Tag: handletter
Flavors Pro Font
Does your blog taste bland? Is you website cooked up from the same old recipe? Ladies and gentlemen, we have the missing ingredient! With Flavors Pro you’ll get the zest and zing not found in those boring vanilla fonts. The
Frijoles Family Font
What’s on your font menu tonight? The same old boring beans? Then why not try Frijoles! Its a fresh new family that’s anything but re-fried. And it’s sure to be a hit when you’re cooking up something that needs to
Filmotype Athens Font
Introduced by Filmotype in 1955, Filmotype Athens was among Filmotype’s first condensed handlettered sho-card brush script faces for narrow applications where economy and style were paramount to the design while retaining legibility and easy readability. Filmotype Athens developed from the
Brisa Font
The dynamic design duo of Koziupa and Paul strike again. This time they cover the space from light nonchalance to eerie darkness, and everything in between. Quicker than lightning and just as poignant, Brisa shows unprecedented determination, presence of spirit,
Trade Winds Pro Font
Ahoy, matey! Prepare to set sail on the high seas! Let Tradewinds guide you to exotic ports of call where your next adventure begins. This breezy font by Squid and Neapolian will blow you away! The Pro version has been
Paris Font
Paris is an avant-gardist handwritten font designed in Paris. It’s an all-caps thin font, with extended glyphs for many languages. But the little difference of Paris from other handwriting typefaces is the Art Deco feeling that brings it a retro
Superhero Font
Superhero™ was developed to simulate the handwritten comic book text found in old Marvel comics. The rough versions were developed to allow for text set at larger point sizes, for example on the cover of a comic book, or on
Filmotype Hudson Font
Released by Filmotype in 1955, Filmotype Hudson was among Filmotype’s most popular upright informal style brush scripts inspired by sign painter classic brush script styles popular in the 1950s in periodical advertisements for automotive dealerships, grocery stores and spectaculars to
Dead Zone Font
This family was inspired from type found on a horror movie poster of the 1950s. FULL CHARACTER SET Each font in the Dead Zone™ family has a full character set of 232+ letterforms, with all characters designed in the style
Baron Font
After Baronessa – funny but not crazy cartoon style font, Baron is an other handmade typeface, warm and friendly but not excessively childish. If Baronessa is a little feminine, Baron is neutral and it’s funny and serious at the same
Besley Hand Font
A funny childish handwritten font, with a spirit. This typeface can tell fairy tales. Besley Hand is a slab serif that goes well with the sans serif Trango. Published by Juraj ChrastinaDownload Besley Hand
Trango Font
A funny childish handwritten font, with a spirit. This typeface can tell fairy tales. Trango is a sans serif that goes well with the slab serif Besley Hand. Published by Juraj ChrastinaDownload Trango
Filmotype Homer Font
Introduced by Filmotype in the early to mid-1950s, Filmotype Homer was created in response to customer demand for a wider brush script expanding on Filmotype’s popular sign painter sho-card lettering styles used in the late 1940s through the 1950s. With
Mixed Breed Font
ALTERNATE CHARACTER SET While there are no lowercase characters in the Mixed Breed™ fonts, there are alternate versions of the uppercase characters in the lowercase character slots. Not only are the character shapes slightly different, but they are also have
Malbeck Font
Malbeck is a script which is both as elegant as it is unique. Very playful typographic treatments can be produced using the large selection of alternate characters. This 2007 version of Malbeck is now available in OpenType format to expand
Monte Cristo Font
Monte Cristo picks up where Libertine left off, then makes a great leap forward to attain its luxuriously seductive personality. With a minimum of 4 variations on the uppercase letters, and up to 38 variations on the lowercase, the application
Filmotype Melody Family Font
Originally released in the late 1950s, Filmotype expanded it’s Free Style typeface category with the introduction of Melody, an offbeat Googie era doo-wop typeface which was most frequently associated with music and entertainment lettering styles throughout the last 1950s and