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  1. Bodoni Classic Inline by Wiescher Design, $49.00
    Bodoni Classic Inline is a very elaborate extension of my Bodoni Classic family. The font has 5 different swashes for each capital letter, diverse swashes for lowercase letters and a full set of ligatures, oldstyle and normal numerals, all together 669 glyphs. This Inline font is good for all kind of official looking documents and of course goes together well with my forever growing Bodoni Classic family. Your Bodonian type-designer Gert Wiescher
  2. HU Discopangpang KR by Heummdesign, $25.00
    "Disco Pang Pang" is the Korean name for Tagada rides. It is a characteristic typeface that is good to use when you want to make use of a unique and bouncy feeling. Light and Extrabold are made with the thickness of normal typefaces, but Left and Right have strange shapes with stroke thicknesses that are biased to one side. Its unique shape can make a strong impression on people. This font contains Korean.
  3. Minik by Ahmet Altun, $16.00
    Minik Font Family comes in 2 weights; Regular and Bold. It is completely hand-drawn. While the capital letters have normal sizes, the lowercase letters are smaller than the common form in the vertical axis to have a cute view. The Minik Font Family has a few ornaments and stylistic alternates. With this font family, you can create eye-pleasing and nice works such as posters, printings, t-shirts, adds, magazines etc.
  4. Chairdrobe by XTOPH, $25.00
    Chairdrobe is minimalistic typeface with a contemporary, urban style. It feels pure, raw and a bit dirty. You can use it as display type as well as in longer text. Try to space it up. It looks super tight with a lot of spacing! Chairdrobe is a sans-serif, condensed typeface. Available in 3 different variations – Normal, Rounded and Grunge. It features upper and lowercase letters and up to 7 Weights and Italics.
  5. Otoiwo Grotesk by Pepper Type, $39.00
    Otoiwo Grotesk is an extremely versatile sans-serif typeface with a closed aperture. It features whopping 126 styles over 7 widths, each containing 9 weights with corresponding italics. The mood of the family ranges from fairy neutral in Normal and Condensed widths to very flavorful Compressed and Ultra Wide. Rich language support, which includes Cyrillic and spans 131 language ovarall, makes Otoiwo Grotesk a worthy choice for brands that strive to reach international audience.
  6. Fab Figures by Letterwerk, $10.00
    Fab Figures is a numbers-only font. This high contrast display font family with curly terminals is a great choice for infographics and posters. The entire font family consists of 10 styles: 2 styles for big usage, 2 styles for normal usage, 2 styles for small usage and 3 patterned styles (fitting to the big styles). Character Set: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 | % # • ~ { $ £ € } . , : ; + - = ÷ / ° * ' ’ (Arrows) (No-Symbol) (Nr-Symbol)
  7. Olimpos by Gatype, $8.00
    Olimpos is a Display sans font that is absolutely perfect for editorial headlines. Her large, bold and slender figure is perfect for posters, t-shirts, and magazine covers. Reserved for capital letters only, this calm and bold typeface is a content creator's best friend. font files Uppercase, Numbers, Punctuation & Symbols. Diacritic for Multilingual Support This Olimpos is a modern sans-serif font that includes 4 weights of the normal style and the Italic style.
  8. Troia by Ahmet Altun, $10.00
    Troia Font Family comes in three weights; normal and italic. In addition, with rounded corners, each weight has its own smoother version. Thanks to its large letters and added spaces between the letters, this font can be used to get perfect results and create great works such as web typography, banners, logos, texts, t-shirts and printings, and also presentations. Troia's eye-pleasing and nice-looking style makes writing much more pleasant.
  9. Caldense by Tiago Cândido, $20.00
    The typeface was baptized as "Caldense" in order to honor the city of Caldas da Rainha, a small city in Portugal, the typography's birth place. It has three weights, Regular, Demi Bold and Bold and it is a sans serif and grotesque. Each character was based on a grid and was built in modules, having round edges and straight finishes. The font can be used in titles and normal text while being easy to read.
  10. Quebra Ex Condensed by Vanarchiv, $55.00
    Quebra Ex Cn (Extra Condensed) is an extend display sans-serif font family, available with four widths (Extra Condensed, Condensed, Normal and Expanded) and ten weights, italics versions are available. The main strokes contain small breaks simulating modulated variations on the letterforms, these details are more present on large body sizes. All font versions contain Latin and Cyrillic encoding characters and also ligatures, case-sensitive forms, fractions, oldstyle and finally tabular figures.
  11. Wolfie Font Family by Oui Studio, $17.00
    Hello friends! The 'Wolfie' font family is coming; a dynamic and new vintage feel. It's perfect for branding, logo, packaging, header, title, etc. Wolfie is great if you pair it with an 80s illustration, it will make the design even more dope. Wolfie are available in 3 Widths (Condensed - Ultra Condensed - Normal) with matches 5 weights (Light - Semi Light - Regular - SemiBold - Bold) total 30 fonts and support for 75+ language. Happy creating :)
  12. Asterlight by NREY, $19.00
    Hi, friends! Introducing new typeface - Asterlight. It is a new display font with 2 styles and cool characters. Asterlight has multilingual support includes cyrillic. Many ligatures make your typography most variable. It works well with normal size text and for large displays or short words. You may combine uppercase and smallcase in the text body, as alternates symbols. The Asterlight typeface is suitable for : product packaging, labeling, logo, classic shop, ethnic shop, titles, etc
  13. FS Siena by Fontsmith, $80.00
    Eclectic FS Siena is a typeface with history, and not just in the sense of having its origins in classical Roman lettering. Fontsmith founder Jason Smith first committed it to tracing paper while still at college, instinctively redrawing letterforms based on Hermann Zapf’s Optima according to ‘what felt right’. When Krista Radoeva took up the challenge to edit and extend the typeface, she and Jason were determined to preserve its subtly nonconformist and eclectic spirit. Like a great dish, there are individual components throughout the character set that all add flavour, and need to be balanced in order to work together. The smooth connection of the ‘h’ ‘m’ ‘n’ and ‘r’ contrasts with the corners of the ‘b’ and ‘p’. The instantly recognisable double-storey ‘a’ – the starting point of the design – contrasts with the single-storey ‘g’ and the more cursive ‘y’. And only certain characters – ‘k’, ‘w’, ‘v’ and ‘x’ in the lowercase and ‘K’, ‘V’, ‘W’, ‘X’ and ‘Y’ in the caps – have curved strokes. Transitional FS Siena is a contrasted sans-serif typeface, blending classical elegance and modern simplicity. Its construction and proportions are descended from classical broad-nib calligraphy and humanist typefaces, with a high contrast between the thick and thin strokes. The angle of the contrast, though, is vertical, more in the character of pointed-nib calligraphy and modernist typefaces. This vertical stress helps to give FS Siena a strong, cultured presence on the page. Idiosyncratic italics The italics for FS Siena were developed by Krista to complement the roman upper and lower-case alphabets first drawn by Jason. Many of the letterforms are built differently to their roman counterparts: there’s a single-tier ‘a’, a looped ‘k’ and connections more towards the middle of stems, such as in the ‘m’, ‘n’ and ‘u’. These distinctions, along with generally much narrower forms than the roman, give the italics extra emphasis within body copy, where the two are side-by-side. In editorial, especially, the combination can be powerful. To cap it all… In his original draft of the typeface, Jason found inspiration in Roman square capitals of the kind most famously found on Trajan’s Column in Rome. In keeping with those ancient inscriptions, he intended the capitals of FS Siena to also work in all-upper-case text, in logotypes for luxury consumer brands and property developments, for example. A little added space between the upper-case letters lets the capitals maintain their poise in a caps-only setting, while still allowing them to work alongside the lower-case letterforms. The caps-only setting also triggers a feature called case punctuation, which adapts hyphens, brackets and other punctuation to complement the all-caps text.
  14. Linotype Mega by Linotype, $29.00
    Linotype Mega is part of the Take Type Library, chosen from the entries of the Linotype-sponsored International Digital Type Design Contests of 1994 and 1997. The fun schrift of German designer Till F. Teenck is available in three weights whose names are word plays in themselves. Mega in (which we hope the font will be) contains relatively light, somewhat irregularly-drawn characters which look as though they were printed by hand and the characters are set rather far apart from each other. This weight is good for short and middle length texts in point sizes of 10 and larger. Mega normal is anything but. The characters are the outline forms of Mega in and their larger width reduces the distance between them. This weight is generally a headline font. Mega out is a very heavy weight and is the filled-in version of Mega normal. The characters flow into each other and look almost like silhouettes. The reduced legibility makes this font suitable exclusively for headlines in larger point sizes.
  15. 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.
  16. CA Yoshiro by Cape Arcona Type Foundry, $30.00
    Tomorrow’s Typeface Today Are you ready to take your science fiction, action, military films, shows or video games to the next level? Our family of fonts brings a touch of nostalgia and a dash of modernity to your titles and typography. The CA YOSHIRO “Wide” style bears a striking resemblance to the iconic Eurostile typefaces of the 1960s. It has an immediate sense of familiarity. But what sets it apart is its contemporary, fresh sci-fi design. It’s the perfect blend of classic and cutting-edge, delivering an unprecedented, unconsumed style that promises to captivate audiences like never before. The CA YOSHIRO “Normal” style can also be used for a variety of other projects that require a normal width and just need to show a light technical touch without immediately suggesting a sci-fi reference. In addition, CA Yoshiro has subtle similarities to the monospace fonts commonly used on computer displays and screens. These fonts are the foundation of written programming code and sequences, lending a distinctive character to the digital realm.
  17. Jingle Doodles by Wiescher Design, $9.99
    Jingle Doodles is for those Christmas occasions, and for those alone! I sell them very cheap because it's Christmas time. Your red-nose-reindeer-type-designer Gert Wiescher Ho-Ho-Ho!
  18. TOMO Pillo by TOMO Fonts, $15.00
    TOMO Pillo! a blocky style fat face with attitude. Bold, heavy and fun! all at the same time! You will only need this font to make your designs stand out fresh!
  19. Plenti by MADType, $19.00
    Plenti is the fat font to add to your visual communication toolbox. Friendly, square, and quirky all at the same time. It is itching to get used on posters and websites.
  20. Holiday Penguins by Deniart Systems, $24.00
    It's always holiday time with this frolicking bunch of penguins. Whether celebrating the end of year holidays or prancing around on vacation, these 52 Holiday Penguins are always having a blast.
  21. Greatest Hits JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Greatest Hits JNL is Jeff Levine's serif version of his 50s style font, Doowop JNL... complete with the same fun look and "good-time-rock-and-roll" feeling as the original!
  22. Hajdamaka by AndrijType, $30.00
    This script has almost no historic roots. It is named after hajdamakas, Ukrainian guerilla fighters from past times. It is lively and somehow saucily forms the vibrant lines of a text.
  23. Rockwell WGL by Monotype, $92.99
    Rockwell font appeared with Monotype Design Studio in 1934, a time which saw the return to popularity of slab serif fonts. Rockwell's strong and harmonious characters make this font particularly flexible.
  24. Timelord by Comicraft, $19.00
    VWORP! VWORP! This font will travel through the four dimensions of time and space to materialise on your hard drive. TIMELORD was created for Telos publishing's line of DOCTOR WHO novellas.
  25. Ding by RodrigoTypo, $25.00
    An entertaining typography, dense but at the same time very gestural. "Ding" is a sans font that contains different alternatives of letters, a Cyrillic alphabet and Dingbat, special for children's titles.
  26. Grande Parade JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Grande Parade JNL is a decorative version of Winnetka JNL, which was based on antique wood type. The look and feel of this design combines old-time typography and festive charm.
  27. Arupala Grotesk by Jetsmax Studio, $15.00
    Arupala Grotesk is a Grotesk font this versatile typeface will grab readers’ Attention. This font was inspired by a character named H. Aroepala. This font is suitable for both formal and informal events and is also suitable for various types of print and digital media.
  28. Kingdrops by Letterhend, $19.00
    Kingdrops is a cool script typeface. This font perfectly made to be applied especially in logo, and the other various formal forms such as invitations, labels, logos, magazines, books, greeting / wedding cards, packaging, fashion, make up, stationery, novels, labels or any type of advertising purpose.
  29. Athellia Script by Lindstrom Design, $19.00
    An upright condensed formal script. Athellia is right at home on packaging, labels, Menus, Headlines, invitations, and title design. NOTE: MyFonts does not display contextual alternates so many of the ‘o’ combinations do not display correctly here but do with open type alternates activated.
  30. ENDEMIC Serif by WAP Type, $20.00
    "Endemic" font is perfect for ethnic movie or game titles. or for titles, cartoon-themed writing, because this font is in the serif category but not too stiff or formal. Features: Uppercase, Lowercase Punctuation & Number, Support in Mac and Windows OS Multilingual Support ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝ
  31. Hinelka by Awan Senja, $14.00
    Introducing our newest cute serif typeface, Hinelka Unique Script. This font perfectly made to be in poster funny, and the other various formal forms such as invitations, labels, logos, magazines, books, packaging, fashion, make up, stationery, novels, labels or any type of advertising purpose.
  32. P22 Bastyan by IHOF, $39.95
    P22 Bastyan is a hybrid Italic Blackletter. This typeface resembles Carolingian miniscule scripts and has a timelessness that evokes formality but defies specific historical categorization. It is available in an optional Opentype Pro version with CE language support, multiple styles of figures, ornaments, and ligatures.
  33. Florentine Script II by Monotype, $29.99
    Based on script handwriting and engraving used in formal announcements and invitations, the Florentine Script font lends itself to typesetting in which an elegant mood is desired. Florentine Script, Citadel, Flemish Script, and Old Fashion Script have similar lowercase letters but unique flourished capitals.
  34. XKnightMares by Ingrimayne Type, $6.00
    There are three XKnightMares fonts. Each has rather formal chess fonts. The key layout is a bit complicated; see the key guide for detailed information on how to position pieces correctly. In addition to making chess boards, some of the pieces make interesting decorations.
  35. Elicit Script Variable by Monotype, $156.99
    Elicit Script Variable Set is a single font file that features two axes: Weight and Contrast. Each axis has preset instances The Weight axis has instances from Extra Light to Bold. The Contrast axis has instances from Casual (low contrast) to Formal (high contrast).
  36. Palace Script by Monotype, $29.99
    Palace Script is a formal English script from the 1920s. This typeface, inspired by centuries-old copperplate engravings, could add the perfect touch to any number of holiday cards. You could also make cute little names tags for all of your presents with Palace Script.
  37. Forelle Pro by RMU, $35.00
    The basic forms stem from Erich Mollowitz' version which he cut for Trennert in 1936. These fonts were completely redrawn, extended with East European letterforms and some OpenType features. They are well suited for more formal invitations, headlines and subtitles, for diplomas and certificates.
  38. Kalyant by Sign Studio, $9.00
    Kalyant prioritizes the element of readability in every use. A very formal and elegant form will be very good for offices. Character sets that support multiple languages will be very useful for communication documents between countries. Kalyant will add other styles in the next update.
  39. Jojo by Canada Type, $24.95
    A little more flower and a little less power, please. Fun, friendly, fashionable, and feminine to a fault, Jojo takes display typography to a whole new level, where eyes can’t help but appreciate the day and the design at hand. It takes a graphic designer very little imagination to see these letters on posters, book covers, clothes, and craft paraphernalia. Or how about a sign over a bakery? A music sleeve? A romantic comedy titling? Cosmetics products? Pretty much anywhere! Jojo takes its name from a Beatles song about getting back to where we once belonged. It also takes most of its shapes from vintage photo-setting days, when an art nouveau typeface called Spring, by B. Jacquet, was putting happy times back where they belonged, which was everywhere. The original photo-setting face came in just 26 letters and 10 numerals. This digital retooling optimizes the original forms and expands on them, for a full character set of over 430 glyphs, including ligatures and stylistic alternates, and support for the majority of Latin languages.
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