This is a pixel font for any purpose you may need it for.
Goal: More glyphs than Cmunk's 7:12 Serif
If you're wondering what the many unidentified symbols are at the end, those are a few conlangs I've made. They're all (currently) in the first "Supplementary Private Use-A" block.
If a glyph is blank on FS, I look it up and recreate it.
If anything's wrong, let me know. If you have any suggestions, let me know as well.
When I finish a section, I add the section's name as a tag, which is why I don't have Supplementary Private Use Area-A 1 isn't there. It's just not fully taken up yet.
Glyph count: 2736
lowercase letters are almost all alternates
()=down ribbon
<>=up ribbon
[]=up dialouge box
{}=down dialouge box
|=stop
see also ABBA Single by enzo bicudo pepi
Fixed j, x, and 7. Original j at lc j, original x at lc x, original 7 at ^, and all other alts in the same positions of the original ABBA except alt a, g, n, and u which were not in the original ABBA and are in lc a, lc g, uc n, and lc u respectively, and alt 1 which was moved from ! to ` because of the punctuation.
All Greek alts are their lc’s except alt υ 2, which is in lc ψ.
Cyrillic alts:
Alt а: lc а
Alt д: lc д
Alt д 2: lc е
Alt д 3: lc ж
Alt ж: lc з
Alt л: lc л
Alt л 2: lc м
Alt л 3: lc н
Alt ф: lc ф
Alt х: lc х
( and ) are normal ends.
[ and ] are ribbon ends.
{ and } are turned ribbon ends.
« and » are diamond ends.
< is the border for thin letters, numbers and punctuation.
> is the border for thick letters, numbers and punctuation.
~ is the border for alt 1.
@ is the border for φ, alt φ, ж, ф, ш, щ, ы, ю, alt ф, and ש.
* is the border for ъ, ד ,ב, and ת.
/ is the border for д, alt д and alt д 2.
% is the border for ς, ц, ך, and ף.
& is the border for щ.
_ is the border for ç and ץ.
\ is the border for $.
• is the border for ן.
± is the border for ל.
alt £: ¤.
alt ß: uc ß.
the digitalio logo is on §.
digitalio commented i’m so delighted ^∇^
See also ABBA (https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/2330835/abba-20) by digitalio for the original ABBA and the key for the original ABBA alts.
(why can't i do links ;_;)
(it’s still not working ╥_╥)
This font makes use of the most ancient forms of each of our capital English letters. Glyphs that would have been repeated because of shared origins have been given alternate forms of the original glyph to enable differentiation. The question and exclamation mark originate with Latin, written with two letters vertically, and in this version are written the same way but with the original forms of the letters. The rest of the punctuation comes from Greek origins or is made to look similar. The following website can act as a key for the meaning of each letter: http://www.ancient-hebrew.org/3_al.html
Update 1.1: Added Uppercase Final Sigma, Shidinn, and Klingon
Update 1.2: Big Update
Update 1.3: Moved Latin Lowercase Chi's Codepoint Position, Added Lambdas in Latin Extended D, and Added Kwak (in the Private Use Area)
Update 1.4: Some Latin Letters Are Added. Greek Mp And Nt Are Added. Hebrew Is Added. Armenian Is Added
Update 1.5: Cherokee & Bengali are added.
Update 1.6: Added Extra Thai letters and I also added Cadexian.
Update 1.7: Added Georgian, Fixed Armenian Capital Yev, Tagalog, Alternatives for Russian, and a logo of what it was installed
a pixelated unicode font that can be read at small sizes.
14 sept '22, 17:47:11 hkt / massive update. added coptic, spacing modifier letters and improved readability.
I love the look of this style. The name is self explanatory ;) if you know French.........
UC, numerals and some symbols have one line thicker than the others, LC only has the thinner lines. LC can be used on its own if even thickness of lines is desired but it is 3 px shorter than UC which will show clearly when using Basic Latin LC in combination with Hebrew, numerals, some symbols and some punctuation marks. Cyrillic and Hebrew added. Latin1 will come eventually ;)
Recreation of the character set used in the Atari ST TOS (1985), and later reused in the Atari TT and Atari Falcon.
Most special characters have been included and mapped to their respective unicode equivalents. This recreation also includes the special characters that form the Atari logo (mapped to the dingbat code points U+2768 and U+2769) and the pixelated face of J.R. "Bob" Dobbs (box drawing code points U+250C, U+2510, U+2514 and U+2518).
Only the characters present in the original set have been included.
Recreation of the medium/high resolution character set used in the Atari ST TOS (1985), and later reused in the Atari TT and Atari Falcon.
Most special characters have been included and mapped to their respective unicode equivalents. This recreation also includes the special characters that form the Atari logo (mapped to the dingbat code points U+2768 and U+2769) and the pixelated face of J.R. "Bob" Dobbs (box drawing code points U+250C, U+2510, U+2514 and U+2518).
Only the characters present in the original set have been included.
This is a clone of Atari STThis is possibly the biggest font I will ever create, and probably the one I'm most proud of at that. The original was built over the course of 4 months, and I'm very, very happy with how it turned out. Along with all of the 25 basic categories, I included 23 of my own - some finished, some unfinished. This has been a long process, sometimes fun, sometimes tiring, but I hope you find this font useful. Luckily, with all of the scripts it works with, it should have a use for everyone :) Please enjoy!
I am open to comments, suggestions and any other feedback. If you would like me to add another script, I am open to the task! :)
Edit: It's been more than a year and I'm still going strong! 6731 characters total. Trying to knock-off some smaller / less used scripts. :)
Jan 22, 2024: Fully finished font! 7500 total characters.
Thanks to everyone who has liked or downloaded! :)
If you want to know, A,B,P,S.... are (head)3:1(body).
MOST OF letters are 12x6 except I,T,Y,f,i,l,m,t,y
I've made the numbers thinner. i d even k y. but they look better like this
What about Long leg font? do you guys want a "Long Leg"?
[slashes](Problem solved)
are \ / % ø recognizable? thanks to Se7enty-Se7en and Cookielord, \/%Ø is now better.
THANK YOU \(◦'⌣'◦)/❤❤❤
[ogonek and stroke] (Problem solved)
ogoneks and strokes are annoying me. btw if you're speaking languages with letters that has ogonek or stroke sticked on. try to write a word with ogonek or stroke and remove the ogonek or stroke. and then recognize them
if you CAN. then why do you even put it on?? ¯\_(૦ઁᗝ૦ઁ)_/¯
coment below plz i need to know. :)
[asterisk]
if you don't like it, clone it you lazybone!
[Tags]
I don't speak english well, so plz tell me what is the tag this font should have. :)
Current version includes Basic Latin, More Latin, Extended Latin A-E (E only has one complete glyph though), a nearly-finished Even More Latin, Greek and Coptic, Cyrillic, Hebrew, Braille Set, and some other stuff
Sizes of 6 and/or 12pt (or multiples of them) are recommended so that the font doesn't smoothen or gain translucent pixels.
Has support for 104 languages (according to FontDrop)
A simple remake of my original Brixel, but made to be monospace and 8x8
(-Currently being extended-)
Just a simple font I made.
1433 Unicode Characters!
WOOHOO!!!
This is a clone*Note: the first few lines of the preview is a romanization. The "proper" font consists of the triangle, parabola, and diamond-like shapes in the bottom half*
A revised script of my alien conlang "cimar" Built with Apple's Hebrew QWERTY in mind, though if you are comfortable with the standard Hebrew layout you should have little trouble as long as you keep in mind the four characters which are used for non-standard sounds.
This script is a semi-featural abjad/abugida hybrid inspired by. Read right-to-left, consonants appear as main glyphs while vowels are diacritics which hang above that follows it. of the glyph determines place of , and diacritics inside of the glyph represent manner. The numbers are in hexadecimal and bound to latin characters (1-9, A-F). Like Hebrew, they are read least-to-greatest place value.
Here are the correspondances with Hebrew characters, their latin transcriptions, and a few IPA symbols where the glyphs make a different sound than in Hebrew and/or English.
מ נ
n m
ף ת ך ק
'(ʔ) k t p
ב ד ג
g d b
פ ס צ כ ה
h x(x~χ) c(ɕ) s f(ɸ)
ש ז ח ר
r(ɣ~ʁ) j(ʑ) z v(β)
ל ט
y l
א ע י ו
o i e a