But you can access s of more fonts—from cursive fonts to cool fonts and other trendy styles. Text fonts are a crucial part of your branding design, but ironically, this aspect of branding is usually overlooked. You can create excellent illustrations, images, and other graphic content but if the font on your site or in your branded assets is less than rocking, it could easily turn a reader away.
When designing your brand identity, you must use a consistent set of fonts, each with a specific purpose. Make sure the fonts are legible. They are needed for headings, titles, subtitles, and body text in any collateral or online materials. Consider the weight and size of each font, along with the style.
Make sure that the different choices you select are harmonious with one another. Choose a style that is different from your competitors and translates the personality of your brand. And, most importantly, the font you select should always be easy on the eyes. Nobody likes working with copy that requires squinting to read. Founded in , FontSpace is a designer-centered font website that has quick customizable previews and hassle-free downloads.
Every font is added and categorized by a real person. Each font is reviewed by a FontSpace moderator, checked for font quality issues, and licenses are verified. With an ever-increasing amount of unethical font websites available, we strive to be THE source for legitimate and clearly licensed fonts. Whether you are a professional graphics designer, crafter, hobbyist, teacher, or student, we hope you enjoy the fonts here.
At FontSpace, we pay attention to the fine print. As such, we only provide fonts that are licensed and fully authorized for use. However, there are a lot of font websites operating under false pretenses and, unfortunately, offer fonts that are not actually licensed.
While Walking along the shore of our Main Port to Europe in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, my 14 year old son Jules first hardly dared to step in the mud for he was wearing his brand new sneakers. Concentrating in where he put his feet, he noticed he made a character! The FootPrint-Regular was born! Very Loose by Page Studio Graphics Very Loose is a new alphabetic font. A casual display face with a design personality providing great versatility of association.
Thoroughly pair-kerned, including all accented characters for use in western European languages. Food Doodles by Outside the Line Each tiny illustration is offered as a line drawing and a reverse. Great for menus or to add a little fun to inter office communications. Use the pickle as a header for memos.
Fools Gold by BA Graphics A throwback to the 70s, a graphic design with a lot of different applications. Beat Fool by PizzaDude. Beat Fool is my latest layered font. I love making layered fonts, because the possibilities are almost endless!
Play around with transparency and your favourite colorschemes and patterns to create awesome effects! Beat Fool comes in two layers that plays well together. One layer is solid and can be used for shadow, fill, texture or other creative parts of your design.
The second layer is the "Regular" one - the outline that made the basis for the font. I wanted the handmade and handwritten brushstrokes visible, to keep the flaws which makes the look more authentic. Every letter has 4 different versions, again to make things more natural and kind of random!
Both layers can be used alone or as described, together - and since it has multilingual support, you can be creative in all kinds of languages! Fine Food by Jeff Levine Mother Goose by Fonthead Design Mother Goose contains 1 style. Umbilical Noose by Hanoded Umbilical Noose is a rather scary typeface. It is quite similar to an older font of mine: Nyctophobia. The name comes from a Nirvana song called Heart Shaped Box, in which Kurt Cobain sings: "throw down your umbilical noose, so I can climb right back".
I have always liked that phrase a lot. Umbilical Noose is an all caps font, but upper and lower case are different and you can easily interchange the glyphs. Slow Foot by PizzaDude. What's the hurry? Because of this, serif fonts are popular fonts for long blocks of text like books, newspapers, and magazine articles. Brush fonts include artistic details meant to make them appear hand-painted. You can typically see lines that make each individual letter look as though someone took the time to handcraft the words rather than type them.
These artistic details make brush fonts a popular choice for greeting cards, posters, and rustic themed websites. Handwriting fonts imitate real handwriting, making them appear authentic, intimate, and classic.
These fonts are available in many different styles, from whimsical to elegant and everything in-between. Looking to download free fonts in the handwriting style? Take a look at Hello Ketta and Great Day! Or browse our selection of cursive font styles. Perfect for posters, cards, and website headings, these fonts are pure nostalgia from a simpler time.
Looking to add an urban edge to your next project?
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