Category: Handwriting
Escalope Font
Escalope is a hand-drawn layered font with a crazy & unique personality: the low midline, the false-All Caps style, all the fun & playful Stylistic Sets will give your projects a new and fresh look! There are many Open-Type features
American Scribe Font
American Scribe simulates the penmanship of Timothy Matlack, generally agreed to be the scribe of the famous, engrossed copy of the Declaration of Independence (written, of course, by Thomas Jefferson). Matlack—whose clear, compact script is perhaps the most familiar handwriting
Oak Street Font
Oak Street has the look of a note written with a felt-tip pen gone blunt from overuse. Distinctively plump and eye-catching, its letters lean slightly to the left. OpenType features include true small caps, lots o’ ligatures, and Central/Eastern European
Schooner Script Font
Schooner Script replicates the handwriting of Samuel Clarke, pastor of a church in Princeton, Massachusetts, in a letter to his congregation dated 18 September 1825—a plea for donations to help some families who lost their belongings in an accident at
Garlic Embrace Font
Ever wanted to be embraced by garlic? Probably not! But this font could surely embrace your designs that need an authentic brush look! Comes with 7 contextual alternates that automatically cycles as you type! Also, Garlic Embrace is FULL of
Barack Pro Font
Barack Pro is the enhanced Version of Ekke Wolf’s typeface Barack. It still has got its casual and hand-drawn look and is best for designing insubordinate, cheeky campaigns. Barack Pro is set up as multi-layer fonts for multi-color lettering and
Houston Pen Font
Houston Pen replicates the handwriting of Sam Houston, perhaps the most famous Texan, in letters dating from the 1830s to the late-1850s. Much like the man himself, Houston’s handwriting stood fairly large on the page and had a distinctive flourish
Remsen Script Font
The 1765 Stamp Act ignited in American colonists a simmering distrust of the distant British Parliament, whose oppressive trade duties they deemed unfair assaults on their rights as English subjects. Before long, of course, this little dustup spawned The Boston
Antiquarian Scribe Font
Antiquarian Scribe is modeled after the neat, oblique hand-lettering displayed on an original page of “Atlas Historique, ou Nouvelle Introduction a L’Histoire”—a world atlas published by Henri Abraham Chatelain between 1705 and 1732 in Amsterdam—that I picked up at an
Ordinary Guy Font
Just another ordinary brush font? No! There is more to the picture than meets the eye! Ordinary Guy has 8 different versions of each letter! Just like magic, they cycle as you type! Included is multiple language support! Published by
Lamar Pen Font
Lamar Pen gets its name from Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar, whose penmanship it’s modeled after. Lamar, born in Georgia in 1798, migrated in 1835 to Texas, where he supported—and the following year fought for—the then-Mexican province’s independence. He stuck around, too,
The Valleys Script Font
The Valleys Script is an elegant and ornate script design published by Zerowork Studio. Published by Zerowork StudioDownload The Valleys Script
Pigment Font
Crayon font gone crazy! 8 different versions of each letter, and they cycle as you type! Great variation, and enough to confuse people about this being a font or real crayon writing! And of course, the font has got a
Breakfast Font
This is close to insane! My Breakfast font has got 8 (yes EIGHT!) different versions using contextual alternates! They cycle nice and easy AS you type! How cool is that?! Of course, the font is also loaded with diacritics! Published
Forest Two Font
Forest Two is an organic, distressed and display style font design. Published by RodrigoTypoDownload Forest Two
Cedar Street Font
Cedar Street simulates the look of a ballpoint pen on a porous notepad. I find it interesting especially for the little bulbous ends of the strokes where the pen soaked into the paper. Cedar Street has a single, medium weight
Old Man Eloquent Font
Old Man Eloquent simulates the handwriting of John Quincy Adams, the second President of The United States, in pages of his famous diary, circa 1810. Adams kept his diary from 1779, when he was a boy, until 1848, the year