I like pixel art. Can you tell?
Fontstructing since | 9th April, 2016 |
Fontstructions | 20 shared, 0 staff picks |
Shared Glyphs | 1283 |
Downloads | 103 downloads made of this designer’s work |
Comments Made | 1 |
A translation of the conventional d'ni letters into their numbers. Looks good vertically, too.
The keymap is somewhere in the middle of the New Translation Standard and the original font. I found NTS imposible to type on a conventional keyboard, so I made it so that all letters can be represented by "default" keyboard keys.
OTS-Key(s)
v-v b-b t-t s-s sh-S,š j-j g-g
y-y kh-x k-K,k ah-a í-á-I f-f p-p i-i ee-í,E
eh-e ai-é,A r-r m-m th-þ,T dh-d,ð d-D
h-h o-o oy-ó,O ch-c w-w uh-u oo-ú,U
ts-C,X l-l a-æ,q,å z-z n-n
25-| 8roads-+ wrap-= 0-\
Using different keys for the same letters may give you different versions of the letter.
The period and < keys have been repurposed as brackets. use > for a normal period.
When monospace, lo-res fonts get REALLY silly....
Aka: Good luck reading this.
This is a clone of Inconcievable!Made for a conlang that I'm calling Snowfall. It's a syllable based language, like Japanese. Lowercase vowels are attached to the consonants, so typing {qka niri} gives you [q*][ka] [ni][ri]. For seperate vowels, use uppercase: typing {Eyin yari} gives you [e][yi][n] [ya][ri].
EDIT: This is probably going to morph into High Malar for the Cambrian conlang.
Punctuation:
'.' is put at the beginning of general statements.
'?' is put before questions, '@' is used before requests and clarifications, and '!' is used before emphatic expressions.
'*' is used at the end of a paragraph or supersentence.
Pronounciation Notes (for Snowfall, so that I don't forget):
Most consonants are pronounced like they are in English.
The q makes a sort of click sound, like a very very short T.
v is like an english v, but with a slight vibration. Hard to describe.
h by itself only appears in the Stratus and Nimbostratus dialects. It is pronounced like an English h.
A fictional alphabet designed for Spanish and English, with an optional extra for Portuguese (I think?). Works for all three, can be used with other latin-adjacent languages.
NOTE: 'Uppercase' letters are accented variants of normal letters. [Eg, to write 'Enseñar", you would type 'enseNar']. English texts should be written entirely in lowercase.
A semaphore-style braille font. Inspired by the Clacks towers in Terry Pratchett's "Going Postal".
Just a novelty, really, as I cannot see any practical use for a font like this...
I can't even see many impractical uses...
#GNUSIRTERRYPRATCHETT
Another new look for Malarian text. This one's called High Malar and is based on the conlang Cambrian. Malar is going to be a sort of central writing system in a fantasy setting of mine, and is designed to work with many languages. An elf from the Yor-Talang Archipelago might use the same symbols as a dragon from Egiri or a human from Arkania.