Pegacorn Initials 1951806

Pegacorn Initials 1951806

Pegacorn Initials 1951806

Bringing the magic of unicorn and Pegasus together, the Pegacorn Initials merge myth, legend and fairytale into one typeface! Each pegacorn is rendered in high detail and drawn with care, from the tip of the horn to the far end of the tail. The lush manes, feathered wings and star-sparkling diacritics make these mythical beasts illuminate any text they accompany.
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Skilt Gothic Font Family

Skilt Gothic Font Family

Skilt Gothic Font Family

In the 1920s the Danish architect, printer and designer Knud V. Engelhardt made some striking typefaces for signage. The Swedish typeface designer Marten Thavenius used some structural elements from the work of Engelhardt when he designed Skilt Gothic—a typeface to be used for display and text settings in the 21st century. Skilt Gothic comes in nine weights—thin, light, regular, medium, semibold, bold, extrabold, black and ultra—in roman and italic respectively. A wide range of glyph alternatives are accessible through OpenType features. Skilt Gothic has support for more than 50 languages.
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Knif Mono Font

Knif Mono Font

Knif Mono Font

Knif (pronounce [Ka-neef]) is an acute and sharp-as-a-knife monospaced typeface. Its starkness results from a very short and intense design process. Knif is the product of a team of 4 french people: It has been designed by Axel Pelletanche-Thevenart under the artistic direction of Guillaume Grall and Benoit Santiard, then Emilie Rigaud, head of “A is for… type foundry”, took care of the production of the final typeface.
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First Prize Font Family

First Prize Font Family

First Prize Font Family

First Prize typeface has simple shapes. It is a narrow, heavy sans serif typeface with geometrical logic and quite predictable constructions of characters. The idea behind it was to combine constructed structure of the skeleton and some calligraphic ideas, swashes and cursiveness. At the moment First Prize typeface consists of three narrow styles: bold, upright italic and italic. Cursive weights have beautiful ending swashes and initials. There are few alternative shapes for A&N. As a Display typeface First Prize will work very well with any other typefaces for the good of any project in print or online.
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Grind Font Family

Grind Font Family

Grind Font Family

Grind is a big and bold display typeface that oozes strength and toughness. Grind features simple, demolished, halftone and timber styles. It also comes with multilingual support and includes letters, numbers and punctuation.
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PF Diplomat Sans Font Family

PF Diplomat Sans Font Family

PF Diplomat Sans Font Family

A clean humanistic sans-serif typeface which complements its serif version Diplomat Serif. It has preserved several of its original characteristics and comes complete with true-italics with a distinct flowing structure. Supports Latin and Greek.
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Timmons NY Font

Timmons NY Font

Timmons NY Font

TIMMONS NY has been graciously donated to the BuyFontsSaveLives campaign by designer Matt Willey in honour of his father Nick who was taken by cancer in 2011. This narrow and muscular headline font, designed by Matt with assistance from A2-Type’s Henrik Kubel, was originally conceived for a Jazz FM booklet created by Willey in 2012. Currently working at the New York Times, Willey decided to refresh the typeface and deploy it as the principal headline face in the NYT magazine special edition, ‘Walking New York’, which was published in April 2015 (see spreads below and read more about this special issue here). The font’s robust, angular letterforms made a huge impact on the stark black and white layouts.
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TheSerif Font Family

TheSerif Font Family

TheSerif Font Family

TheSerif is part of the Thesis superfamily which Luc(as) de Groot first published in 1994. It was conceived to be the perfect secondary font within the Thesis system, using it for headlines, subheads, pull quotes, etc. TheSerif has also been used successfully as a text font in its own right. TheSerif is a low-contrast typeface – i.e., the differences between thin and thick strokes are not very pronounced. Yet the reference to writing with the broad-nibbed pen is still present, giving the letters a diagonal stress and a forward flow that facilitates reading. The roman letterforms tend to have some characteristics of an italic or written construction. Yet the italic forms themselves are very distinctive: they were not derived from the upright but were individually designed while perfectly complementing the roman forms.
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