Latin Font Family

Latin Font Family

Latin Font Family
3 OTF
Latin is a retro, vintage and decorative styled serif type design. It works beautifully when used in headlines for posters, but can also be spiced up to work in fashion and branding projects as well. Latin was designed by Achaz Reuss in 1993.
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Blackye Latin, Greek Cyrillic 1904057

Blackye  Latin, Greek Cyrillic 1904057

Blackye Latin, Greek Cyrillic 1904057
OTF | EOT | WOFF | RAR 540 KB

Blackye is a sans-serif font with contemporary and humanized forms. Its glyphs are full of personality and make it the perfect choice for projects that need to convey joviality and originality. It has an extensive set of characters, with over 1000 glyphs, which should meet the needs of composing texts in most Western languages. Its full-bodied form works great for composing posters, titles, banners, signage projects, logos etc.
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Pechenka LATIN

Pechenka LATIN

Pechenka LATIN
TTF OTF WOFF
Pechenka - a new fresh handmade font includes Latin and Cyrillic Inscription. Very suitable for greeting cards, branding materials, business cards, quotes, posters, and more!
Pechenka - includes many alternative characters. Is coded with PUA Unicode, which allows full access to all the extra characters without having special designing software. Mac users can use Font Book. Windows users can use Character Map to view and copy any of the extra characters to paste into your favourite text editor. For folks who have opentype capable software : The alternates are accessible by turning on "Stylistic Alternates" and "Ligatures" buttons on in Photoshop's Character panel, or via any software with a glyphs panel, e.g. Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop CC, Inkscape.
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1467 Pannartz Latin OTF

1467 Pannartz Latin OTF

1467 Pannartz Latin OTF
OTF
This family was created inspired from the edition of "De Civitate Dei" (by Sanctus Augustinus) printed in 1467 in Sobiano (Italy, Roma) by Konrad Sweynheym and Arnold Pannartz who was the punchcutter. It is one of the first few "Roman style" fonts, just before the birth of Jenson's pattern. The present font is containing all of the specific latin abbreviations and ligatures used in the original (about 54). Added are the accented characters and a few others not in use in this early period of printing.
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