font_designer: Matthew Desmond

Hydrochlorica

Hydrochlorica font

This is a friendly display typeface with large ink inlets that make it look like the counters have been eaten away from the inside out by hydrochloric acid. It’s legible at small sizes, but...

Brauhaus

Brauhaus font

I enjoy and am inspired by many blackletter designs, but find that their uppercase characters are generally too complex to be very usable. I also found that very few, if any were designed with...

Ironside Crosses

Ironside Crosses font

The Cross has a rich history and various meanings in many different cultures around the Globe. This font contains 178 cross symbols. Most of the designs have both a rectangular and square version.)

Plenti

Plenti font

Plenti is the fat font to add to your visual communication toolbox. Friendly, square, and quirky all at the same time. It is itching to get used on posters and websites.

Variable

Variable font

Variable is a sans-serif monoline typeface family that can be used in a variety of typographic environments. The UltraThin weight is perfect for use at large sizes in magazines or anywhere a hairline effect...

Casino Hand

Casino Hand font

Casino Hand is a handwriting font that comes with some exciting new OpenType features*. The font comes with an alternate glyph for every uppercase letter, lowercase letter, numbers and some punctuation. These alternates are...

KAH

KAH font

KAH is a font which is based on a strict LCD-style grid. KAH is perfect for mocking up LCD screens or to create a technological/futuristic aesthetic in your design.

Shifty

Shifty font

Rational curves and spiky rhythms punctuate this all-caps sans face, for a plastic feeling, futuristic effect.

Wooddale

Wooddale font

If you require an authentic wood type era typeface, Wooddale is your match. This face was revived with care from samples in antique type specimen books.

Retron

Retron font

Simultaneously futuristic and retro, Retron is perfectly named. Retron is a partially connected script – or is it a connected sans? Either way, it’s a strange, unique combination that works surprisingly well.