Work in progress
A cursive handwriting inspired style work.
Its a medium size faux-Bezier (fake curve) style approach with somewhat rough shaped outlines. I am having a serious hard time comming up with a uppercase set. Publishing it in this early stage I kind of hope to get some suggestions that might refreh my perspective on it.
Therefor I am curious about what you guys think so far...
Cheers
A cursive pixel font.
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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?
First attempt at a cursive pixel font. The name derives from an old joke band, whose name is itself a parody of the name of a toy gun by BoomCo, the "Rapid Madness".
Original size: 12pt (use multiples of this value for pixel perfection)
VERSION HISTORY:
09 Mar 2018 - v1.0 released.
10 Mar 2018 - v1.1 released.
13 Mar 2018 - v1.2 released. More Latin support added. The capital letters were cleaned up to make them nicer-looking when appearing in isolation. Excess spaces/lengths of line were reduced to make for denser-looking, more naturally handwritten words.
02 Apr 2018 - "More Latin" and "Google Fonts Basic" ranges finished. More shortening/optimization done for the extended Latin letters.
A cloned and semi connected variation to to SCHOLTEMEIJER (CONTIUOUS)
This is a clone of STF_SCHOLTEMEIJER (CONTINUOUS)An alphabet of my own creation for the writing of a fictional language, also of my own creation. Despite its origin, it can be used for writing English with no problems.
One of the first fonts I attempted to make on this website was a cursive font, with accurate bridge letters.
I finally thought of a way to make it work; dots on both ends that would build a bridge if one mid-ending and one bottom was used, and gave an aesthetic if it was two of the same height endings.
I realized after making the entire font that there are no mid-starts, but I had an entire pixel cursive font, so I reworked it as shown.
I can make it the dotted way, too.