My take on the Mongolian 'Phags-pa script designed by the Tibetan monk Phagspa in 1269, based on the Tibetan script, to write Mongolian, Tibetan, Sanskrit and Chinese. This font is based on the Tibetan style which consists almost entirely of straight lines and right angles. It seemed like a prime candidate for a FontStruct treatment. I've added rounded corners and serifs to make it more visually interesting.
The script is written in vertical columns top-to-bottom and left-to-right and thus needs to be rotated 90° clockwise and the columns then reversed.
'Phags-pa was added to the Unicode standard in version 5.0 in 2006. This font however uses an ad-hoc mapping to Ascii characters which admittedly doesn't always make sense. I kind of gave up in the end and started assigning a bunch of letters to digits. Letters are connected into syllable block by a thin line (mapped to '-'), usually on the right-hand side. A straight line clashed wth the serifs so I made it into a small arch.
The script is an abugida: the vowel ‹a› is inherent in each syllable and thus not written.
Vykra is a conlang script based on the concept of a syllabic alphabet and inspired by plants.
The upper case is the plant body, while the lowercase is the root. As such it is necessary to write this script in alternating case (AlTeRnAtInG CaSe) so as to place an upper and lower case letter together.
The full stop symbol is used for words consisting of one letter to provide a root.
Here is the second version of the Unlu script font.
This one has been called Unlu Light as it is significantly smaller than the original with cleaner lines and angles.
In addition to the Unlu v.1 letters and usage this version includes more punctuation and the numbers 0-9.
Matriarc is a linear script of flowing lines orditing central circles. This is used as a standard alphabet with the upper and lowercase vowels having a different distance to the main line to allow aesthetic placement.
This, as the name suggests, is a cubic version of the script helix. This variation removes all curved lines and approached the script with a box look rather than the traditional helix twist effect.
This has the same letter/punctuation as other helix variations.
This is a conlang font based on the SIGIL panel script which can be found on the Omniglot Website. Unlike the inspiration this font is alphabetical.
Note on the script: The script is formed from consonant-vowel pairs. If a pair cannot be made in the order consonant-vowel then an underscore [_] should be used for the consonant or a hyphen [-] for a vowel.
Marchen is a Brahmic script used in the Tibetan Bon tradition to write the extinct Zhang-zhung language. It can also be used to write Tibetan. It supposedly originated in the Zhang-zhung kingdom prior to the introduction of Tibetan Buddhism in the 7th century, but no texts from that time using the script are known.
Marchen was added to the Unicode standard in version 9 released in June 2016. This font is modelled very closely on the example characters in the Unicode chart which were designed (I think) by Andrew West. Like my other fonts it's not a Unicode font though but uses an ad-hoc ASCII mapping. Marchen, like the Tibetan script, relies heavily on vertically stacked consonants. I could in theory create precomposed compound characters for the most common stacks, but managing that with an ad-hoc encoding would be a nightmare. This makes the font rather useless. :P
My second biggest problem was that I wanted the vowel diacritics to be the same width as the base letters. These come in four widths. Add the medial 'y' which attaches to the right side of a letter and it turns into a huge mess. I solved this by creating extra "bars" that can be used to extend the diacritics.
font for the Quat language. note that:
the letter for /ɨ/ is mapped to the character Y
the letter for /j/ is mapped to the character J
the letter for /ʃ/ is mapped to the character H
the "number start" & "number end" symbols are mapped to [ and ] respectively
the letters can't connect; i don't want to manually draw out every syllable
This is a revision of the original Imrian script (my first fontstruct).
This revision has had some significant tweaks based on what I have learnt from my other designs.
The original script was laced with a strong botanical theme and draw from the Ogham language. All sentences should begin with a ( [open bracket] to create the root symbol. Words are then typed as in english using a - [hyphen] instead of a space. For example:
(The-quick-brown-fox-jumps-over-the-lazy-dog.
Enjoy!
This is a recent experiment on linear design. This includes all 26 letters in both upper and lower case a a small number of punctuation marks.
I wanted to try and create a stark linear script that would be easy and quick to write out in contrast with some of my more ornamental scripts.
This is a font for a new writing system called Qugu.
Qugu is really cool, because the letters go together and the SPACE is different from most fonts.
Currently, it is only compatible with Latin letters, and no accents yet.
This font is made for a special script I created. Readable characters appear, only if you write in the order Ccbv, where the syllables look like Cvc.
C means a uppercase consonant, c means a lowercase consonant, v means a vowel and b is binding ("(/){|}[\]"). Numbers are in base 12, with the digits being "0123456789.,", a comma is written like ' and a full stop like ''.
c=Palatal lateral approximant,
q=Uvular trill,
r=Alveloar trill,
w=Bilabial trill,
x=Velar nasal,
y=Mid central vowel.
<=uppercase glottal stop
>=lowercase glottal stop
If you follow the writing rules, you might be able to write a word, such as
H>}aVs{o = /havos/
or
F>{oNt|ySt|yR>|aKt}y = /fonytsytrakyt/
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1HwjCrQHwI_nhp6PH5J2H3y2veBSlhdMpe5h17L0u0rU/edit?usp=sharing
This is, in fact, a script for Morse code. Dots are like a cursive i, and dashes are above or below the line. Multiple dash letters P and J have doubled loops. Still a work in progress, numbers and punctuation to come.
1:zh 2:ch 3:sh 4:(zh, ch, sh, r, z, c, s)-i 5:-ai 6:-i-(V) 7:-u-(V) 8:---ng 9:---n 0:-o -:-ei ^:--ê
q:q w:w e:-e r:r t:t y:y u:u i:i o:-o p:p @:--a [:-ou
a:-a s:s d:d f:f g:g h:h j:j k:k l:l ;:-ng ::-n ]:-ao
z:z x:x c:c v:ü b:b n:n m:m ,:, .:. /:! _:yu-
!:tone1 ":tone2 #:tone3 $:tone4 %:-ai &:-i ':-u (:-ng ):-n =:--ei ~:-ê |:'
Q:ai W:wu E:e R:-r T:--r Y:yi U:-ü-(V) O:o `:、 {:--ou
A:a D:ei F:-e G:---r H:ê L:ou +:; *:: }:--ao
Z:ao V:yu B:----r <:( >:) ?:?
1:--k 2:--y 3:--w 4:--t 5:--tsw 6:--chy 7:t 8:--h 9:--n 0:n -:m ^:r
q:-yu w:w- e:-e r:r- t:t- y:y- u:-u i:-i o:-o p:p- @:-ya [:--kw
a:-a s:s- d:d- f:e g:g- h:h- j:i k:k- l:o ;:h ::k ]:--ky
z:z- x:a c:-yo v:u b:-b n:n- m:m- ,:, .:. /:! _:t
!:-k ":-y #:-w $:-t %:-tsw &:-chy ':' (:-h ):-n =:accent (V) ~:accent (Chinese loanword CV/VC) |:accent (Chinese loanword V)
W:w E:-we R:(-xu) Y:y U:-wu I:-wi O:-wo P:p {:-kw `:accent (CV)
A:-wa D:d F:-ye G:g H:(-xi) J:-yi K:(--xi) L:& +:accent (CVC) *:=/: }:-ky
Z:z V:(--xu) B:b N:(-m) M:(--m) <:( >:) ?:?
1:-ng 2:-ă 3:-e 4:tr 5:-t 6:-iê 7:-u/o 8:th 9:-n 0:-c -:-ươ ^:-ô
q:ng/ngh- w:-â e:-ê r:r t:t- y:-ư u:u/o- i:i/y- o:-o p:-p @:-ơ [:-ô(-c/ng)
a:-a s:x d:đ f:ph g:g/gh h:h- j:-i/y k:c/k/q- l:l- ;:-o(-c/ng) ::kh ]:nh-
z:d x:s c:ch- v:v b:b n:n- m:m- ,:, .:. /:! _:-m
!:ă ":--ă #:--e %:- $:e &:--iê ':' (:( ):) =:ưa ~:ô |:ia/ya
Q:a W:--â E:--ê R:ê T:ê(-ch/nh) Y:ư U:u I:--i/y O:o P:p- `:--ơ {:ô(-c/ng)
A:--a S:â D:a(-ch/nh) F:-a(-ch/nh) G:-ê(-ch/nh) H:--ê(-ch/nh) J:i/y K:ua L:-uô +:o(-c/ng) *:ơ }:-nh
Z:gi- C:-ch V:--a(-ch/nh) B:◌̀ N:◌̉ M:◌̃ <:◌́ >:़ ?:?
1:zh 2:: 3:ee 4:sh 5:th 6:ue 7:; 8:ie 9:ooe -:oo ^:ah
q:ng w:w e:e r:r t:t y:y u:u i:i o:o p:p @:ae [:aw
a:a s:s d:d f:f g:g h:h j:j k:k l:l ;:oe ::oy ]:ow
z:z x:dh c:ch v:v b:b n:n m:m ,:, .:. /:! _:-
!:ZH “:" #:EE $:SH %:TH &:UE ‘:' (:IE ):OOE =:OO ~:AH
Q:NG W:W E:E R:R T:T Y:Y U:U I:I O:O P:P `:AE {:AW
A:A S:S D:D F:F G:G H:H J:J K:K L:L +:OE *:OY }:OW
Z:Z X:DH C:CH V:V B:B N:N M:M <:( >:) ?:?
Glyphr is a combination of shapes, design and ideas which I have seen and love. The combination of then creates a very linear chicken scratch script.
Generally you should start every word with an uppercase in order to get the preparatory line, however, the script is equally effective without this.
Evikræyl is the product of a sudden flash of inspiration combined with a love for calligraphy and the aggressive illumination look.
All the basic latin letters are available along with the numbers and a few punctuation marks.
Evikræyl means 'words that stay' in Kallin'Erillian the conlang this script will be used for.
Klanara is the script generated for the conlang of the same name. The inspiration for this comes from a script called Oxidilogi available from Omniglot. The language is made up of consonant vowel pairs throughout and is structured to accommodate this pairing. There are some special characters. the ae and oe pair form a single vowel symbol in Klanara. Also the capital H and L are used to form the consonant pairs sh, ch, wh, th and kl. The lower case h and l are letters in their own right.