901592
Published: 25th June, 2010
Last edited: 25th June, 2010
Created: 19th June, 2010
A blocky font, best used in ONLY UPPERCASE or ONLY lowercase. I still think it looks funky weird when I do uppercase and lowercase at the same time.
Also best used large-sized, not Pixel base.
If you have any recommendation on how to make some characters that are missing, or some other characters that you think look a bit wonky, a comment is appreciated ~
77124627
Published: 23rd May, 2010
Last edited: 23rd May, 2010
Created: 23rd January, 2010
An unoriginal idea that's been sitting around for a while. Don't go by the January 2010 creation date, no; this is a clone of a clone of a different idea (which may see the light of day yet...or not, whichever comes first ;).This is a clone
93930
Published: 30th December, 2009
Last edited: 31st December, 2009
Created: 28th November, 2009
This font was inspired from the font the Air Force Reserve uses as part of their logo. If it might look better, I'll add lowercase later. Tell me what you think!
1422672
Published: 9th November, 2009
Last edited: 7th November, 2009
Created: 3rd November, 2009
I used to find difficult working with non-English text when using pixel-based fonts because they often lacked characters.
Any constructive opinions are welcome =D Please, be gentle.
Being the first font I ever worked on, I decided to do very simple letter forms including characters I often use when typing in Spanish, French and Swedish, and even adding some Katakana.
80673
Published: 7th November, 2009
Last edited: 16th November, 2009
Created: 26th October, 2009
For my font I tried searching for a new meaning to explore the theme of curves. I did this by approaching it in a different manor by looking into the value of 3D curves, for example poles. This was then developed from phone masts into the forms of aerial and radar. Its name derives from my view that the font Arial could be updated and made more exciting and I did this in a literal way, its primarily a headline font, but could also be used for logos, especially within the telecommunication industry.
50261
Published: 18th August, 2009
Last edited: 18th August, 2009
Created: 18th August, 2009
This is my first font, so I thought I would just make it free for everyone.
The font just consists of uppercase letters, no numbers, punctuations or lowercase letters.
123533
Published: 8th August, 2009
Last edited: 8th August, 2009
Created: 28th July, 2009
Bird's eye view or Worm's eye view.
Or use alternate cases to create a zig-zag effect.
3906162
Published: 18th July, 2009
Last edited: 14th July, 2009
Created: 8th July, 2009
‘int’ stands for ‘international’ as this font covers multiple scripts.
It’s not beautiful, but it has a lot of (uppercase) glyphs to start from. It’s more like a showcase of what is possible in a rectangle 5 pixels wide and 7 pixels tall.
190552
Published: 1st December, 2008
Last edited: 6th December, 2008
Created: 30th November, 2008
A font for titles/posters
P.S: "Cabbage cake" is a phrase I use to test my fonts once I have designed letters a-k.
14411516
Published: 1st December, 2008
Last edited: 31st December, 2021
Created: 29th November, 2008
Bridge is a thick and heavy, geometric typeface designed to emulate the look of industrial stencil lettering.
170812
Published: 19th November, 2008
Last edited: 3rd December, 2008
Created: 17th November, 2008
I used the "font" that my Texas Instruments TI-84 PLUS calculator uses.
330790
Published: 1st October, 2008
Last edited: 2nd October, 2008
Created: 27th September, 2008
NON_proportional (FIXED) UPPER CASE CHARS, SEMIgraphic lines, Euro & Dollar sign,
lower "a" is a FIXED SPACE.
417127023
Published: 15th September, 2008
Last edited: 22nd June, 2009
Created: 15th September, 2008
This was fun for me...just for feel some freedom on the grid.
The lowercase contains alternates characters, so... there are two possibilities of uppercase, adding more handwritting feeling.
18192610
Published: 12th September, 2008
Last edited: 16th June, 2009
Created: 12th September, 2008
Inspired in a travel poster ( WPA, 1936) designed by Jerome Roth.
Only uppercase