I am planning on using this as the script for infernal in my DND campaign, it is roughly based on Latin, Hebrew, and Cyrillic giving it what I consider a very orderly looking alphabet. I purposefully excluded letters that would not be commonly used or can be created easily.
I am planning on using this as the script for infernal in my DND campaign, it is roughly based on Latin, Hebrew, and Cyrillic giving it what I consider a very orderly looking alphabet. I purposefully excluded letters that would not be commonly used or can be created easily. This version is designed to look as though it had been printed for the Infernal gazette or another official document that had been typed rather than written.
I asked CookieLord and Zephram about how to name this style of font.
And the tags are the answers they gave me.
Thanks! :)
This is a clone of Heavy VintageThis is the language of Twbraech. There are certain rules and limitations in the language. Rules include; only use capital letters at the beginning of a name or a sentence, i.e. not always a capital I for myself. There are no spaces after a full stop or a comma. Numbers are written differently...3527 is written as three thousands, five hundreds, two tens, seven, with a backslash instead of commas, represented by a hash in the font (#). 10=$, 100=% and 1000=&. So 3527 is 3%#2$#7. There is no letter j, k, q, v, x or z. There are however other letters; wa, ae, ch, sh and chush... in the font j=wa, k=ae, q=ch, v=sh, x=chush, and z represents nothing. The language is purely fictional, and of course when writing in English you will find almost no use for the additionnal letters, except perhaps for sh and ch. If you want to use the letters that aren't in the language such as j or v, I recommend the following j=gae, k= cae, q=cu, v=we, x=ec and z=sd, and I would put these in apostrophes i.e. j='gae', to make it clear that your not using 'real' letters.