1071545181
Published: 14th May, 2008
Last edited: 8th August, 2009
Created: 14th May, 2008
Mostly inspired by the video game QBert, which was, I'm sure, partly inspired by M. C. Escher.
IsoMatrix was a font long before Fontstruct, and was much harder to realize with bricks than vectors.
This one is shared thanks to the intricate 3D output of the following fontstructors:
shasta's Escheresk,
frodo's Hommage a Escher,
and
funk king's Soma.
It is also released for Em42, because it was created purely with the original set of bricks that Fontstruct started out with.This is a clone
1102675
Published: 11th April, 2008
Last edited: 5th April, 2020
Created: 11th April, 2008
"Smoothed out on an R&B tip with a pop appeal to it."
Pseudo Pixel font sans any perpendicularities. Scales nicely.
501110
Published: 27th April, 2024
Last edited: 8th September, 2015
Created: 8th September, 2015
Clone of Space Frontier - Basic Latin (ALPHA v.0.1).
This One Features More Latin Characters, a Different letter "A", among other correctionsThis is a clone of Space Frontier - Basic Latin (ALPHA v.0.1)
1135733
Published: 27th April, 2024
Last edited: 4th December, 2013
Created: 4th December, 2013
More ridiculousness. Zoom in and see for yourself.
Created for layering effects. Caps are decorated, lowercase letters become backdrops. Sketched back in September.
Laynecom's splendid Lush Caps reminded me of it, hence the edit I created off of his creation.This is a clone
160543
Published: 27th April, 2024
Last edited: 2nd October, 2013
Created: 21st September, 2013
fsHalf is a somewhat monospaced font -created using fontstruct.
A sequence of any two characters forms a perfect square, except m or w, which are squares already.
191446
Published: 27th April, 2024
Last edited: 26th April, 2013
Created: 26th April, 2013
Permutation: The act of changing the arrangement of a given number of elements.
One font, two different brick combinations.
Picking any two bricks from the 169 available gives a total possible combinations of 14196 (169C2) different fonts. Counting a certain kinds of bricks as one--all four 45degree, for instance--gives 36 unique bricks, resulting in 630 (36C2) unique combinations or fonts.
In this font, if the bricks are swapped with each other, the result will be a different font. Hence order of the bricks matter. In which case, nCr (combinations) is not the right choice. What's needed is nPr (permutations). 169P2 gives 28392 permutations and a 36P2 gives 1260 permutations.
So, at a minimum, 1260 fonts are possible with the current implementation of FontStruct, with just this particular layout of bricks.