Assembled from the typography of pixel artist Brandon James Greer. Only includes characters identified in his art and videos.
This is a cloneThis is my recreation of the Arial font in pixel form as used for on-screen program guides for Dish Network in the United States and Bell Satellite TV (formerly Bell ExpressVu) in Canada during the 1990s and 2000s, albeit with some modifications...
EXAMPLES:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JFJ6mrriZc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETpsq-KWavw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2CUPclvbfQ
https://i.redd.it/0fapo9h1t9w41.jpg
https://atechfabrication.com/images/Dish6000vsSamsungSIR-T150_022.jpg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJPRIUDTECE
*This font will be updated occasionally with more characters added... As such, for now, this is NOT a complete set...
Inspired by the Metallica logo
How to use the font
First letter- Upper case letters
Last letter- Lower Case letters
Middle letters:-
1=A 2=B 3=C 4=D 5=E 6=F 7=G 8=H 9=I 0=J !=K @=L #=M $=N %=O ^=P &=Q *=R (=S )=T -=U _=V ==W +=X /=Y ?=Z
Open to comments and suggerstions!
Last week my beloved iMac stopped working for good. It's been more than a decade of a fantastic relationship, but now I have to accept the fact that it won't be with me anymore... With that in mind, I've collected these vintage Mac icons, most (maybe all) made by the great Susan Kare in the best 80's. Curiously, you will see that many of them have remained until today with very few modifications, but others (that dot matrix printer, those faxes, those floppy disks...) have definitely passed into the History. I remember with particular displeasure the d*** Bomb, which appeared unexpectedly when the computer crashed -too frecuently- and you then lost all the work not saved manually. Freaky old times. My favourite character still being Clarus, the dogcow (at the Z, of course). Hope you like them.
A: Mac-happy / B: Mac-unhappy / C: Mac-working / D: Bin / E: Bomb / F: Watch / G: Save / H: Save-as / I: File-text / J: File-vector / K: File-graphic / L: New / M: New-text / N: New-vector / O: New-graphic / P: New-type / Q: Compress / R: Font-kit / S: Font-stack / T: Alert / U: Prompt / V: AppleLink / W: Fax / X: Fax-to / Y: Command / Z: Dogcow (Clarus).
a: Print / b: Arrow / c: Hand / d: Inbox / e: Inbox-in / f: Inbox-out / g: Mail-drown / h: Mail-wings / i: News-headlines / j: Newspaper / k: Easy-access / l: Quick-access / m: Direct-access / n: Folder / o: Folder-speedy / p: Folder-hierarchy / q: Compress / r: Box / s: Desk-drawer / t: Top-drawer / u: Global / v: Library / w: Personal-archive / x: Threaded / y: Volume / z: Zoom.
0: OK / 1: New-blank-file / 2: Pencil / 3: Eraser / 4: Lasso / 5: (Idem) / 6: Brush / 7: Fill / 8: Spray / 9: Apple-logo.
modeled after the damage control © text
A replication of the Panasonic Omnivision VCR bitmap. Now, that I have a Panasonic Omnivision VCR for myself, the model being a PV-V4520, I can make this font with ease and 100% accuracy.
This font is not entirely accurate. Please point out errors so I can fix them in the forseeing future.
This is a clone of VCRStereoCyrremake of interceptor by iconian fonts
Here's a recreation of a font that is very near and dear to my heart. I found it was actually quite a fun challenge to match each character as closely as I could, but I did take a few liberties on the punctuation characters especially.
A recreation of the font used on the early CRT terminals from IBM, based on this source by Marcin Wichary.
I find there is a particular charm in the crudeness of some solutions compared to subsequent iterations or other 5x7 pixel fonts (see, for example, the numerals and |C|U|Y|).
I reproduced only the characters shown in the aforelinked image, placing them in what I considered to be the appropriate Unicode place.
I tried to look for some more glyphs (comma anyone?) but failed to find reliable sources.
This is Nokia Sans Small Condensed, you might have seen it on your old Nokia phones running with Series 30 or 40 operating systems. Redesigned by ChildishRifty7.
Thanks to ">gtrx<, my E52 good" and Romphonix Club for gathering the font resources of Series 40 3rd Version.
Made under 2 hours at first release.
Changelog:
Nov. 22, 2022 - First Release
Dec. 3, 2022 - Added Indian Rupee letter.
Dec. 25, 2022 - Adjustment and fixes.
Here’s a Remake of the original font from the Gammation Logo.
I tried my best recreating all the Existing Characters. But the New Characters I Made Just for this Font!
For Now, The Private Use Area Only Contains Variations of Existing Letters.
Suggest New Characters and Fixes for Existing Characters in the Comments!
Will (Hopefully) be Updated Frequently!