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  1. Moris by Katatrad, $29.00
    Moris™ is a family of modern sans serif typeface with simple and condensed proportions. Moris is recommended for publication, screen and Corporate use. This new font family includes nine weights with true italics, numeric tabular function and Opentype features.
  2. Moki by FaceType, $25.00
    The seven ways of Moki. Moki comes in seven different styles: Base, Cut, Dust, Lean, Mono, Soft and Uni. Moki is a display expert – with a wide range of languages covered, the family offers a style for every purpose. You are a SciFi movie director and are looking for an alternative to the inevitable Eurostile? Now you have!
  3. Union City Blue - Unknown license
  4. Tokyo City Pop by IKIIKOWRK, $19.00
    Are you prepared to add a retro energy and the vivacious pop culture of the 1980s to your creative projects? Look no further than Tokyo City Pop, the ideal retro pop font that is ready to give your creative pursuits a fresh and vibrant edge! Tokyo City Pop yells instead than merely speaking. Its text is bold and funky, dancing across the page and vibrating with the energy of a busy city. Each word evokes a burst of vitality, embodying the youthful spirit and inventiveness that characterize urban landscape. This typeface is perfect for an vintage stuff, retro poster layout, magazine design, packaging, food & beverages and also good for quotes, or simply as a stylish text overlay to any background image. What's included? Uppercase & Lowercase Number & Punctuation Multilingual Support Works on PC & Mac
  5. The City Burn by Alien, $40.00
    The City Burn, formerly called "The city burn night after night and we spray-paint the walls", was especially designed for Mad Skills Mag issue#3 Urban Flavour. It needed to be street, and urban, so I made a stencil font. It’s used by Fox5 tv for the rant TV show, the website infected.com, Fried chillies TV, and others!
  6. Big City Vibes by Roland Hüse Design, $25.00
    Big City Vibes is a display font designed for posters and texture or pattern like designs. The font is based on "Quixotic Sans Bold" and features its sliced and adjusted uppercase lettershapes. This font covers Eastern, Central and Western European accented characters and symbols, as well as Rovas Script (Old Hungarian). In place of the lowercase letters there are the uppercase letters shifted a little differently and set under "Contextual Alternate" OpenType feature, when you enable this feature and type all caps, it will alternating between the lowercase and uppercase for a mixed variety of the 2 versions of each letters that are cycling randomly.
  7. MC Robo City by Maulana Creative, $17.00
    Robo City mecha display font. Heavy stroke, fun character with a bit of ligatures. To give you an extra creative work. Robo City mecha display font support multilingual more than 100+ language. This font is good for logo design, Social media, Movie Titles, Books Titles, a short text even a long text letter and good for your secondary text font with script or serif. Make a stunning work with Robo City mecha display font. Cheers, Maulana Creative
  8. Tecna Building City by Descarflex, $30.00
    The Tecn@ BC (Building City) family's design was inspired by the Downtown of a Metropolis City surrounded by buildings and real estate structures. Each uppercase or lowercase character represents a building with a unique design, which when forming a word or in an entire piece of writing, the user would be composing their own city.
  9. River City Sandwriting by River City, $24.98
    I searched all over the internet looking for a realistic sand writing font and came away empty handed. Undaunted by this, I grabbed my business partner, Mary and trekked down to our local river, the Arkansas (pronounced ar-KAN-sas around here). Using sticks, we scratched out the entire alphabet in the sand, including upper & lowercase, and punctuation marks! I photographed the characters, converted them to line art on my computer and used font creating software to turn it into a true type font! This font was designed for adding dates, places and messages to your beach photos that looked as if you wrote it in the sand before you took the picture! It is a decorative font best used in large, headline sizes. To make it appear more realistic, select a darker color from the sand in the photo to use for the type instead of black!
  10. Fun City Life by Epiclinez, $18.00
    Fun City Life is a smooth and bold display font. Its casual style makes it appear wonderfully down-to-earth, readable, and, ultimately, incredibly versatile. Whether you’re using it for crafting, digital designing, posters, movie headlines, or apparel, it’s lovely. So what’s included: Fun City Life in OTF format. Basic Latin A-Z, a-z, numbers, symbols, and punctuations Multi-Languages support: from Afrikaans Albanian Catalan Danish to Dutch English Spanish Swedish Zulu. Accented Characters : ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÑÒÓÔÕÖØŒŠÙÚÛÜŸÝŽàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïñòóôõöøœšùúûüýÿžß Thank you
  11. Wed Dings City by Design23, $35.00
  12. City Boys Soft by Dharma Type, $19.99
    City Boys Soft is a fashionable contrasted sans-serif that can be used in almost any situation. City Boys has basic, natural and neutral letterforms and skeletons for a wide range of usage. The glyphs are somewhat humanist yet they have vertical stress for modern and sophisticated impression. The ratio of the contrast was carefully designed for modern usage –websites, digital, printings and merchandises–. City Boys consists of 7 weights and their matching Italics for a wide range of usages. Farther, City Boys is supporting international Latin languages and basic Cyrillic languages including Basic Latin, Western Europe, Central and South-Eastern Europe. Also CSS covers Mac Roman, Windows1252, Adobe1 to 3. This wide range of international characters expands the capability of your works. City Boys is a normal corner version of this City Boys Soft.
  13. Scary Movie Gallery - Personal use only
  14. SF Movie Poster - Unknown license
  15. Movie Poster Condensed - Unknown license
  16. SF Movie Poster - Unknown license
  17. KR Movie Time - Unknown license
  18. SF Movie Poster - Unknown license
  19. SF Movie Poster - Unknown license
  20. Movie Poster Condensed - Unknown license
  21. Movie Poster Condensed - Unknown license
  22. Movie Poster Condensed - Unknown license
  23. Movie Drama JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The Nov. 26, 1921 issue of “The Moving Picture World” carried an ad for the dramatic film “For Your Daughter’s Sake” (originally tilted “The Common Sin” and produced in 1920). Hand lettered in an Art Nouveau sans serif style, the ad copy inspired Movie Drama JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  24. Silent Movies JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    An ad in the Oct. 27, 1919 issue of the trade magazine “The Moving Picture World” promoted “Princess Virtue” from Bluebird Pictures starring Mae Murray – The Adorable [as noted by the movie studio in the ad]. The Art Nouveau hand lettering emulated the style usually drawn with a round nib pen, but was given a specialized treatment for the ad. It was re-drawn in a more traditional ‘pen nib’ look for digital revival. The end result is Silent Movies JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  25. Movie Usher JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Decorative, Display, Headline, Serif, 1920s, Hand Lettered, Engraved, Incised, Bold, Extra Bold, Retro, Vintage, Nostalgic An ad in the July 27, 1928 issue of The Film Daily for FBO Pictures was an encouragement to all theaters to accept the emergence of 'talking pictures' and "Don't be Panicked by Sound". The headline text was hand lettered in an extra bold serif type face with engraved [incised] lines. The lettering has been redrawn as the digital type face Movie Usher JNL, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  26. Movie Musical JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A lobby card for the 1929 movie musical “Broadway Melody” features the bulk of the film’s title hand lettered in a playful sans serif style. This design is now available as Movie Musical JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  27. Movie Classic JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered title card from the 1935 melodrama “Magnificent Obsession” inspired the digital revival Movie Classic JNL; available in both regular and oblique versions.
  28. Movie Night JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Movie Night JNL was modeled from one of a number of ceramic home movie titling kits on the market that were popular during the 1950s and 1960s. The camera buff would set up the letters against a colored background and photograph clever titles to describe their 8mm home movies of vacations, sightseeing or their darling children (or grandchildren).
  29. Movie Screen JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered opening titles from the 1944 Laurel and Hardy comedy “The Big Noise” served as the inspiration for Movie Screen JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  30. LD Horror Movie by Illustration Ink, $3.00
  31. Movie Matinee JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A 1926 trade ad for the silent comedy “The Nut-Cracker” starring Edward Everett Horton has the film’s title hand lettered in a decorative bold sans serif design complete with highlight lines and accent dots. This festive type face is now available digitally as Movie Matinee JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  32. Movie Arts JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    In the June 18, 1929 issue of “The Film Daily”, the curvy and casual hand lettering found within the ad for the movie “Such Men are Dangerous” belies that this was actually a pre-code drama. Digitally redrawn as Movie Arts JNL, it is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  33. Movie Producer JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The Nov. 13, 1915 and Nov. 27, 1915 issues of Moving Picture World carried ads for Jesse L. Lasky Productions in which the titles of the upcoming films were hand lettered in an elegant Art Nouveau spurred serif style. This stylish alphabet is now available digitally as Movie Producer JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  34. Home Movies JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A set of cling vinyl letters and numbers for titling home movies or slides is the basis for Home Movies JNL. The set was made by the Clingtite Letters Company of Chicago and retailed for $2.95. It was advertised in many photographic publications of the 1950s.
  35. Movie Set JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered title on the poster for the 1929 film comedy “Why Leave Home?” inspired Movie Set JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions. A classic “thick-and-thin” design with early Art Deco influences, this condensed typeface is perfect for any period projects.
  36. Movie House JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Double Feature JNL reworks the classic Huxley Vertical into an elegant trilinear Art Deco display face.
  37. B-Movie Splatter by Die Typonauten, $19.00
  38. The Love Movies by Putracetol, $18.00
    The Love Movies is a quirky love font with 7 different versions of the font, the difference between each version is in the shape of the heart decoration. This font is basically soft and fun, and coupled with heart decorations of various shapes and choices, will make this font suitable for the projects you are working on, especially those themed on love, valentine, children, babies, weddings, etc. In addition, this font is also suitable for invitation cards, greeting cards, logos, branding, posters, crafting, stickers, social media, packaging, headers, merchandise and others. This font is also support multi language.
  39. Movie Nouveau JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A 1920s magazine featuring behind-the-scenes stories about the motion picture industry had its name [“Shadowland”] lettered in an Art Nouveau sans serif style. This has been recreated digitally as Movie Nouveau JNL, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.
  40. Movie Show JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A 1911 movie poster for a film called “How Bella Was Won” from the Edison studios had the name “Edison” hand lettered in a bold, spurred sans serif design. These few letters became the basis for Movie Show JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
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