font_foundry: K-Type

Club

Club font

Managing to be both simple and distinctive, Club takes inspiration from the packaging and signage of dance music and fashion goods. Three weights for the price of one.

3×5

3×5 font

Based on the squared lettering used for art folders at Joseph Eastham High School in Salford England, most letters being three squares wide and all of them five squares tall. In memory of Tony...

Blundell Sans

Blundell Sans font

Blundell Sans is a type-hybrid that combines the precision and power of a sans serif with the elegance and humanism of a script. A resolutely upright font with a strong diagonal thrust.

Bolshy

Bolshy font

Bolshy is a stroppy font whose x-height has got ideas above its station, it’s ended up being equal to the cap height. Bolshy doesn’t go completely Bauhaus, and although the boundaries are somewhat blurred,...

Circa

Circa font

Inspired by lettering in a furniture advertisement on the wall of a Paris Metro station. And circles in general. Maybe a hint of Bauhaus snuck in too. This face has a dangerously large x-height...

Soft Sans

Soft Sans font

Soft Sans is a modern sans serif family of fonts, businesslike and classic grotesque in origin, but made friendlier and less austere by the addition of rounded outer corners. Soft Sans is designed for...

Klee Print

Klee Print font

Klee Print is based on the handwritten capitals of the American artist, Emma Klee, to which a matching lowercase and many accented characters have been added.

New Old English

New Old English font

New Old English was prompted by two Victorian coins, the mid nineteenth century gothic crown and gothic florin, which featured a gothic script lowercase with quite modern looking, short ascenders and descenders enabling it...

Runestone

Runestone font

Runestone is a bold typeface derived from ancient Runic alphabets carved into standing stones. It also evokes the style of engraved Greek and Phoenician lettering. An additional Small Caps version is included in the...

Adventuring

Adventuring font

Rock-steady and friendly, yet animated and exciting, Adventuring evolved from the hand drawn, uppercase title lettering used for the 1950s and 1960s dust jackets of Enid Blyton’s Famous Five series of books.