Grunge is not dead! Neither is punk!
The proof is the Overbeat font! It has got both grunge and punk in the one and same. The letters are grungy, and punked up with a sort of halftone slime effect. It's hard, it's tough and perhaps even scary!
Play around with the font and you'll quickly notice the variety of the font. Each lowercase letter has 4 different versions and there is ligature substitution for most common uppercase double letters!
Download Klapt Font Family From SevenType
Klapt is a geometric sans serif family that is soft on the outside and sharp on the inside.
This family of four weights, includes an extended character set supporting most Latin languages even Vietnamese!
Klapt, which can be bold or very elegant, is well suited for designs ranging from branding and corporate identity to editorial design and also web design.
It is great for display purposes especially for headlines, posters, magazines, book covers, logos... you name it!
Feel free to share your designs using Klapt or just get in touch via email to hi@seventype.com.
Download Shaley Font Family From Dmitrii Chirkov
This font is a new Calligraphic Script with a floating baseline, ligatures and multilingual support.
Shaley Script will look beautiful on holiday invitations, wedding invites and stationery, logos, and more.
Test it out below to see how it could look for your next project!
Includes:
Uppercase and lowercase
Numbers and punctuation
Foreign language support
Ligatures
Check out my blog:
https://www.instagram.com/zloillev
pinterest.com/dmitriychirkov7
Enjoy!
Download Oriole Bird Font Family From Tanincreate
September 27, 2019
alternates
,
calligraphic
,
calligraphic fonts
,
calligraphic style
,
calligraphy
,
calligraphy font
Oriole Bird is a modern calligraphy script to bring an elegance to your designs - branding projects, social media, wedding invitation, greeting cards, packaging, logo design, news, titling, headlines, posters, signboards and more.
It features multi language support (for most of Western Europe), contains glyphs with some OpenType features - standard ligatures, alternates for uppercase (beginning swashes) and lowercase letters (beginning and ending swashes).
Download College Tantrum Font Family From David Engelby Foundry
College Tantrum is my take on the college font tradition – an edgy, hard working attitude and a proud statement. The font comes with both lower case and upper case letters – plus a bundle of ligatures, alternate glyph sets and college sport dingbats. It’s also versatile as a poster font, for websites and for infographics. Play ball!
Download Nouveau Vaudeville Font Family From Jeff Levine
Download Amica Pro Font Family From Schizotype
Welcome Amica Pro, a workhorse sans designed to give your branding a friendly, approachable look. What is it that makes a typeface friendly? Schizotype undertook extensive research* in this and the results are in! To cut a long story short, friendliness in sans serif fonts can be summed up in two words – short and fat. Basically, think Danny DeVito in letter form. The shortness in Amica Pro is achieved (somewhat counterintuitively) by pushing up the x-height. This, coupled with short ascenders and descenders, gives the text a squat appearance. For the fatness, that's easy in the bolder weights, but how to carry this through to the lights? Here, the fatness equates to roundness, so the letterforms, even if the stroke weight is light, have a rotund appearance from the wideness and roundness of the circular glyphs.
When thinking about friendliness, we think about inclusiveness. To this end, Amica Pro supports a super wide range of latin-based languages, as it uses Underware's Latin Plus character set, as well as extra support for Vietnamese.
Amica Pro is best used for branding, logos, infographics etc. It will give your UI a friendlier feel, but that doesn't mean it's not serious. There are many useful typographic features, including alternates, numerous figure styles, automatic fractions and case-sensitive forms. The italics are carefully optically corrected "sloped romans" and as such they are the same width as their upright equivalent, so changing your copy to italics will not mess around with the spacing.
*I looked at a few fonts and drew some lazy conclusions.
Subscribe to:
Posts
(
Atom
)