Searching for more “Script” fonts?
Buy and download “Script” fonts at MyFonts.
ORIENTFAHRTEN (Pro) — Semi-connected script-style font design
═══════════════════════════════════
Losely based on the lettering that was seen on a 1929 poster design by German painter Ottomar Carl Joseph Anton (1895-1976) for the “Hamburg-Amerika Line” * (click for image of the original poster)
Whereas the original (non-Pro)-version aimed at extracting that “stylistic essence” of the lettering, and made an attempt at extrapolating and restoring a full alphabet from the letters provided by the original poster. And this basically became sort-of a font revival with a little extra's.
ORIENTFAHRTEN (Pro) than took this to a whole other level, This refor-mation wasn't guided by Ottomar's original poster-lettering, but rather a remodeling and amelioration of my initial work.
Many glyphs were fully re-invented, others only just partially improved.
In addition to this, many new things were introduced as well. For example, the font was further ornated with various typographic elements and bits, reminiscent of calligraphic hand lettering. Turning this into a much more attractive looking little novelty.
Also some “technical” restructuring of the Unicode character mapping, to creating more user-friendly text formatting properties.
Since it is a semi-connected script, certain characters were deliboratly disconnect and some weren't. For example, the uppercase letters almost all disconnect, whereas the majority of lowercase letters will connect by default. A set of glyphs alternate forms was included that allow to break the 'connected' flow of a text.
These also function sort-of as “Contextual Substitutions”, but without OpenType's automated glyph-stream lookup classes. Yet these do allow the manual control over word-endings and word-space situations. So when a default-glyph is followed by a white-space, a glyph-alternate form could than be selected to replace the default-character encoding and improve overall aesthetics and natural flow of text. These substitutions are located in the “Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms” and “Private Use Area's” Unicode blocks. In addition to the default alphabet letters the font also includes numerous symbols and punctuation marks, as well as ligatures.
As for the “numberscomp” that is currently in progress:
This font was specially fitted with 5different schemes for text figure arrangement.
• Didot-(old style) non-lining (font default)
• Traditional-(old style) non-lining
• Clean-(modern) lining
• Tradidotional-(old style) non-lining
• Ornate-(modern) lining
— This does temporarily create a new problem for me though... As this would be my fourth submission to the competition, where a maximum of only three font submissions is allowed. Now, which of these previous entries am I going to eliminate?!
I hope you like it,
Cheers
This is a cloneInstructions
1-Type the uppercase vowels A I U E É O to get the independent vowels
2-Type ğ, ŋ, ŕ to get the digraph gh, ng, rr
3-To get a digraph, type consonant before and add a uppercase H
4- The follwing consonants who dosent work with the H is
r g k x v w n
5- The following lyrics does not exist in that script is
f z
6- the lowercase vowels a i u e é o is a vowel diacritics
OVUNUQUE NOI SAREMO - BIANCONERI!
A Tribute to Internazionale Milano FC Font from the late 2010s and mixed with the Modern Germanic Blackletters around the 1950s. Here's the first blackletter font I made in my spare time...
This whole font is free to use, cause it's my first font to use for this site. Feel free to modify, share, or fix it. But CREDIT THE AUTHOR, PLEASE! Thank You!
'Sacred Textura', by Studio Sampersand, blends medieval Textura blackletter with contemporary design. Crafted with precision, it balances tradition and innovation. Its structured forms and intricate details convey strength and authority. The font follows a precise wide pen stroke-width that follows the hexagonal grid lines; creating a consistent neo-traditional textura font design.
Inspired by Dry Heat Medials and English cursive, named Atlantico because it's similar to Pacifico.
Capitals - Low connectors
Lowercase - High connectors
!"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789: - Initials
;<=>?@[\]^_`{|}~¤¥¦§¨©ª«¬ - Low Finals
®¯°±²³´µ¶·¸¹º»¼½¾¿ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇ - High Finals
ÔÕÖ×ØÙÚÛÜÝÞßàáâãäåæçèéêëìí - Capitals
Low low space: [No-Break Space]
Low High space: ¡
High Low space: ¢
High High space: £
Low final z at the soft hyphen glyph ()
ÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑ - Numbers
ÒÓ - Period and Comma
Ô4LANTIC} ìÖ Ùæ
à!D? "Æ á!THA| ×/uGLA¦
For this font I was inspired by elegant and decorative type. I looked at old English style and modern cursive fonts to inform my design. My font would be described as script, pixelated, and formal, using thick and thin strokes, ligatures, and fluid strokes to simulate handwriting.
A script (cypher?) I made which separates letters into groups in an unusual way. It's also monospaced, visually at least.
Translator: https://lingojam.com/TexttoOnno
Translator specifically for this font: https://lingojam.com/LegibleOnno
What are those weird no-width characters!? The rectangular vowels of Onno - ⊐◻⊔⊏⊓ꘌ॥ᒧᒣᒪᒥ, corresponding to AEIOUYÜÅÄÖÉ - are actually supposed to go around the non-vowels to their right. Ex: for the word "⊐ⴲ╱", it should be written so "⊐" is big, and contains "ⴲ╱". For multi-vowel words like "◻⊐ꕕⴱ", "◻" contains "⊐", which in turn contains "ꕕⴱ". In order to construct these large vowels that can contain other characters, and even other large vowels, the no-width characters exist.
Special no-width glyphs
(lyr = layer)
Left line: lyr1 ʰ, lyr2 ʱ, lyr3 ʲ
Right line: lyr1 ʰ, lyr2 ʳ, lyr3 ʴ
Top line: lyr1 ʵ, lyr2 ʶ, lyr3 ʷ
Bottom line: lyr1 ʸ, lyr2 ˠ, lyr3 ˡ
Top and bottom line: lyr1 ˢ, lyr2 ˣ, lyr3 ˤ
Quote extensions: yr2 ˄, lyr3 ˅
Linebreak: (space)
Other technical glyphs
Vowel continuation mark: ˀ
Space glyph: _
GOSPEL ANGLOS
A insular half-uncial or insular majuscule script style typeface project that is inspired by ancient celtic bookhand & manuscripts.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The project is aiming at solidifying a number of different insular script styles. The main goal is to create a single typeface that includes about everything required to replicate the decorative writing style seen in ancient celtic manuscripts.(except for the ornamental decoratives)
The font, though essentially a bi-linear or majuscule insular half-incial script, in reality is a combination of different styles and complementary lettersets. Each carefully designed for specific purpose.
For example, it includes a more decorative Anglo-Saxon-script capital letter, perfect for headline text or book bindings. These actually include a small number of short ascending / descending letters, but it remains mainly a majuscule. Then there is a complete insular style lowercase set, but which resembles a more traditional style lowercase letterform. And instead of being proportional sized, these reflect the cap-height, remaining faithful to the bi-linear nature of the script.
Besides all that, there is a set of glyph-alternates for most of the Anglo-Saxon capitals, as well as numerous random stylistic glyph alternates scattered througout some other various unicode blocks. Providing more than enough options to make variations.
To top it all off, I started making a set of more decorative lombardic initial letters, perfect for decorating paragraphs.
(This remains a WIP for now, as I am still experimenting aound with different styles and bits to narrow down the right one that suits this total package)
I like how some of these characters turned out, but many are jiust ideas and not yet reached their definitive forms. But this set proved a lot more difficult than I had anticipated. So,
Any suggestions helping me to complete the full set are very much welcome..
The major recources and guidelines for the creation of this project mainly evolved around the two medieval celtic manuscripts:
"Book of kells" and "Liɴdisfarne Gospels"
-----------------------------------------------------------------
It has grown quite a bit already so far, but remains a WIP.
So beware of very little overall polishing or kerning.
The overall design has quite some rough character, even more so with the insular lowercase set, that obviously was not aimed at smooth edges. Actually the oposite, sort of trying to replicate that rough look seen with many scribes from that era.
But I would love to hear your opinions (or suggestions for that matter) on the work so far. I can really use a little refreshing vibes for this at this point.
;)
Cheers.
A cursive pixel font.
---
Series title: Essentia
Type: Cursive Script
Properties: Bold & Italic, 5.7pt
Currently Available in:English and Dutch, Welsh, Irish, Scots Gaelic, Italian, French, Albanian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Hungarian, Swedish, Danish and Norwegian, Faroese, Icelandic, Greek, Belarussian (Latin and Cyrillic), Bosnian (Latin and Cyrillic), and Russian.
Soon to be available in:Polish, Czech, Slovak, Croatian, Finnish, Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Esperanto (potentially), Turkish, Vietnamese (Latin).
Possible future additions: Hebrew, Arabic, Persian (Farsi), Hindi.
Any Suggestions?