I'm very new at creating fonts, and am using this site mostly to create a font for use with a hobby language I'm playing with, not to mention having fun with that creativity. So far, I have created two fonts that were for fun/learning how to, named "Krinkle and Spike" and "Flower Garden". The other two are for use in my hobby language, which I've named "Neso". My username in this site, Niyesi, is derived from Neso, and means "speaker of Neso".
1601521
Published: 9th January, 2015
Last edited: 10th January, 2015
Created: 9th January, 2015
Clone of Neso Classic. This is an adapted version for a different hobby language.This is a clone of Neso Classic
101990
Published: 9th April, 2014
Last edited: 9th April, 2014
Created: 21st January, 2013
Solid letter forms, with vine and flower-like designs intertwined in the letters.This is a clone
80990
Published: 9th April, 2014
Last edited: 9th April, 2014
Created: 15th January, 2013
This is a 2nd font I created while learning how to use FontStruct. Again, like its "sister" Flower Garden, it is strictly for fun.
2301493
Published: 9th April, 2014
Last edited: 17th June, 2014
Created: 28th March, 2014
This script, within the context of the culture and people using it, is adapted a bit more for less formal occasions. The other font, Neso Classic, is the "master" version, and both are still being tweaked.This is a clone of Neso Classic
9001253
Published: 9th April, 2014
Last edited: 18th October, 2014
Created: 15th December, 2012
This font is for a hobby language I'm working on called "Neso" in its original form. This font, in the context of the "culture", is more for formal writing, monuments and official documents. The dot with some of the letters is a voicing dot, which voices that consonant's unvoiced version. For those sound groups, such as r and l, and y and w, where all members are voiced, the dot changes position in relation to the basic letter to express both voicing and place of articulation. Nasal sounds are an exception. /m/ has no dot, /n/ inside, and /ŋ/ above the base letter form. In this case, the dotting represents a change in the place of articulation.
This font and its clone Neso Fine are undergoing intermittent tweaking as I try to make them easier to read and to write. At some point I hope to come up with a more cursive version.This is a clone