Milk Drops is a semi-casual-feeling cross between a didone and slab serif display font. Elegant, flourishy, whimsical and bold, as much as one font can be any or all of those things! It has highly contrasting weights, but not so much to take itself too seriously or risk legibility.
Playfully, it entertains the teardrop motif wherever it can – in expected areas like the descender of a "y" and the ascender of an "f", but also in some whimsical flourishes. Many of the uses of the teardrop motif are implemented on the terminals and ears where many old prints may have suffered from bleed of ink – answering a "what if" question like "what if those accidental bleeds were designed on purpose?" or "what if a font were designed as though it was already seen through blurry eyes?"
Milk Drops also features stencil-like open counters and lots of ligatures (32). Note also, it has some super-nerdy additions like symbols for Bitcoin, Pilcrow, Interrobang and Irony Mark.
Language Support
Milk Drops is highly versatile – with an impressive count of 470 glyphs, it can accommodate up to 78 latin-based languages.
Download Coral Blush Font Family From Set Sail Studios
Explore a stunning typography pairing with Coral Blush; a carefully crafted and perfectly balanced set of elegant serif and realistic script typefaces.
Here’s what’s included;
Coral Blush Serif • An all-caps Serif font containing uppercase, all punctuation & numerals.
Coral Blush Script • A thin and realistic textured handwriting font, hand-drawn with a real fine-tip pen. Contains, lowercase, uppercase, all punctuation & numerals. Also includes 88 built-in ligatures.
Coral Blush Script Alt • This is a second version of Montrose Script, with a completely new set of upper & lowercase characters.
88 Script Ligatures • Coral Blush Script fonts contain 88 ligatures (double letter glyphs) to help your text flow more naturally and recreate authentic, handwritten text. Many programs will automatically have this feature switched on for you, but if you need any help accessing them, please feel free to drop me a message.
Language Support; English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Indonesian, Malay, Hungarian, Polish, Turkish, Slovenian
Download High Dreaming Font Family From Haksen
September 10, 2019
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branding typeface
High Dreaming is a stylish modern and natural handwritten script font with casual chic flair. It is perfect for branding, wedding invites and cards, and maybe for red wine label.
High Dreaming includes full set of gorgeous uppercase and lowercase letters, numerals, a large range of punctuation and ligatures. All lowercase letters of High Dreaming Regular include ending swashes, giving realistic hand-lettered style. What you get?
You will get:
High Dreaming OTF
High Dreaming Alternate OTF
In order to use the beautiful swashes, you need a program that supports OpenType features such as Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe Photoshop CC, Adobe Indesign and Corel Draw. but if your software doesn't have Glyphs panel, you can install additional swashes font files:
Thanks and have a great day,
Haksen
Download Cnossus Font Family From Haksen
Say Hello to "Cnossus" Bold Funny Fonts!
Cnossus was built with OpenType features, numbers, punctuation, ligatures and it also supports other languages. Cnossus is very suited to build your brand such as : T-shirt, Logo, Poster, Packaging, Advertising and anything.
Installing Your New Font: This font can be installed in all software that can read standard fonts.
Accessing the swashes / opentype features / glyphs: In order to access the alternate characters in this font, you need a program that supports OpenType features such as Adobe Indesign, Adobe Illustrator CS, or Adobe Photoshop CC.
Download Creatie Font Family From MaxnorType
Creatie is a lovely modern script font. This beautiful hand-lettered script font is perfect for styling logos, stationery, social media, websites and much more!
Creatie was created with multilingual support, ligatures, contextual alternates, stylistic alternates, swash and wings, allowing you to create a great look to your projects. These features work well in programs that support OpenType features, such as Adobe Indesign, Illustrator, and Photoshop.
The start wings and end wings use contextual alternates and ligature features, making it easy to access and change the wing style simply by changing the number on the end of the wing formula.
Download Pink Lemonade Font Family From Nicky Laatz
A new fresh, bold brush font from Nicky Laatz.
Pink Lemonade is Sweet, Casual and curvy...with subtle brush texture left in- perfect for head-turning statements and eye-catching branding.
Pink Lemonade includes 45 natural-looking Opentype ligatures - perfect for making your words look freshly lettered, and like less of a font. Try alternating between having the ligatures active and not active for an even more natural look.
Pink Lemonade will work wonderfully for beauty, posters, music brands, magazines, cosmetics, cook books, culinary art, book covers, sporting brands, bold headliners, and websites.
Enjoy more inspiration using all Nicky Laatz's fonts on Instagram - @nickylaatz.
Download Varidox Font Family From insigne
September 10, 2019
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Varidox, a variable typeface design, allows users to connect with specific design combinations with slightly varied differences in style. These variations in design enable the user to reach a wider scope of audiences.
As the name suggests, Varidox is a paradox of sorts--that is, a combination of two disparate forms with two major driving influences. In the case of type design, the conflict lies in the age-old conundrum of artistic expression versus marketplace demand. Should the focus center primarily on functionality for the customer or err on the side of advancing creativity? If both are required, where does the proper balance lie?
Viewed as an art, type design selections are often guided by the pulse of the industry, usually emphasizing unique and contemporary shapes. Critics are often leading indicators of where the marketplace will move. Currently, many design mavens have an eye favoring reverse stress. However, these forms have largely failed to penetrate the marketplace, another major driving factor influencing the font world. Clients now (as well as presumably for the foreseeable future) demand the more conservative forms of monoline sans serifs. Typeface designers are left with a predicament.
Variable typefaces hand a great deal of creative control to the consumers of type. The demands of type design critics, personal influences of the typeface designer and the demands of the marketplace can all now be inserted into a single font and adjusted to best suit the end user. Varidox tries to blend the extremes of critical feature demands and the bleeding edge of fashionable type with perceptive usability on a scalable spectrum. The consumer of the typeface can choose a number between one and one-thousand. Using a more conservative style would mean staying between zero and five hundred, while gradually moving higher toward one thousand at the high end of the spectrum would produce increasingly contemporary results.
Essentially, variable fonts offer the ability to satisfy the needs of the many versus the needs of the few along an axis with a thousand articulations, stabilizing this delicate balance with a single number that represents a specific form between the two masters, a form specifically targeted towards the end user. Practically, a user in some cases may wish to use more conservative slab form of Varidox for a more conservative clientele. Alternatively, the same user may then choose an intermediate instance much closer to the other extreme in order to make a more emphatic statement with a non-traditional form.
Parametric type offers a new options for both designers and the end users of type. In the future, type will be able to morph to target the reader, based on factors including demographics, mood or cultural influences. In the future, the ability to adjust parameters will be common. With Varidox, the level of experimentality can be gauged and then entered into the typeface. In the future, machine learning, for example, could determine the mood of an individual, their level of experimentality or their interest and then adjust the typeface to meet these calculated parameters. This ability to customize and tailor the experience exists for both for the designer and the reader. With the advent of new marketing technologies, typefaces could adjust themselves on web pages to target consumers and their desires. A large conglomerate brand could shift and adapt to appeal to a specific target customer. A typeface facing a consumer would be more friendly and approachable, whereas a typeface facing a business to business (B2B) customer would be more businesslike in its appearance. Through both experience, however, the type would still be recognizable as belonging to the conglomerate brand.
The font industry has only begun to realize such potential of variable fonts beyond simple visual appearance. As variable font continues to target the user, the technology will continue to reveal new capabilities, which allow identities and layouts to adjust to the ultimate user of type: the reader.
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