  18. D3 LiteBitMapism Bold - Unknown license
  19. D3 DigiBitMapism type A - Unknown license
  20. D3 CuteBitMapism TypeB - Unknown license
  21. DDD Pipe - Unknown license
  22. D3 Egoistism - Unknown license
  23. Gemerald - Unknown license
  24. D3 Superimposism Inline - Unknown license
  25. D3 DigiBitMapism type C - Unknown license
  26. D3 Skullism Katakana Bold - Unknown license
  27. D3 Superstructurism Inline - Unknown license
  28. D3 DigiBitMapism type B - Unknown license
  29. D3 Roadsterism Wide - Unknown license
  30. D3 Spiralism - Unknown license
  31. DUST - Unknown license
  32. Reeperbahn - Unknown license
  33. D3 Petitbitmapism - Unknown license
  34. D3 Petitbitmapism - Unknown license
  35. D3 Digitalism - Unknown license
  36. D3 Skullism Alphabet - Unknown license
  37. D3 Roadsterism Long - Unknown license
  38. D3 LiteBitMapism Selif - Unknown license
  39. Serena by Canada Type, $24.95
    The story of Serena is a unique one among revivals. Serena was neither a metal face nor a film one. In fact it never went anywhere beyond Stefan Schlesinger’s 1940-41 initial sketches (which he called Saranna). A year later, while working with Dick Dooijes on the Rondo typeface, Schlesinger was sent to a concentration camp where he died, along with any material prospects for the gorgeous letters he'd drawn. The only sketches left of Schlesinger’s Saranna work are found in the archives of the Drukkerij Trio (the owner of which was Schlesinger’s brother-in-law). The sketches were done in pencil and ink over pencil on four sheets of paper. And now Hans van Maanen revives Schlesinger’s spirit as closely as the drawings permit, and elaborately expands the work to cover a multitude of codepages and languages. It took more than 65 years for Schlesinger’s drawings to see the light, so van Maanen made sure to bring them to life stylishly and respectfully. Serena embodies the peace and calm rarely ever found in mainstream calligraphy or other genres of display type. With upright elegance and a slight Eastern touch, this typeface expertly bridges the gracefully casual with the deeply spiritual. The light and soft letter forms add a pleasant, breezy element to anything they touch. When used sparingly in titling or display, Serena is like a sigh of desire, rare but quite memorable and very appreciated.
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