font_shop: MyFonts

Lidia

Lidia font

The decorative title typeface was designed at Polygraphmash type design bureau in 1967 by Iraida Chepil. It is a decorative variant (‘open’, or ‘engraved’) of classical serif typefaces. For use in magazine headlines, title...

Lunokhod

Lunokhod font

Lunokhod type family (four weights) was designed by Oleg Karpinsky for ParaType in 2005. Lunokhod is an original wide sans serif with square shapes of oval glyphs. Several Cyrillic glyphs such as Í, Ó,...

Mellnik

Mellnik font

Mellnik is a sans serif of humanist style (in a way) that was developed by Oleg Karpinsky for ParaType in 2006. The type family contains nine styles with a number of alternate characters in...

Display Robust

Display Robust font

Display Robust is a display font not intended for text use. It was designed specifically for display, headline, logotype, branding, and similar applications. Display Robust has an uppercase alphabet, numbers, and punctuation.

Posy

Posy font

Posy is a flower font inspired by the plant Sison Amomum or Stone Parsley. We find its structure utterly beautiful, and it inspired us to create the 52 cute graphic illustrations which make up...

Uncertainty

Uncertainty font

Uncertainty 2010 Edition is an intensely textured typeface carefully rendered by hand. This font is faded with a chalk-like texture. Please be aware that working with this highly detailed font may slow some graphics...

Dotmap

Dotmap font

The inspiration for Dotmap came about while researching text size screen fonts for use on LCD and LED displays. Conforming strictly to a matrix there are no kerning pairs and all characters are positioned...

Clobber

Clobber font

Clobber Grotesk Bold is a grotesk typeface family designed for high readability. It includes a range of weights and a stencil variant. The terminals of the letterforms are slightly flared in order to increase...

Futura TS

Futura TS font

1546 Poliphile

1546 Poliphile font

This family was inspired from the French edition of Hypnerotomachie de Poliphile (“The Strife of Love in a Dream”) attributed to Francesco Colonna, 1467 printed in 1546 in Paris by Jacques Kerver. He was...