Southwest Spikes was inspired by southwest design, and is comprised of triangular aspects that make up such designs. It is a decorative typeface to be used as a large size display font, not for body copy. It would be best used vectorized with elements of color.
A bold and old Western esque typeface, Wayne is perfect for display type uses. This modern serif type face redefines a Western type feeling which immediately reminds me of my Dad and the constant reruns of old cowboy shows on our TV. With my Dad in mind, I also think of hockey and the player Wayne Gretzky comes to mind since Wayne is often used as a cowboy name. This thought process of cowboys and hockey ultimately led to the decision to name my typeface Wayne.
This is a cloneThis stylish pixel font is a combined recreation of the original font appearing in the SNES brawler Kouryuu no Mimi and the font used for the inofficial English fan translation. Both fonts are very different in style, shape and measurements, but I mixed them together as there are no overlaps on any glyphs.
The character set of Kouryuu includes a vast array of additional diacritic variants (which do not appear in-game), number variations, bonus characters, unique glyphs, and also full sets of the Japanese hiragana and katakana alphabets and other Asian glyphs from the original Japanese version of the game. Every character that doesn't pop up in the game has been designed to match the look and feel of the base characters.
I recommend to use this one with font sizes that are multiple of 11pt and avoid any font smoothing or anti aliasing methods.
~ Kouryuu by Caveras - a font recreation based on original fonts from the SNES game Kouryuu no Mimi, developed and released by VAP in 1995. ~
This is a cloneA font inspired by 8-bit Operator+ and Chicago.
Originally, I was just going to make some letters and release it, but I ended up tweaking the letters a tiny bit every day. After a few weeks, I finally decided that it's good enough to publish. I'm not proud of some of the letters, such as the K's, but I might try to fix them later.
I might add more letters one day.
Based on the title text on the front of an M.C. Escher calender I had decades ago. Each letter is defined by inscribing lines into a square. This would probably be an interesting font for engraving and embossing.