114128110
Published: 19th February, 2009
Last edited: 19th June, 2009
Created: 11th February, 2009
This came out of the same exercise that produced FIROX.This is a clone of fs FIROX
51078423
Published: 18th February, 2009
Last edited: 16th July, 2009
Created: 8th February, 2009
It started when kolarek posted the RÖFIX logo as his inspiration for his Blokinjo FontStruction. I wondered if that logo could be recreated exactly in FS. Turns out, it could. Having done that exercise, it was time to move on to play with other character designs. In a short while the whole set was done that matched the logo characters. Then the playing really began. Over the last 11 days, enough variations for each character were generated to fill three fonts. This is just one of those three.
$=Alt. s %=Alt. alt. s <=Alt. V >=Alt. W [=Alt. U ]=Alt. alt. W \=K |=Alt. S
13773439205
Published: 16th January, 2009
Last edited: 11th May, 2011
Created: 15th January, 2009
Lay The I Flat on top of this to fill in the missing parts.
9661417263
Published: 10th August, 2008
Last edited: 24th June, 2009
Created: 10th August, 2008
this electricity
injected into me
emotions running over me
and when you're getting close
you touch my innermost
a feeling deep inside me knows
—"circuit breaker", röyksopp
370943
Published: 23rd May, 2008
Last edited: 5th June, 2008
Created: 23rd May, 2008
I like both the uppercase and lowercase part of this font, but togheter they produce a strange mix. Anyway, it could be an option for a solid and nice hybrid case.This is a clone of Futuristica
73155612
Published: 3rd May, 2024
Last edited: 26th December, 2009
Created: 25th September, 2009
Syzygy was an attempt to create a typeface of old style characters with a high contrast between thicks & thins and attractive curves, despite the inherent limitations of fonstruct’s available blocks. The end result is a highly readable typeface — even at smaller sizes — comprised entirely of straight lines. While the astronomical definition talks about alignment, the word “syzygy” more broadly means “the union of disparate or opposing object, ideas or concepts”. Thus, the name “syzygy” is meant to reference the merger between old-style letters and a modern, computer-driven design tool — truly a meeting of opposites.