JPG
ASPHALT BACKGROUNDS - 1545324
ASPHALT BACKGROUNDS - 1545324
JPG | 80 Mb
There are 20 JPEG files of asphalt backgrounds with lines. You can use this with any your design project.
JPG | 80 Mb
There are 20 JPEG files of asphalt backgrounds with lines. You can use this with any your design project.
25 TEXTURES PACK. ASPHALT AND MORE - 2271534
25 TEXTURES PACK. ASPHALT AND MORE - 2271534
JPG | 448 Mb
JPG | 448 Mb
ASPHALT RACER TYPEFACE 1818669
ASPHALT RACER TYPEFACE 1818669
TTF OTF
Asphalt Racer is bold, dynamic, wide format display font. It is suitable for use on narrow sports equipment, sticks, bikes etc. It is all caps font with several alternative characters, stylistic alternates and ligatures.
TTF OTF
Asphalt Racer is bold, dynamic, wide format display font. It is suitable for use on narrow sports equipment, sticks, bikes etc. It is all caps font with several alternative characters, stylistic alternates and ligatures.
Asphalt
Asphalt
2OTF
Asperity, Asphalt and Aspic, were designed for Another magazine issues 18 and 19, A typeface in three versions, Hard, Soft and Script, three typefaces with the same character shape, where hard is angular, Soft is brushlike, and Script a painted-ish connected design. For Asphalt, Aspic’s brushy forms are connected into an expressive, striking script typeface. It has a feeling of having been painted by a sign writer, with a brush dipped in too much paint as it has a gloopy, fluid but still readable, quality. Signwriting is seemingly a dying craft, but as with other crafts outmoded by technology or the needs of speed and cheapness of delivery, it is highly revered. At its best it is hugely skilful, quirky, idiosyncratic and expressive. It can occasionally be naive and amateurish, but that’s good too. In a retail environment of familiar brands, any opportunity for individual expression should be cherished.
2OTF
Asperity, Asphalt and Aspic, were designed for Another magazine issues 18 and 19, A typeface in three versions, Hard, Soft and Script, three typefaces with the same character shape, where hard is angular, Soft is brushlike, and Script a painted-ish connected design. For Asphalt, Aspic’s brushy forms are connected into an expressive, striking script typeface. It has a feeling of having been painted by a sign writer, with a brush dipped in too much paint as it has a gloopy, fluid but still readable, quality. Signwriting is seemingly a dying craft, but as with other crafts outmoded by technology or the needs of speed and cheapness of delivery, it is highly revered. At its best it is hugely skilful, quirky, idiosyncratic and expressive. It can occasionally be naive and amateurish, but that’s good too. In a retail environment of familiar brands, any opportunity for individual expression should be cherished.