3,678 search results (0.045 seconds)
  1. Bonzai - Unknown license
  2. Blades - Unknown license
  3. REOXY - Unknown license
  4. QUAKE - Unknown license
  5. Waziri - Unknown license
  6. DecoDividers - Unknown license
  7. Metallica - Unknown license
  8. FStein - Unknown license
  9. Origin - Unknown license
  10. Pegasus - Unknown license
  11. Fredfont - Unknown license
  12. Ephotical - Unknown license
  13. Assimilate - Unknown license
  14. MANIC - Unknown license
  15. URLYbird - Unknown license
  16. Baglady - Unknown license
  17. Minnie - Unknown license
  18. YellowSubmarine - Unknown license
  19. Mickey - Unknown license
  20. Orpheus by Scriptorium, $18.00
    In response to many requests for Morpheus, an idea came to us. Why not make a font that looked a bit like Morpheus, but which had more attractive, more consistent character forms, was rendered cleanly and properly spaced and kerned? We took a look at Morpheus and decided to redo the concept from the ground up, replacing some of the amateurish characters, adding a bit of a Celtic look and feel, developing a set of alternate characters and making sure that the design elements were consistent from letter to letter. The result is Orpheus, a font which has the general look and feel of Morpheus, but is a much more complete and fully realized design. In addition, Orpheus is a fully developed font set, with not only regular and bold versions, but with a special customized italic style and a really neat looking heavy weight rough-outlined variant.
  21. Carlton by ITC, $29.99
    Carlton is based on a typeface designed by Prof. F. H. Ehmcke. In 1908, Ehmcke released his Ehmcke-Antiqua design through the Flinsch typefoundry in Germany. Ehmcke-Antiqua was later distributed by the Bauer typefoundry in Frankfurt am Main. The Caslon Letter Foundry in England discovered the design and released their own typeface based upon the model, which they named Carlton. Carlton entered the Stephenson Blake program after they acquired the Caslon Letter Foundry in the late 1930s. As hot and cold metal typesetting became outdated technologies, Carlton and Ehmcke-Antiqua fell out of general use. In the 1990s, Letraset revived this classic design, distributing it under its English name, Carlton. Carlton's clean and generous capitals, as well as its understated yet detailed lower case, have found popularity again in recent years. The elegance of Carlton is best used for displays with large letter and word spacing. Carlton shows all of the hallmarks of a delicate serif typeface design; its forms capture a distinct moment that was common within Central European type design during the first third of the 20th Century. Carlton is similar to several other expressive typefaces from the early 1900s, including Bernhard Modern, Koch Antiqua, Locarno, and Nicolas Cochin."
  22. Gliners by Dumadi, $25.00
    Gliners is a simple stylized font that overlies the center of the glyphs bar in the font. Glyphs font doesn’t have too many, it only offers Uppercase and Multilingual, but don’t worry because its simple shape will make your project look interesting. The Gliners font is very suitable for use as movie titles, movie title poster covers like the review image I shared above. how? are you interested in trying it? Thank You, stay the center of attention and classy!
  23. Chopper by Canada Type, $24.95
    In 1972, VGC released two typefaces by designer friends Dick Jensen and Harry Villhardt. Jensen’s was called Serpentine, and Villhardt’s was called Venture. Even though both faces had the same elements and a somewhat similar construct, one of them became very popular and chased the other away from the spotlight. Serpentine went on to become the James Bond font, the Pepsi and every other soda pop font, the everything font, all the way through the glories of digital lala-land where it was hacked, imitated and overused by hundreds of designers. But the only advantage it really had over Venture was being a 4-style family, including the bold italic that made it all the rage, as opposed to Venture’s lone upright style. One must wonder how differently things would have played if a Venture Italic was around back then. Chopper is Canada Type’s revival of Venture, that underdog of 1972. This time around it comes with a roman, an italic, and corresponding biform styles to make it a much more attractive and refreshing alternative to Serpentine. Chopper comes in all popular formats, boasts extended language support, and contains a ton of alternate characters sprinkled throughout the character map.
  24. Saginaw - Unknown license
  25. Dyer - Unknown license
  26. Moonchild - Unknown license
  27. Saginaw - Unknown license
  28. heresy - Unknown license
  29. acid_reflux - Unknown license
  30. 79 - Unknown license
  31. Jessica - Unknown license
  32. Catharsis Bedouin - Unknown license
  33. Cowpoke BI - Unknown license
  34. Jailbird - Unknown license
  35. Christa - Unknown license
  36. jaggernaut - Personal use only
  37. Independence - Unknown license
  38. Sevenet 7 - Unknown license
  39. twig - Unknown license
  40. Almagro - Unknown license
Looking for more fonts? Check out our New, Sans, Script, Handwriting fonts or Categories
abstract fontscontact usprivacy policyweb font generator
Processing