30271
Published: 31st December, 2010
Last edited: 8th January, 2011
Created: 31st December, 2010
I am still working to fix all the little errors/pixels. Please suggest something I can do about this. I mean, look at the G!
160653
Published: 15th November, 2010
Last edited: 15th November, 2010
Created: 11th November, 2010
This sans serif is an extended typeface that uses only uppercase letters that are wider than they are tall disregarding x-height. FatBot Sans is named so because of the expression of letterforms that look robotic but are extremely exaggerated in the extension and have fatty qualities. Imagine an obese robot sitting on a sheet of paper, that is the nature of FatBot Sans.
60711828
Published: 13th November, 2010
Last edited: 13th November, 2010
Created: 9th November, 2010
A "deconstructed" exercise. I got the idea when I fontstructed in a grid that turned out to be a bit narrow. I could only place two of three horizontal lines where I wanted them, so I decided to see what happened if I simply skipped the third. The result turned out to be quite legible even though many glyphs had gaps where the important baseline should be. I especially liked the lower case letters. The concept is presumably not unique though...
2531224
Published: 19th October, 2010
Last edited: 19th October, 2010
Created: 13th October, 2010
Tired of Eurostile? Well here is Aerostyle! Inspired by Masayuki Sato & Tsuyoshi Nagae at Maniackers Design.
2001144
Published: 2nd October, 2010
Last edited: 13th October, 2010
Created: 1st October, 2010
Square meets slab. Inspired by "FF Tsunami" by Donald Beekman. My variant is more stiff and mechanic. Adds some alternative/lower case characters.
642011
Published: 7th May, 2010
Last edited: 13th July, 2010
Created: 25th April, 2010
A pixel font I'm working on for my website. Not Done yet. I'm trying to make a many of the glyphs as I can. Please vote!
Last Edit:
- Made "s" readable
- Added all "Extended Latin"
88126626
Published: 11th April, 2010
Last edited: 27th April, 2010
Created: 17th March, 2010
A very small grid size, and a large diversity of bricks, for a serif font reminding Italian food labels from the 50s and 60s.This is a clone
2451895
Published: 20th December, 2009
Last edited: 25th January, 2011
Created: 19th December, 2009
A “finger” version of Noptical.
I’m not yet 100% sure of the curves’ placement on all characters. But I think the overall appearance is pleasing :-)This is a clone of Noptical
2722072
Published: 6th December, 2009
Last edited: 13th April, 2020
Created: 5th December, 2009
What started as an experiment to reduce at the most the caps of Noptical, ended up with a Bauhaus-esque lower case (I find the "e" especially cute)This is a clone of Noptical
34111957
Published: 28th November, 2009
Last edited: 16th October, 2011
Created: 27th November, 2009
An ongoing try to use curves' radius as big as possible compared to the size of the letters. Alas, obviously without any optical correction whatsoever.
Using a near square grid obviously led to a Microgramma-like appearance.This is a clone of Noptical
1501523
Published: 3rd November, 2009
Last edited: 28th November, 2009
Created: 30th October, 2009
The bold extended weight of Haemophobe.This is a clone of Haemophobe
404992
Published: 28th October, 2009
Last edited: 11th November, 2009
Created: 28th October, 2009
The extended form of the Atlas family.This is a clone
3921905
Published: 27th October, 2009
Last edited: 26th May, 2010
Created: 27th October, 2009
A try to use curves' radius as big as possible compared to the size of the letters. Alas, obviously without any optical correction whatsoever.
There are some alternate characters too.
A more coherent version is Noptical (neé "Noptical short")This is a clone
711257015
Published: 24th October, 2009
Last edited: 28th November, 2009
Created: 17th October, 2009
More pxl love. And another expansion of Lex Kominek’s Trajedy majuscules.
The freshness of the original charmed me into creating an extended set of matching miniscules, diacritics, symbols and ligatures. But why stop there? :^)This is a clone
6358216
Published: 23rd July, 2009
Last edited: 26th July, 2009
Created: 8th July, 2009
For those who need to fill a long width with few characters, like the spine of a book or CD jacket.
1812060
Published: 22nd March, 2009
Last edited: 13th April, 2009
Created: 22nd March, 2009
Another square font with slightly rounded corners. Basic and extended Latin.
This fontstruction is made for programmers and coders. It's focused on beeing very small, monospaced and easy to read. It includes many international glyphs. It isn't possible to draw some very exotic letters at this small size, so I abstracted or modified them to still identify them or associate them with the original letter.
The additional information behind 'Pure Prog' have got the following meanings:
12 -> use font-size 12 to see the at original size (although fontstruction says its 16)
5x8 -> capital letters are 5 pixel wide and 8 pixel tall
Pixel -> pixelbased (just consists out of sqaure bricks)
mono -> monospaced/fixed width (every glyph has got the same width)
Compressed -> capital accent characters are compressed to same height as standart onesThis is a clone of PureProg 12 5x8 Pixel mono Dropped
This fontstruction is made for programmers and coders. It's focused on beeing very small, monospaced and easy to read. It includes many international glyphs. It isn't possible to draw some very exotic letters at this small size, so I abstracted or modified them to still identify them or associate them with the original letter.
The additional information behind 'Pure Prog' have got the following meanings:
12 -> use font-size 12 to see the at original size (although fontstruction says its 16)
5x8 -> capital letters are 5 pixel wide and 8 pixel tall
Pixel -> pixelbased (just consists out of sqaure bricks)
mono -> monospaced/fixed width (every glyph has got the same width)
Dropped -> some accent characters are dropped below the baseline to minimize letter heightThis is a clone of PureProg 12 5x8 Pixel mono Normal
287684721
Published: 6th March, 2009
Last edited: 22nd June, 2009
Created: 4th March, 2009 This fontstruction is made for programmers and coders. It's focused on beeing very small, monospaced and easy to read. It includes many international glyphs. It isn't possible to draw some very exotic letters at this small size, so I abstracted or modified them to still identify them or associate them with the original letter.
The additional information behind 'Pure Prog' have got the following meanings:
12 -> use font-size 12 to see the at original size (although fontstruction says its 16)
5x8 -> capital letters are 5 pixel wide and 8 pixel tall
Pixel -> pixelbased (just consists out of sqaure bricks)
mono -> monospaced/fixed width (every glyph has got the same width)
Normal -> normal version (there are some variantions existing)
190870
Published: 16th January, 2009
Last edited: 18th January, 2009
Created: 16th January, 2009
A kind of retro type This is a clone of Kromos Ultra Black Extended