1014125826094
Published: 25th November, 2009
Last edited: 23rd April, 2015
Created: 17th October, 2009
A monospaced pixel font with over 8000 glyphs! 7 pixels wide, 12 pixels tall. Some characters may be wider than 7 pixels to make them connect with other characters.
410331268871
Published: 27th February, 2014
Last edited: 13th February, 2015
Created: 23rd February, 2014
Something as simple and boring as a monospaced, octagonal, sans serif font. But it has great unicode support!
1303179518
Published: 20th June, 2009
Last edited: 28th June, 2009
Created: 19th June, 2009
My aim to to express the most information with the minimum amount of pixels. I have minimized basic Latin, More Latin, extended Latin A&B, Greek, katakana, hiragana, Hangul, Cyrillic, Armenian, Hebrew, Georgian, Tamil, and Telugu. The katakana and Armenian are clean. The hiragana is a bit harsh due to the many intricacies in the strokes. If someone who knows whatever language uses those can discern one from the other, then it is good. Hangul lacks quality because the glyphs were simple enough that I jammed them closer. Tamil is big because of the loops(or so it felt). Some need to be checked for positioning.
29713153055
Published: 5th February, 2012
Last edited: 15th October, 2012
Created: 4th February, 2012
Pixel font with lower right corners cut. Best used with font size 24.
25215140226
Published: 31st December, 2011
Last edited: 24th October, 2022
Created: 31st December, 2009
Here’s Noptical as it was meant to be. Two years in the making, still an ugly font!
But look: better spacing, 1333 glyphs, all latin variants you could wish for (including Vietnamese), Greek, Cyrillic, Braille, Yijing hexagrams, the not yet Unicode-encoded Rouble sign, interrobang (after a design by Adien Gunarta), even a tombstone!This is a clone of Noptical
102992614
Published: 1st May, 2014
Last edited: 3rd May, 2014
Created: 21st November, 2012
A font with a parallel top and bottom and a diagonal middle to make a mysterious looking typeface.
59977716
Published: 28th April, 2024
Last edited: 2nd January, 2011
Created: 1st January, 2011
This is basically an extreme version of 7x12 Pixel Mono, by CMunk. The only difference is that most of the letters are only four pixels high, and it's only capitals. This font includes Basic Latin, More Latin, Extended Latin A&B, Greek and Coptic, Cyrillic, Hebrew, Bopomofo, and Even More Latin. I had to guess with most of the Even More Latin characters, as most of them were displayed as squares (indicating that the specific letter is not included in your computer's font). Enjoy!
9675845
Published: 28th April, 2008
Last edited: 2nd June, 2011
Created: 28th April, 2008
Font of the day #1: One of my very first fonts (if not the first) here on fontstruct.
{Letters made from dots of pretty random size. Holds extended Latin A and B, Cyrillic and Greek alphabets and (very little) hiragana.}
78557513
Published: 9th July, 2011
Last edited: 23rd July, 2012
Created: 7th July, 2011
A serif font with sharp edges, suggesting it might be cut in stone; hence the name Bloccus.
What do you think of the asymmetric c? And what do you think of the 'feet' on v and w?
--- On a completely different note, I'm going to Japan for a fortnight on monday, so I'll upload a couple of fonts now, and read the comments when I get back.
83657214
Published: 16th November, 2010
Last edited: 8th March, 2012
Created: 9th November, 2010
I'm just playing around with some diagonals and monospace, and it ended up as this strong and legible typeface.
711257015
Published: 24th October, 2009
Last edited: 28th November, 2009
Created: 17th October, 2009
More pxl love. And another expansion of Lex Kominek’s Trajedy majuscules.
The freshness of the original charmed me into creating an extended set of matching miniscules, diacritics, symbols and ligatures. But why stop there? :^)This is a clone
225854219
Published: 18th February, 2013
Last edited: 9th July, 2017
Created: 21st October, 2012
I made this, because I was bothered with the quality of the font used on the displays of the Copenhagen Metro. So this is an attempt to make a better font under the same restrictions (i.e. a display with a height of 14 LED lamps). The o - and possibly other characters - are the same as in the current font. But I made sure the M became similar to the logo of the metro. Don't mind the IPA, I just went a bit wild...
6461854038
Published: 21st July, 2008
Last edited: 30th March, 2010
Created: 21st July, 2008
This bitmap font is based on little crosses that are arranged on a 2x2 pixel grid. Although the font size is 36px I had the best results with 128px font size in a PS/72dpi doc.This is a clone of Raketentim
4145335
Published: 9th December, 2012
Last edited: 30th November, 2012
Created: 19th November, 2012
The serif version of Akron Sans.This is a clone of Akron Sans NBP
701452217
Published: 16th February, 2010
Last edited: 16th March, 2010
Created: 14th February, 2010
I began this fontstruction as a challenge to create a seriffed pixel font with grid characteristics similar to iSlab’s 8 pt setting (bearing an x-height of four pixels). This inspiration began with similar shapes and roots as its predecessor, but evolved from there once it quickly became clear that those shapes really could not be reproduced with strict pixels.
Then I went on a bender creating the katakana and hiragana character set.
Then I went crazy with filters and single brick substitution.
86747513
Published: 14th September, 2009
Last edited: 12th June, 2010
Created: 25th June, 2009
Two lines twist and bend, giving the letters a pixelated but also rounded look.
831339927
Published: 29th October, 2014
Last edited: 30th October, 2014
Created: 28th October, 2014
This font is made for word games like scrabble, wheel of fortune, word search, crosswords. I have included a lot of digraphs and trigraphs that may be considered a single tile in some languages (according to this article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrabble_letter_distributions). Numbers 0-9 can be used to assign scrabble scores to the previous letter (since they are different for each language). 0 stands for 10 points.
7223849
Published: 8th June, 2014
Last edited: 8th June, 2014
Created: 1st January, 2012
Creating a typeface based entirely around the slanted A used to represent a font throughout Mac OS Classic. Is such a thing even possible? Yes it is.