font_shop: MyFonts

Rankensteen

Rankensteen font

Many blackletter and calligraphic typefaces are elegant and can be used for items like invitations and liturgical or religious texts. Rankensteen is probably not one of them. It is crude and bizarre and with...

Kyhota

Kyhota font

The six typefaces of the Kyhota group all have an “Old West” look to them. KyhotaOne has very thick slab serifs compared to KyhotaTwo. KyhotaBarbed is more condensed than either and has little barbs...

Letrinth

Letrinth font

Letrinth is a bold, informal sans-serif face. Its lower case is unusual in design; some of the characters are scaled versions of the upper-case letters. It was developed from a special alphabet I used...

Lettergical

Lettergical font

The lower case of Lettergical is a mixture of several medieval styles and the upper case is a variant of Lombardic.

NoPain

NoPain font

The letters of NoPain went to a party and had a bit too much to drink. The four NoPain typefaces, regular and bold of NoPainRight and NoPainLeft, were formed by distorting the letters of...

Pensle Caligraf

Pensle Caligraf font

PensleCaligraf is a wild and exuberant calligraphic script. It may lack the elegance for formal invitations and certificates but its quirkiness may make it suitable for invitations and documents that are casual or humorous...

Ingriana

Ingriana font

Ingriana is an informal, serifed typeface family with nine styles that is highly readable at small point sizes. Nothing else is quite like it.

IngrianaCasual

IngrianaCasual font

IngrianaCasual is somewhere between a handwritten face and a sans-serif face. The italics is almost a script face.

KnewFont

KnewFont font

KnewFont simulates neat and meticulous hand printing. Its letters slant left and come in five weights.

Kwersity

Kwersity font

Kwersity is a boxy, geometric, slab-serifed typeface with strokes of uniform weight. Its circular elements are almost rectangular. The narrower style has a high x-height. Both the narrower and wider variants come in three...