Inspired by sign painters of the past, Fancier Script is a bold and highly customizable script face. With all the OpenType features turned on, watch the letters instantly customize as you type.
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified October 19, 2015
Blackletter fonts are timelessly beautiful and still very popular. At some point, it seems that every type designer discovers the beauty of these forms and the great pleasure in creating blackletter characters. Like also...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 17, 2024
Jason Uncial, a unicase font, was created by Dutch designer Coen Hofmann. Uncial hand writing began to spread in Europe at the time of the late Roman Empire (200 A.D.). It influenced both the...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
Filmotype Rose was among the company’s earliest original serif styles introduced by Filmotype in the early-to-mid 1950s. This wonderful wide serif style was inspired by the art deco movement of the 1930s. Filmotype Rose...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 17, 2024
Coen Hofmann has rediscovered Blackletter font design and enriches URW’s FontForum with two new and very beautiful fonts: Caxtonian Black and Holland Gothic. Caxtonian Black is a remarkable classical Fraktur inspriced inspired from the...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
Filmotype Havana was among the company’s earliest connecting brush-lettered casuals and was introduced by Filmotype in 1955 as a smoother, condensed weight of its popular cousin Horizon. Filmotype Havana was developed from the original...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
HoneyBee is an all-caps display face in a delightfully hand-lettered style for irresistibly sweet layouts on food packaging, fantasy games, or children’s products. This versatile font includes three sets of full-size capitals, two sets...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
This family of decorated initial letters was inspired from a French catalogue dedicated to engravers, embroiders and jewelers. unfortunately, we don’t know the name of the illustrator, no more than the publisher, because a...