Syabab Brush Script

Syabab Brush Script

Syabab Brush Script
2 OTF 2 TTF
Hi everyone, Introducing new font in this spring. Syabab Brush Script is my original character I created inadvertently after scribble exercises with brushes are worn out and broken. These fonts may be suitable for a wide variety of designs who need a freestyle expression with vintage or modern style.
Syabab Brush Script package is perfect for making design: posters, a variety of quotes, header, logo design, blog headers, all kinds of covers, T-shirts, mugs, etc.
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Culinary

Culinary

Culinary
OTF
Culinary is a typographic system inspired by the art of cooking. This family comes with 2 subfamilies: one Regular Family of 4 weights plus a Sans Line font and a set of Borders, and one 4-weight Script Family that also includes Sans Line and Borders. Culinary is well-suited for packaging, restaurant and cafe branding, bakeries, logos, magazines, menus, recipe books, invitations and much more. The OpenType features allow access to a wide set of characters, including ligatures, swashes, endings, initial and terminal forms, and lots of alternates.
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Duet II

Duet II

Duet II
4 TTF
The idea for Duet started when I decided to create a complex, elegant, and easy-to-read script with particular emphasis using a double line feature in the capitals. I set out to see how I could take advantage of the extra line in creating the curves. Finding a treatment that can be applied across all characters is always a challenge.
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Katzenjammer

Katzenjammer

Katzenjammer
2 OTF
Katzenjammer is a German word meaning ‘Cat’s Wail’ - it is used to describe a hangover. Katzenjammer font is a slightly eroded, squarish typeface, which would be ideal for headlines, packaging, posters and websites. This all caps font comes with different upper and lower case glyphs and a non-eroded set of alternates for the lower case - for those who like their alphabet nice and neat.
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Leviathan

Leviathan

Leviathan
2 OTF
Leviathan is the gothic (sans serif) member of The Proteus Project, a collection of four interchangeable type families designed in different nineteenth century styles.Leviathan began as a sans serif conversion of our Ziggurat typeface, a process which echoes the way in which many early gothics were developed. Like all typographic names that evoke the ancient world (Egyptian, Tuscan, Ionic, etc.) the term “gothic” is a ninteenth century English invention that reminds us of that culture’s fascination with antiquity.
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