“Devinne Ornament” Typeface by URW Type Foundry
Originally developed in Paris circa 1900, this Art Noveau-esque display typeface has been digitized for your eye-catching headline needs.
Originally developed in Paris circa 1900, this Art Noveau-esque display typeface has been digitized for your eye-catching headline needs.
Romantic and curvy, like a roadtrip should be, Voyage is a very seductive yet bold display typeface.
A definitive and beautifully designed survey of ’70s, ’80s, and early ’90s arcade game pixel typography.
The font that can smile or be sad. Everything you type has a face, a typeface!
This jighly decorative all-capitals typeface evokes Victorian-era styling — perfect for adding a retro-European vibe to product packaging and more.
A visually striking, almost over-the-top typeface with absolutely gorgeous letterforms. Designed to say something loud and proud.
Modern reinterpretations of a collection of classic typefaces that date all the way back to the Renaissance.
Quincy's warm, rounded letterforms provide a pleasant reading experience. It also works as a stately display font.
The latest in a series of annual tear-off calendars featuring a different font for each date of the year.
A modern (and gorgeous!) reinterpretation of Marvin, a science fiction-style typeface originally designed in 1969.
A new typeface that turns typed numerals into inline data visualizations (aka sparklines).
Mark Simonson's beautiful font just got a nice update, with three new weights — Thin, Extrabold, and Black — and some useful new features.
Earnest and forceful, compact but not crowded.
A straight-talkin', industrial-strength typeface in three weights and with support for over 100 languages.
A new typeface designed for text, text, and nothing but text.
A book of punk rock gig posters reinterpreted in Swiss modernist style.
A new typeface rooted in the traditions of typewriting but designed for modern designers and developers.
Ever had trouble picking the right typeface for a project? This poster/flowchart will help.
People have mixed feelings about Comic Sans. "Civilians" love the font for its casual handwritten look, while designers just love to hate it. Graphic designer Craig Rozynski decided he'd had enough of this divide, and designed a new typeface intended to make both camps happy: Comic Neue. In Craig's own words: “The squashed, wonky, and weird glyphs of Comic Sans have been…