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Showing posts with the label italic

Download Concasse Font Family From Lillan Team

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Download Concasse Font Family From Lillan Team The family comes in five weights from Thin to Black, all with true italics; and a variable file in weight and slant. Concasse is multi-purpose and reads well in body copy, the open shapes ensure excellent legibility in even the smallest text sizes, while the lightest and boldest weights deliver impact to headlines and other display uses. Download Concasse Font Family From Lillan Team Download Now View Gallery

Download Spantaran Font Family From Nurf Designs

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Download Spantaran Font Family From Nurf Designs Spantaran is a sporty display typeface which is very suitable for logos, titles, player names on the jersey, and more. It was made with italic & bold characters which give it a strong feel. Download Spantaran Font Family From Nurf Designs Download Now View Gallery

Download Magnate Font Family From Stiggy & Sands

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Download Magnate Font Family From Stiggy & Sands The Magnate Family began as a digitization of a film typeface from LetterGraphics known as “Wilshire”. What began as a basic glyphset was fleshed out with a full character set with a smallcaps feature. We also decided to add a slightly more delicate side to Magnate, softening up the sharp flair serifs just a little. See the 5th graphic for a comprehensive character map preview. Opentype features include: - Full set of Inferiors and Superiors for limitless fractions. - SmallCaps feature. - Tabular and Proportional figure sets. - A small collection of Standard Ligatures. - A Stylistic Alternates feature for an alternate lowercase t style. Approx. 687 Character Glyph Set: Each style of Magnate comes with a glyphset that includes standard &a

Download Pagnol Font Family From Typorium

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Download Pagnol Font Family From Typorium The Pagnol typeface has been designed with a principle developed by A. M. Cassandre in 1937, when the great French designer created the Peignot typeface following paleographic studies on the evolution of letterforms. Researches in the history of writing have proved that the lowercase “a” is at its origin nothing but the “A” shape transformed through centuries by scribes until the invention of printing. A large number of lowercases meanwhile kept their original shapes. If the scribes’ hand didn’t find the necessity to simplify them, it is only because these letters could be easily written. Integrating the classical shapes of capitals to the lowercases has already been used, keeping the lowercases which are only a deformation of capitals. Nevertheless, the respect of readability imposes to keep ascend