UPDATES
v1.0 - Official release
v1.1 - Added Latin-1
v1.2 - Added Balsnese
v1.2.2 - Fixed some letters on Balsnese
v1.3 - Added Polish Letters
v1.4 - Added Arabic
v1.4.2 - Finished few letters and fixing less letters
v1.4.5 - Added ligatures
v1.4.8 - Fixed lowercase K
v1.5 - 1 Month Special, Update
v1.6 - Added supplemental Balsnese
The default Kaiski sans serif font.
Kaiski's Helvetica, or more appropriately, Kaiski's Inter UI.
Kaiski is the orthography (alphabet) of Kairen, a language developed by Kimeiga for his videogames.
kimeiga.github.io/kairen
A contructed language I made
p= p (pea)
b= b (buy)
m= m (sim)
t= t (tea)
d= d (dye)
n= n (sin)
k= k (key)
g= g (guy)
N= ng (sing)
f= f (foul)
v= v (vowel)
T= th (think)
D= dth (though)
s= s (sip)
z= z (zip)
x= sh (rush)
Z= zh (rouge)
q= ch (chomp)
j= j (jump)
c= ts (pizza)
C= dz (godzilla)
y= y (yell)
w= w (well)
h= h (house)
#= 10
$= 100
%= 1K (1,000)
&= 1M (1,000,000)
£= Currency
K= Chapeter
P= Paragraph
Klanara is the script generated for the conlang of the same name. The inspiration for this comes from a script called Oxidilogi available from Omniglot. The language is made up of consonant vowel pairs throughout and is structured to accommodate this pairing. There are some special characters. the ae and oe pair form a single vowel symbol in Klanara. Also the capital H and L are used to form the consonant pairs sh, ch, wh, th and kl. The lower case h and l are letters in their own right.
Here is the second version of the Unlu script font.
This one has been called Unlu Light as it is significantly smaller than the original with cleaner lines and angles.
In addition to the Unlu v.1 letters and usage this version includes more punctuation and the numbers 0-9.
Glyphr is a combination of shapes, design and ideas which I have seen and love. The combination of then creates a very linear chicken scratch script.
Generally you should start every word with an uppercase in order to get the preparatory line, however, the script is equally effective without this.
The Namak script was originally derived from a logographic script and used for the language of Namariehak around 5000 years ago, but has since then spread and has become the most widely used script on Notasami. It is a bicameral, alphabetic script that uses a base-10 number system. This is a sans-serif, simple font along with the four Santieng diacritics.