Simple, stylized, & consistent pixel based font, intended for use by game designers & pixel artists. This is my first "finished" font & I am very much open to suggestions, as I would like to optimise it & eventually submit it to Google Fonts.
A clone of Marengi with some brick-substitution and filters applied. Has a "rightward" momentum that seems to push my eyes along as I read, as well as a connectedness which makes words seem nice and solid despite being segmented.
This is a clone of MarengiI came up with an original high-res design, then brickswapped to turn everything into square bricks. The result sort of reminds me of Proxima Punch Pixel Squared, but less art deco and more computer-esque. It has a really old and naive look to it which could make it good for retro-terminal use.
"Buttons Foe" = "Obtuse Font". Not only is it an obtuse font in look and construction, it's reminescent of an era when computers were thought of as adversarial, magic voodoo boxes. So both the name and the anagram are equally applicable. :^)
Portland State University has employed sworn and armed Portland Police officers since 2015, despite widespread dissent from the student body. On June 29, 2018, officers from the PSU Campus Public Safety Office used unnecessary deadly force when they shot and killed Jason Washington, a 45-year-old man who was trying to break up a fight outside a bar near the PSU campus. Jason Washington had a wife and a family; he worked for the United States Postal Service and was a Navy veteran. His killers were placed on paid administrative leave until a grand jury declined to indict them, and they will not face criminal charges.
It's far past time for PSU to take action. Two internal reviews have been planned, but no timeline has been given for when they will be complete. If Portland State University wants to be seen as a progressive school, the administration needs to take action and listen to what students have been saying for three years: Disarm campus security.
You can't be a progressive school if your security officers can get away scot-free with killing a black man who was trying to de-escalate a fight, just because he happened to have a gun; or if you allow anti-choice protesters to display twenty-foot-tall displays equating abortion to genocide in the center of campus, complete with graphic images of genocide victims and infamously falsified depictions of "aborted fetuses"; or if you knowingly provide a platform for notorious far-right agitators to spread their violent, hateful rhetoric in a city already fraught with neo-Nazis looking to cause harm to marginalized people. Kindly get your sh*t together, and stop pretending to be progressive: either drop the pretense, or drop the bullsh*t that should have been left to die back in the 40s-60s.
Anyway. I made this font as part of a design I'm donating to the #DisarmPSU movement on campus. Bootlickers are welcome to piss off and not use this font. No political arguments in the comments please.
Solid Quartzthrone. Somehow, this looks more "cartoonish" than the others.
This is a clone of QuartzthroneA design that combines decolike asymmetry with a double line concept. It also incorporates some experimental methods to unify the wider glyphs (mw@#™, etc.) with the others, by allowing the middle sections of these letters to have both the single and double lines. This results in a look that is at times architectural and at other times almost like loopy cursive.
Extrapolation of the lettering found on a Dutch renovation brochure. I have no clue if it is a existing font or not. I only used the letters from the brochure as guide and did zero research on it's origin.
Enjoy nonetheless!
Yet another polygonal font, this time a diamond. :^)
This one was also designed to combine symmetry and asymmetry. Some letters have central lines and some have offset lines. In this way a greater variety of designs was made possible.
A bricks experiment in which the bricks are made of bricks. (Yo Dawg.) The name comes from a Duck Game map created by my amazing friend, Star. It seemed fitting. :^)
Original proportions are reached at sizes that are multiples of 21pt! Use 21pt, 42pt, etc. to get them.
Best with antialiasing turned off, although you can do smooth stone, gel, or gem-like looks with different antialiasing modes in your graphics software.
Welp, I had to make something like this sooner or later... :^)
Like most of my pixel fonts, this was made at the smallest legible size I could manage, so that it could be useful even to small-canvas pixel artists.
More glyphs later, perhaps? Depends on the use I find for this in my games (and your comments).
Original size = 26px (Use multiples of 19.5pt for pixel perfection)
The name is inspired by Slab City, California. Search that name on Youtube for some interesting documentaries and such!
Collection of linear-interpolated circle attempts, or simply faux-Bezier circles and other curvature related materials.
This toolset basically is collection of pre-made fake circles and curves in numerous different sizes to make ones workflow easier. It could also simply serve as a educative tool that demonstrates the basic FontStruct technique used for making fake curves and circles.
Initially I intended this to be much more complete, but it is simply too much work, and would take forever to get published at once.
Please don't expect this to be perfect, a lot gets fairly close to the "real-deal".
But keep in mind that they remain raw approximations of their true Bezier counterparts. I will try to improve whatever is needed as time progresses, as well as most likely add more stuff.
--- No filters were used ---
I hope you like it so far,
Feel free to copy, re-use, improve or even destroy!
enjoy!
Here at Marengi Omnisystems, we like to put a twist on the ordinary. Consider the plus sign. Normal plus signs have four termini. But, after dozens of minutes of modification, the plus sign can be transformed into myriad other shapes, all of which are even pointier than the original. Don't Worry, No Frankenplusses Here! These are actually organic, free-range, grass-fed plus signs that we chopped up and glued together. Don't you wish all stories could end so happily?