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.
1:1 2:2 3:3 4:4 5:5 6:6 7:7 8:8 9:9 0:0 -:sch ^:'
q:ch w:y e:e r:r t:t y:j u:u i:i o:o p:p @:ʺ [:yu
a:a s:s d:d f:f g:g h:h j:zh k:k l:l ;:ye ::yo ]:ya
z:z x:sh c:c v:v b:b n:n m:m ,:, .:. _:-
!:! ":" ':' (:( ):) =:SCH ~:'
Q:CH W:Y E:E R:R T:T Y:J U:U I:I O:O P:P `:ʺ {:YU
A:A S:S D:D F:F G:G H:H J:ZH K:K L:L +:YE *:YO }:YA
Z:Z X:SH C:C V:V B:B N:N M:M ?:?
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.
My first attempt at the Kayah Li script used to write Kayah Li spoken in Burma/Myanmar and also in Thailand. It was created by Htae Bu Phae in 1962. I based my design on the relatively blocky font used over on Omniglot. I'm not that happy about the result though. Letters were made on a 9×11 grid which allowed me to make vertical lines thicker than horizontal. It makes for very blocky letters though. I was hoping to create something similar to my Tai Le font but the letters simply didn't lend themselves to the same level of fluidity.
Kayah Li was added to the Unicode standard in version 5.1 in 2008. This font however uses an ad-hoc mapping to Ascii characters. The only real oddity are the tone markers mapped to 'f', 'j' and 'q'.
The script is a true alphabet with all vowels written out. There are however only four vowel letters: ‹a›, ‹oe›, ‹i› and ‹oo›. The rest are written as ‹a› plus a diacritic.
Heptal is an alternative alphabet for English created by Katie Molnar. The original can be found here: http://www.omniglot.com/conscripts/heptal.htm
The original script uses overlines to identify vowels which join together when next to each other. The extended vowels á (acute) begins the join the à (grave) ends the join and the ä (diaresis) is the middle of a join - each vowel has an equivalent.
The original script also has 3 varieties of s. Use the S for the capital, the s for an s in the middle of the word and a $ for a final s.
Finally, all sentences should be started with an _ (underscore).
This is a cloneMy 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.
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.
1:1 2:2 3:3 4:4 5:5 6:6 7:7 8:8 9:9 0:0 -:- ^:-ā
q:q w:w e:-ī r:r t:t y:y u:-u i:-i o:-ū p:ʾ @:a [:th
a:-a s:s d:d f:f g:gh h:h j:j k:k l:l ;:; ::: ]:dh
z:z x:sh c:kh v:ʿ b:b n:n m:m ,:, .:. /:/ _:ḥ
!:! “:" ‘:' (:( ):)
W:ū E:-e R:o T:ṭ Y:ī U:u I:i O:-o P:p
A:ā S:ṣ D:ḍ G:g J:e L:ɫ
Z:ẓ C:ch V:v ?:?
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.
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.
1:qian hard 2:wang death 3:he grain 4:ri sun 5:tian field 6:yang sheep 7:wang net 8:fei deny 9:xi west 0:zi nose -:bian sort ^:shan mountain
q:quan dog w:mu tree e:xue hole r:shi spirit t:tu soil y:ya fang u:zhu bamboo i:mian house o:yu rain p:bei shell @:mo no [:ci this
a:shang respect s:si string d:tian field f:er ear g:jian see h:zhe person j:zhui bird k:shi stone l:li stand ;:li queue :: ]:zhui bird
z:zi child x:xin heart c:cun inch v:nv woman b:gan dry n:niao bird m:ma horse ,:lin woods .:ci next /:yu wing _:shao few
space:cao grass
!:juan roll ":wen text #:fen divide $:sai block %:tu soil &:tu born ':sheng grow (:chen time ):jiu mill =:er two ~:niu ox |:shi ten
Q:jin cloth W:shou hand E:li stand R:ri sun T:dou bean Y:yi clothes U:mu tree I:ying light O:kou mouth P:mu eye `:zhua nail {:xi meat
A:shi male S:si own D:dao knife F:rou meat G:gong give H:huo fire J:ji table K:kou mouth L:li power +:tou lid *:he fit }:jin now
Z:zheng correct X:shi ten C:che car V:ren leg B:ba eight N:niu cow M:min dish <:ba eight >:bu not ?:ren entrust
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.
The Namak script was originally derived from a logographic script and used for the language of Namariehak around 5000 years ago, but has since then spread and has become the most widely used script on Notasami. It is a bicameral, alphabetic script that uses a base-10 number system. This is a sans-serif, simple font along with the four Santieng diacritics.
1:que 2:qui 3:we 4:de 5:ti 6:he 7:yu 8:hu 9:yo 0:li -:- ^:hi
q:qua w:wa e:e r:te t:ta y:ya u:u i:i o:o p:le @:tla [:ni
a:a s:s d:da f:tse g:ga h:ha j:dla k:ka l:la ;:me ::: ]:no
z:sa x:se c:tsa v:v b:ne n:na m:ma ,:, .:. /:tsi _:mi
!:! ":quo #:quv $:sv %:di &:ge ':' (:gi ):go =:ho ~:lv |:nah
Q:quu W:wi E:ye R:dv T:do Y:yv U:wu I:yi O:wo P:lo `:tli {:tle
A:hna S:su D:du F:tsv G:gu H:hv J:tlu K:gv L:lu +:tlv *:tso }:tlo
Z:so X:si C:tsu V:wv B:nv N:nu M:mu <:mo >:mv ?:?
The Namak script was originally derived from a logographic script and used for the language of Namariehak around 5000 years ago, but has since then spread and has become the most widely used script on Notasami. It is a bicameral, alphabetic script that uses a base-10 number system. This is a serifed version of the script resembling the original, traditional way of writing it, and includes the four Santieng diacritics.
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
Another script for morse code. This one is closer to what I use when writing. Still struggling with multiple dashes in central or final positions, which leads to difficulty depicting numerals and punctuation... I'm playing around with other ways of showing this.
1:nu 2:fu 3:a 4:u 5:e 6:o 7:ya 8:yu 9:yo 0:wa -:ho ^:he
q:ta w:te e:i r:su t:ka y:n u:na i:ni o:ra p:se @:voiced [:h→p
a:chi s:to d:shi f:ha g:ki h:ku j:ma k:no l:ri ;:re ::ke ]:mu
z:tsu x:sa c:so v:hi b:ko n:mi m:mo ,:ne .:ru /:me _:ro
!:pu ":bu #:-a $:-u %:-e &:-o ':-ya (:-yu ):-yo =: ~: |:long vowel
Q:da W:de E:-i R:zu T:ga Y:ve U:vi I:wi O:va P:ze `:po {:pe
A:dji S:do D:ji F:ba G:gi H:gu J:pa K:dzu L:pi +:vu *:ge }:we
Z:t X:za C:zo V:bi B:go N:vo M:wo <:, >:. ?:?
1:nu 2:fu 3:a 4:u 5:e 6:o 7:ya 8:yu 9:yo 0:wa -:ho ^:he
q:ta w:te e:i r:su t:ka y:n u:na i:ni o:ra p:se @:voiced [:h→p
a:chi s:to d:shi f:ha g:ki h:ku j:ma k:no l:ri ;:re ::ke ]:mu
z:tsu x:sa c:so v:hi b:ko n:mi m:mo ,:ne .:ru /:me _:ro
!:pu ":bu #:-a $:-u %:-e &:-o ':-ya (:-yu ):-yo =: ~: |:long vowel
Q:da W:de E:-i R:zu T:ga I:wi O:wo P:ze `:po {:pe
A:dji S:do D:ji F:ba G:gi H:gu J:pa +:vu *:ge }:we
Z:t X:za C:zo V:bi B:go N:pi M:dzu <:, >:. ?:?