font_category: decorative

066 Army

066 Army font

066 Army is an experimental font which makes each letter unique. Specially designed for short forms. It will be perfect wherever you need to emphasize a strong message: on billboards, posters, T-shirts, etc. Remastered...

Chiara Script

Chiara Script font

Chiara Script has a very simple origin. It’s a highly stylized interpretation of Greater Albion’s chief designer’s handwriting! It combines legibility and cursive characters in a distinctive blend and includes a range of OpenType...

Borough Hall JNL

Borough Hall JNL font

Picture yourself on a New York subway station platform with the location name set into the tiles on the wall. Borough Hall JNL evokes the feeling of urban industrialism at its best.

Brookhurst JNL

Brookhurst JNL font

Brookhurst JNL has strong Art Deco influence, and features an ultra-compressed width to set copy into a tighter space.

Class Project JNL

Class Project JNL font

Another in the series of stencil fonts from Jeff Levine, Class Project JNL was inspired by a lettering guide from the 1940s.

Regal Suite JNL

Regal Suite JNL font

Add a touch of class and bring back the elegance of the 1930s with Regal Suite JNL.

Major Production NF

Major Production NF font

This typeface was designed specifically for producing movie posters, as well as VHS and DVD packaging for them. The uppercase letters are ultracondensed, and the lowercase letters are small caps, approximately a third the...

Loading Dock NF

Loading Dock NF font

This typeface is patterned after the lettering produced by the Marsh Stencil Making Machine, which was an indispensable part of industrial shipping departments in the mid-twentieth century. The font is unicase, but includes a...

Verena

Verena font

Verena was written with a common felt marker pen, scanned and worked over, to keep just the right amount of roughness. The result is a very readable and usable handwritten font.

Daliwood NF

Daliwood NF font

This quirky charmer is based on a typeface called “Les Catalanes”, designed in 1952 by Enric Crous-Vidal for Fonderie Typographique Française. Appropriately, it is named for the king of quirky Cataláns.