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 serifed version of the script resembling the original, traditional way of writing it, and includes the four Santieng diacritics.
A new conlang I've created based on LokiT's unlu and Evikræl and a few others I've found on the web. Although the time I spent fonstructing this one was minimal, I did put a lot of effort into designing it's style and method. You'll find a similar one to this on omniglot; trust me, I designed this without knowledge of the other one.
Hope you enjoy it; not much to explain about its usage, really, other than the advanced glyphs æ and á on a latin keyboard or a regular "special symbols" page on a mac make an Ai or Ay sound, like eye, or cry, or a japanes maegeri, and that á makes a kind of æ and eh hybrid sound not in our language, symilar to a heavily accented e in spanish.
Sooo, yeah.
BYEEEEE!
A script used by the Old Fyromrese or Lesser Oinai (human-like) people of Planet Fyromr in my own stories and games. The runes depict looms, which were made by splitting two sticks, one to make the internal frame and one to make the hexagon shape. These runes were typically carved into wood.
The earliest Fyromrese writing was done using cord wrapped around pegs on these looms, and so this script attempts to mimic the path of the cord. The later Fyromrese (Tangled Script) took things further, making it possible to encode entire words within a single loom-shape while also making individual words and letters far more readable. But that script requires multiple colors to render legibly so it probably won't be possible to Fontstruct it.
Notating Fyromrese numbers using a Fontstructed font is similarly unlikely, as the logic of their enumeration would require hundreds of glyphs.
This script attempts to match loom-shapes to phonemes as they are spoken in American English.