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  1. Hands on Albrecht by URW Type Foundry, $39.99
    This typeface is based on Albrecht Dürer’s work “Die Underweysung der Messung” (Institutiones Geometricae, Instruction in Measurement). Please note that this font needs special treatment when typesetting text. If you need black text, you need to type just capital letters separated by spaces. If you need coloured text, type both lower case and upper case (with the lower case character first), and then assign a colour to the lowercase letters only.
  2. Belle Story by Creativemedialab, $19.00
    Belle Story is a beauty serif family. This hi-contrast display font Consists of 2 styles Display & Regular and each style has 10 weights from thin to black with fine lines and smooth curves to make this font perfect for luxury, classy, high-end branding, logo, and many more. Belle Story also includes a Variable style as well as multilingual support, numbers, and currency symbols, and dozens of alternates.
  3. Kairos by Monotype, $50.99
    The Kairos™ family from Terrance Weinzierl is that rare form of typeface that successfully melds design distinction and ease of use. While based on 19th century Grecian wood type forms, it performs admirably in a variety of applications, both in print and on screen. Kairos Variables are font files which are featuring two axis and have a preset instance from Thin to Black and Condensed to Extended
  4. Boldoni by Forte Type, $4.90
    Boldoni is like a caricature: it brings with itself exaggerated elements of the modern typefaces, that has as main names Giambattista Bodoni and François-Ambroise Didot. Boldoni takes to the limit its width and serifs, causing a ultra fat type feeling, and its styles causes a monochromatic effect that remember the colors Black, Gray and White. Boldoni is good for titles, initials, drop caps, lettering, posters and vertical writing.
  5. Scootchy by Typogama, $19.00
    Scootchy is a high contrast, narrow typeface destined for use in both large and small point sizes. Blending an industrial and humanist approach, this typeface includes four weights ranging from a slender, regular style to a dark and contrasted Black weight. With an Extended Latin character set and a wide range of Opentype features, Scootchy aims to provide a versatile solution that can be applied to a wide range of layouts.
  6. Bentley Floyd by Differentialtype, $10.00
    Bentley Floyd is a display font family designed to enhance the appearance of any document or presentation you create. This font can also be used for logo fonts, brochures, pamphlets, billboards, book covers, magazine covers, or product promotions. This font will support the appearance of every product promotion that you make. This font consists of 18 styles from thin to black, which will add more options to your mix.
  7. Krazy Kracks NF by Nick's Fonts, $10.00
    This playful offering, suggestive of Cooper Black on some serious drugs, is based on the so-called “California” style of lettering used extensively in travel posters of the 30s to the 50s. This version is based on its interpretation by Carl Holmes in a Walter T. Foster artbook entitled ABC of Lettering. Both versions of this font include the complete Unicode Latin 1252 and Central European 1250 character sets.
  8. Levy by Lithographe, $36.00
    Good for typography, good for close paragraphs, good for titles logo, markers, use with numbers, Capitals and Cases. use Special symbols as design elements. One can be used for others. Good for closed groups. Limbos, good to go with Serif, Sans serif or old english. use it with variety and any design light or heavy. the weight is black, so it wont matter. hope you enjoy the font and use it.
  9. Quiche Flare by Adam Ladd, $25.00
    Quiche Flare is a high-contrast, flared serif typeface featuring foxtail ball terminals, swash capitals, and geometric proportions. With weights ranging from Thin to Black with matching italics, it’s useful for a variety of display applications across products, packaging, labels, invitations, stationery, fashion, etc. The design exhibits both elegance and a touch of whimsy with the foxtail terminals and the flared serifs add more interest, beauty, and movement to the characters.
  10. Molecula by Northeast Type Foundry, $22.99
    Molecula is grotesque sans serif of slightly condensed proportions and humanist-grotesk features. The family features 9 weights from Thin to Black, each of which has an italic. The character set is robust, covering extended latin. All completely equipped with opentype features, alternative glyphs, fractions, lining numbers, small caps, subscript and superscript. Molecula has been designed for advertising, branding, packaging or anywhere a clean and contemporary voice is needed.
  11. Modet by Plau, $30.00
    Modet is a versatile and friendly humanist sans-serif prepared for all typographic tasks. It is quite readable in smaller sizes and shows its character in larger sizes. You can change the face of Modet through its many alternate characters and OpenType features. This versatility makes it a great performer in editorial and branding projects. Modet comes in 10 roman styles, from thin to 'ultra black' and speaks 289 languages.
  12. Scamps by Spark Creative, $39.00
    I designed this font because it didn't exist - it’s based on hand rendered type created for black and white line marker scamps used in the advertising industry. I use it that way and it’s saved me a LOT of hand-rendering time over the years. Of course, Scamps works as an informal marker script in its own right too. I’ll be interested to see what you do with it.
  13. TT Prosto Sans by TypeType, $29.00
    Prosto Sans - this font family for any occasion. You can use these fonts almost everywhere. The modern open grotesque forms and classic font family formula: Thin, Light, Regular, Bold, Black and Italics. Prosto Sans is the assistant to work for any projects. Optimized for the websites, mobile applications, and printing materials. We offer you to have a look at this font’s narrow version, which is called TT Prosto Sans Condensed.
  14. Soul Leo by Otto Maurer, $16.00
    Soul Leo ist a special Version of my font „Soul“ (soul ultra black). For a long Time i want to make a Font like this. Before FL6 that was impossible. I know it is a big File Size for a Font with all the Graphics but i need a Font like this for a LadyProjekt. And so i did it myself. I hope you like it as i do!
  15. Retroguard by Mevstory Studio, $15.00
    Retroguard is a typeface that was inspired by classic movies and frequently makes people nostalgic for the height of cinema. This typeface is distinguished by its strong, dramatic letterforms, which frequently evoke the early 20th-century Art Deco and Art Nouveau movements. Images that enhance boldness and drama, including black-and-white photos, antique movie posters, or pictures of film reels, are frequently used in conjunction with this font.
  16. Souses by Piñata, $8.00
    Souses — original fontfamily, which are made by hand. Universal typefaces formula of 10 fonts: Thin, Light, Regular, Bold, Black and Italics. Souses ideal for use in themes: ecology, village, natural, handmade & toys. Handmade style of the fonts — an advantage that will create loyalty to your products & company. Scope: animation, packaging, logotypes, movie titles, children's products, ecology, cafes, menus, posters, interiors, outdoor advertising. Optimized for the websites, mobile applications and printing materials.
  17. Candycorn Overdose by Fontosaurus, $19.95
    Candycorn Overdose represents how I used to feel on the morning after Halloween, way back when I was young enough to go out begging for candy.
  18. Futhark by Deniart Systems, $10.00
    A font based on the Germanic rune divination system dating back to medieval times NOTE: this font comes with a comprehensive interpretation guide in pdf format.
  19. Nouveau Era JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Nouveau Era JNL was adapted from the title of a hand-lettered advertisement found on the back of a 1920s-1930s piece of vintage sheet music.
  20. Fairplex by Emigre, $49.00
    Zuzana Licko's goal for Fairplex was to create a text face which would achieve legibility by avoiding contrast, especially in the Book weight. As a result of its low contrast, the Fairplex Book weight is somewhat reminiscent of a sans serif, yet the slight serifs preserve the recognition of serif letterforms. When creating the accompanying weights, the challenge was to balance the contrast and stem weight with the serifs. To provide a comprehensive family, Licko wanted the boldest weight to be quite heavy. This meant that the "Black" weight would need more contrast than the Book weight in order to avoid clogging up. But harmonizing the serifs proved difficult. The initial serif treatments she tried didn't stand up to the robust character of the Black weight. Several months passed without much progress, and then one evening she attended a talk by Alastair Johnston on his book "Alphabets to Order," a survey of nineteenth century type specimens. Johnston pointed out that slab serifs (also known as "Egyptians") are really more of a variation on sans serifs than on serif designs. In other words, slab serif type is more akin to sans-serif type with serifs added on than it is to a version of serif type. This sparked the idea that the solution to her serif problem for Fairplex Black might be a slab serif treatment. After all, the Book weight already shared features of sans-serif types. Shortly after this came the idea to angle the serifs. This was suggested by her husband, and was probably conjured up from his years of subconscious assimilation of the S. F. Giants logo while watching baseball, and reinforced by a similar serif treatment in John Downer's recent Council typeface design. The angled serifs added visual interest to the otherwise austere slab serifs. The intermediate weights were then derived by interpolating the Book and Black, with the exception of several characters, such as the "n," which required specially designed features to avoid collisions of serifs, and to yield a pleasing weight balance. A range of weights was interpolated before deciding on the Medium and Bold weights.
  21. FF Meta Variable by FontFont, $344.99
    The FF Meta® design is a sans serif, humanist-style typeface that was designed by Erik Spiekermann for the West German Post Office (Deutsche Bundespost). It was subsequently released in 1991 by Spiekermann's company FontFont The FF Meta family, initially released as a commercial font in 1991, now comprises over sixty fonts. The FF Meta 2 family was released in 1992, the FF Meta Plus family in 1993, and in 1998 a facelift of the complete font family reclassified the FF Meta series and combined them into family-sets named FF Meta Normal, FF Meta Book, FF Meta Medium, FF Meta Bold and FF Meta Black. These are all available in Roman, italic, small caps and italic small caps. Between 1998 and 2005, further light stroke weights and a condensed family were introduced by Tagir Safayev and Olga Chayeva and were named: FF Meta Light and FF Meta Hairline. The last addition to the growing FF Meta font family is FF Meta Serif released by FSI in 2007. FF Meta Variable Roman is a single font file that features two axes: Weight and Width. For your convenience, the Weight and Width axes have preset instances. The Weight axis has a range from Hairline to Black. The Width axis provides a range of condensed values. This Roman (upright) font is provided as an option to customers who do not need Italics, and want to keep file sizes to a minimum. FF Meta Variable Italic is a single font file that features an italic design with two axes: Weight and Width. For your convenience, the Weight and Width axes have preset instances. The Weight axis has a range from Hairline to Black. The Width axis provides a range of condensed values. This Italic font is provided as an option to customers who do not need Roman (uprights), and want to keep file sizes to a minimum. FF Meta Variable Set is a single font file that features three axes: Weight, Width and Italic. For your convenience, the Weight and Width axes have preset instances. The Weight axis has a range from Hairline to Black. The Width axis provides a range of condensed values. The Italic axis is a switch between upright and italic
  22. Nixed by Gatype, $14.00
    Nixed is a cool and daring display font. Add it to your posters, headlines, banners, or anything that requires strong and modern typography.
  23. JH Naskh Expanded by JH Fonts, $120.00
    JH Naskh Expanded font is designed based on Naskh calligraphy; it is typical for book covers including spine, headlines, short text paragraphs, poetry…..
  24. Ultimate Victory by Epiclinez, $18.00
    Ultimate Victory is an authentic handwritten brush typeface. This textured script font is suitable for posters, magazines, apparels, movie headlines, packaging and more.
  25. Tart by Suomi, $35.00
    Headline font with extremely tight kerning with more than 1600 kerning pairs. Also with some discretionary ligatures and lining figures. That’s Tart. Sweet.
  26. Ript Cure by insigne, $19.99
    RiptCure is a futuristic, but usable typeface for everything from logotypes to magazine headlines. Several weights are included, including an interesting Ultra Light.
  27. Bangke by Typefactory, $14.00
    Bangke is a textured brush font with rough and casual letters. It’s great for logos, branding, print projects and any attention drawing headline.
  28. Damasquine by DePlictis Types, $31.00
    Damasquine works well for headlines and titles mostly, could be a sharp Art Deco reinterpreted typeface with a touch of archaic lettering inspiration.
  29. Nilus MF by Masterfont, $59.00
    Beautiful curved shapes of this serif font family make it a high legible and distinctive companion for setting texts as well as headlines.
  30. HWDP by Borutta Group, $10.00
    HWDP is heavy letterpress type. HWDP has two style: bold and bold italic. This type looks great in headlines and longer text. CHEERS!
  31. Schoko by Hubert Jocham Type, $29.90
    Schoko is a brush script headline typeface. It is elegant and still clear and self-confident. Ideal for food packaging and product branding.
  32. PL Brazilia by Monotype, $29.99
    PL Brazilia from Albert Boton is an elegant extended sans serif face in two weights. Usable in headlines on books, journals and posters.
  33. Kerb by Lebbad Design, $24.95
    Kerb is a contemporary sans serif font created with wide letterforms and subtle bowed vertical strokes. Fantastic font for logotype and headline use.
  34. Hallandale JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Hallandale JNL is versatile enough to be a headline font as well as a text font, without a loss of style or integrity.
  35. Morning Violetta by Fortunes Co, $19.00
    Morning Violetta is modern contemporary display sans, and well suited for magazines, brochures, logos, headline or quotes, stand alone display, and short paragraphs.
  36. Daily Tabloid JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Daily Tabloid JNL was redrawn from a set of wood type that was popularly used for newspaper headlines, posters, broadsides and the like.
  37. Magnold by Hikhcreative, $19.00
    Magnold is a modern bold and elegant serif font. Magnold is well-suited for advertising, branding, logotypes, packaging, titles, headlines and editorial design.
  38. Blackwood by Alan Meeks, $40.00
    Blackwood is a sans serif headline face with a woodgrain effect. Based loosely on Grotesk, it has strong, solid forms with distinctive style.
  39. Woodlawn JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Woodlawn JNL is based on an open face wood type. A bold outline sans, this design is excellent for headline and titling applications.
  40. Ellen by Lebbad Design, $29.95
    Ellen is a charming elegant serif face. Great for headline display and text use. Many alternates and ligatures are included with this font.
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