Part of my "1 of the month" series of fonts I designed to welcome new months.
The "1st of a month" group was a fun idea but I found it a little complicated to do as I don't usually build several different fonts concurrently (ghosting happens too easily).
This font could be used to make tree decorations, gift tags, glass markers, place cards/napkin cards, etc. Just print on sturdy paper in large size and then cut out. Use pale grey ink if you want to decorate this paper base with collage, embroidery/stitching type work; print in coloured inks for a jazzy look which you enhance with dots of glitter glue or sparkly rhinestones. For a hanging decoration thread a length of yarn through the top 'rectangle' or you remove the rectangle's center to thread ribbon through it.
For some different fun you could glue your print on card stock and create greeting cards, jewellry pendants, shoe decorations. With a brooch back it could make a decoration of clothing, gift bags, hats.
Have fun, joyous December dear fellow FontStructivists :) :) :)
Based on Suspiria's opening credits.
I was looking for a dingbat font for map making, but I couldn't find one that matched my criteria, so I made this. Please tell me what symbols you want.
A - House
B - Farm house
C - Village
D - Town
E - City
F - Church
G - Fortress
H - Castle
I - Igloo
Typeface used for the opening credits of Hero's Quest: So You Want To Be A Hero (EGA) & Quest For Glory: So You Want To Be A Hero (EGA), (C) 1989 Sierra On-Line. The words and names were not generated using an in-game font; they were actually pre-rendered static images within the game's art assets. Letters Q & Z created by Goatmeal.
Because the flourishes/sparkles present in the center of several letters could not be recreated effectively in FontStruct, they are NOT included in this font recreation.
See more:
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/755432/nova_informe_serif
https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Podkova?selection.family=Podkova:400,500,600,700,800
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/877070/fs_not_a_semiserif
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/951011/fs_afterline
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/999634/at_digitta
This is a clone of fs nudgershootsSee more:
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1066490/fs_quack2
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1611359/f77-kip
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1597746/lexpelian
This is a clone of fs mogwa sansSuggestions welcome!
Article about cyrillic "К": http://typotalks.com/news/2015/05/23/gayaneh-bagfasaryan%E2%80%99s-workshop-the-true-cyrillic-k/?icl_en
See more:
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/429296/geomyk
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1310223/standard-sans-with-cyrillic-extension
ALS Direct
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1723161/pushing-limits
This is a clone of fs road sansMy first attempt at the Kayah Li script used to write Kayah Li spoken in Burma/Myanmar and also in Thailand. It was created by Htae Bu Phae in 1962. I based my design on the relatively blocky font used over on Omniglot. I'm not that happy about the result though. Letters were made on a 9×11 grid which allowed me to make vertical lines thicker than horizontal. It makes for very blocky letters though. I was hoping to create something similar to my Tai Le font but the letters simply didn't lend themselves to the same level of fluidity.
Kayah Li was added to the Unicode standard in version 5.1 in 2008. This font however uses an ad-hoc mapping to Ascii characters. The only real oddity are the tone markers mapped to 'f', 'j' and 'q'.
The script is a true alphabet with all vowels written out. There are however only four vowel letters: ‹a›, ‹oe›, ‹i› and ‹oo›. The rest are written as ‹a› plus a diacritic.