Fontstructing since | 6th April, 2020 |
Fontstructions | 53 shared, 0 staff picks |
Shared Glyphs | 14766 |
Downloads | 1263 downloads made of this designer’s work |
Comments Made | 28 |
This was cloned from Kazuhito Morita's Computer System 5x20.
Please note that the remaining glyphs you see have been positioned to the left side. You may have to use FontForge before you can edit this font.
This is a clone of Computer System 5x20This is version 6.1.0 of Unicode D, which now supports more Cyrillic supplements, Latin-B supplements, and Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols (they can't appear on any site, but you can download it just for free!).
Just issued on July 10th, 2020.
This is a clone of Unicode 5.0 (Unicode D Pre-Release)This is the current OS/2 Orca font which took inspiration from MS Sans Serif.
First established in January 16th, 1997.
This is a clone of OS2 Orca Pixel 2This is close to the Emergency Alert System caption/text, but it's different. Instead, it just looks like the signal for TV captions.
This is a clone of Teletext SignalRevamped with New Heathcliff Helvetica, this is the Unicode version with IPA and phonetic supplements as well as Latin Extended-D.
First edited on May 30th, 2021. Last edited and modified on June 25th, 2021.
This is a clone of New HTCLF HelveticaOpen International 1 is similar to that of Disney Subtitles 2021, but with a multilingual unicode font.
This is a clone of Disney Subtitles 2021Disney Subtitles 2021 is a new type of font which includes the serifness of the minuscule/majuscule letters of I, J, and L. It is said to be a comparison of Captions Inc., along with the popular Ascender UI and Andalé Sans.
This font was popularly introduced to many educational/filmographic DVDs such as the Schoolhouse Rock! series, Jim Henson's "The Muppets Take Manhattan", and many more. Some include a musical symbol (but only when no character or inanimate object is appearing in the scene and is to be shown in italics) according to a type of film/movie genre.
Last introduced from January 26th, 2001 to February 27th, 2002.
Published on Saturday, July 20th, 2019.
This is not exactly the Unicode version, but it is also a Basic Latin (along with the multilingual and supplements) font of the revamped Heathcliff Helvetica.
This is a clone of Heathcliff HelveticaHeathcliff Helvetica is a similar match between Helvetica and Neue Haas Grotesk. Same similar style than Helvetica, but a different trait than Morita Casual 2.
This is a clone of Heathcliff HelveticaMorita Casual 2 is the second installment of the now Morita Casual series. The second version of Morita Casual also identifies the handwriting made entirely by Kazuhito Morita, a sibling of Jōkichi Morita. This font pack was later reissued and installed to the public and media by January 25th, 2003.
Morita Casual is a perplexive, handwritten font that was once published through other MS-DOS games, but did not obtain an example of "Ready to Read with Pooh", since it is not yet still restored by the DOS system. Morita Casual may refer to Jōkichi or Kazuhito Morita's handwriting, but it cannot be reflected to Tolman, which is from Berkeley Softworks (1985), containing the GEOS FontPack 1 (C64 version). No similarities within this font is questioned.
This is pretty similar to Small Fonts, with a twist of MS Sans Serif and CEEFAX Teletext 2. Notice that it is not pretty much compared to Unicode 4.5. This was reissued no later than August 23rd, 1997.
During the mid-80s to the 1990s, the BBC Crew had to copy the same teletext/closed-captioning direct from the UK, but throughout the Americas, other local TV stations decided to broadcast a newspaper-styled page, although it doesn't appear to look like MS Sans Serif from the same computer in 1994. CEEFAX Teletext 3 was then launced in December 27th, 1989 and was reissued no more than April 14th, 1995.
The best for last Unicode D Release. It was then created on November 17th, 2020.
This is a clone of Unicode 4.5 (Unicode C Beta)The CEEFAX Bulletin consists of uppercase letters only.
Throughout early March 1998, in the UK, many CEEFAX pages have been updated, but in the US, when they show more pages, it recovers the same teletext style as mentioned in the UK.
The Log Sys Megatrends version doesn't resemble the Perfect DOS/Classic Console age of the American Megatrends BIOS, but it's perfect for BIOS information.
Log Sys Megatrends 2 resembles the recent Log Sys Alt, but this version has more than different numbers.
This is a clone of Log Sys MegatrendsCloser to Unicode 2.0, which it has the Latin glyphs.
It kind of has a phone-to-digital feel, and that the font is quite a good resemblance to Log Sys 1 Alt.
This is a clone of Unicode 2.0 (Latin Glyphs)This font was originally cloned from Unicode 2.0, which it has the Latin glyphs.
It wasn't made to display it by phones, but there's more than a deal for this existing font. The phone-to-computer age doesn't die yet!
This is a clone of Unicode 2.0 (Latin Glyphs)It's quite not the same version as Unicodes 2.0, 3.0 and 4.5, but it's pretty obvious that this font has a sleek and bold feeling to it.
It might probably become one of the most popular pixelated fonts in the computer age.
This is a clone of Log Sys 1 AltThe alternate version of the current font which is prone/ immune to coding.
Much like Unicodes 2.0, 3.0 and 4.5, it all has the same style along to our computer age.
It may seem that this font is developed for coding, but the further improvements for this font have clearly been updated.
This is a clone of Log Sys 1Unicode 4.5
Unicode C version. This is a beta release. More will be up-to-date soon.
This is a clone of Unicode 4.0 (Unicode C 2.0)