a font derived from this source. i named this font "graypixel" because the colors used in the source image are black and white. continuing on, if you mix black and white, you get gray. and finally, since this is a pixel font, i added the prefix "pixel" to the end of the font name. for some reason, there is a kerning problem with the lowercase. i don't know why it happened.
edit: @BMW helped me fix the problem.
this font is a continuation of generic 4x3, adding a new... uhh... row? or was it column? i don't remember...
there are alternates on the lowercase
keep in mind i only added 5 punctuation characters, because i didn't want to make like 36 of them...
note: some characters, like the M and W, aren't that legible. this is due to the grid limitations.
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 font that has a lot of components and reuses them a lot.
or, in other words, the font uses the other glyphs and modifies them to make another glyph, creating strange looks of the glyphs.
WARNING: font not meant for text, only meant for display or headlines!
(i accidentally made the lowercase more legible than the uppercase.)
some letters like K, V and Y are made from the A, so they may look inconsistent.
an attempt at a script/cursive font based on my cursive handwriting. i got the connections working, but to compensate there are no connections on the uppercase although my real handwriting connects uppercase characters. i know the connects of the f and t are long, but remember this is my first connected font. the numerals are filler, but the very limited set of pinctuation isn't although it may look like it. i also know that there are some characters missing, such as G, H, J, K, R, S, T, etc. but that was just to shorten the amount of work.
how to use this font (make sure you're using a vector editor!):
1. type some text in uppercase.
2. type the same text below the text you made in step 1, this time in lowercase.
3. move the text you made in step 2 to the text you made in step 1 and color the text you made in step 2 white.
you can do this in paint.net too, if you put each text on it's seperate layer.