Wood-engraving script used by Ajurru people of Planet Ashr within my video game series, "Endless Sea of Stars". This script dates from 2010, when I first created the Ajurru within the simulated metaverse, ESOSVM. This is iteration 27 of the script, the one which appears in countless forms within the original ESOS story.
This script was designed for Ajurru scribes to show their skills with stone tools. Thus, it contains an immense number of curves and right angles. Most Ajurru consider this script to be overly-ornate, and so it is mostly used in a traditional context - for government records, memorials, and the like.
The "G" from this script is also the inspiration for another font, "Wall Dye".
From my game Trap Farmer Brer Brah.
The 21 symbols of the written language used by "Eshira" - terrestrial zooid colonies amalgamated from bacterial, viral, fungal, plant, and animal components. Eshira use this language by secreting an enzyme at the top of their rocky, stromatolite-like structures, dissolving the material to reveal white glyphs. These glyphs are extremely shallow engravings, and material is removed much slower than it is added through metabolism. They are formed so that wind, rain, UV exposure, and/or wave action naturally weather them off in a day's time.
Each glyph represents an entire concept, question, plea, or rebuke. The glyph that appears depends on the eshira's environmental conditions and treatment. Intelligent creatures on Planet Fyromr read these glyphs to determine whether the fishing is good, what the weather will be like, whether their aquacultures and aquatic farms are healthy, and so on.
An eshira only etches one glyph at a time, so these symbols are only ever meant to appear one at a time. All the eshira in a particular place tend to produce the same glyph at low tide.
Mostly for wall or border decoration (you can read letters, but probably not the numbers). Every vertical line column is a letter(plus connection to previous column)! Have fun!
For dozenal counting system, " ' " serves as "0", "0" is "10", "-" is "11", "_" is "-", ":" is division, "*" is multiplication, ";" is for roots (as the opposite of powers, "^")
3x3 cipher, based on version 0.3 of "Micromaze". It uses its own form of binary notation for the numerals, wherein the upper-right 4 pixels play the role of the 1, 2, 4, and 8.
This is the smallest font in which I was able to give a unique symbol to every glyph (excluding the lower/upper case, which look the same). It reads sort of like Pigpen Cipher, but is more densely written.
Since MMC is obscure and of constant width/height, it serves many "gibberish" and "placeholder text" purposes in addition to being a modestly strong cipher.
Original size: 2pt (use multiples of this value for pixel perfection)
〈B〉= [ˈˈb͜ʰf̆]
〈C〉= [t͡ʃ]
〈K〉= [ˈk̩ʰ]
〈S〉= [t͡s]
〈T〉= [t↓]
〈1〉= [d(͡ə)͜m̆]
〈2〉= [b(͡ə)‿d(͡ə)͜m]
〈3〉= [b(͡ə)‿d(͡ə)‿b(͡ə)͜m]
〈.〉= [ǀ]
〈,〉= [↓]
〈_〉= [(..)]
〈*〉= fast
〈+〉= [Ⓢːː]
〈/〉= slow
〈;〉= [↑]
〈<〉= [ˈʍ̤(i)]
〈>〉= [ˌk̤͉(uˑ)h̤]
WIP ithkuil font
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DONE:
primare aspect characters
vertical/diagonal tail modifications
above/below/midline dicaritics
secondary and tertiary aspect characters
secondary and tertiary aspect character diacritics
consonantal characters
tail modifications for the horizontal sections
placeholders
punctuation
numbers
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The diacritic/tail modification placements would be handled using opentype GSUB and GPOS.
Enjoy the several hundreds of various zero width diacritics and modification characters stacking on top of each other.
Heptal is an alternative alphabet for English created by Katie Molnar. The original can be found here: http://www.omniglot.com/conscripts/heptal.htm
The original script uses overlines to identify vowels which join together when next to each other. The extended vowels á (acute) begins the join the à (grave) ends the join and the ä (diaresis) is the middle of a join - each vowel has an equivalent.
The original script also has 3 varieties of s. Use the S for the capital, the s for an s in the middle of the word and a $ for a final s.
Finally, all sentences should be started with an _ (underscore).
This is a cloneHere is my version of a serif Eriseci alphabet. It is the same format as the previous Eriseci font which this was cloned from, so for use of this font please referrence that one. I hope you enjoy :D
This is a clone of Eriseci AlphabetAn alphabet of my own creation for the writing of a fictional language, also of my own creation. Despite its origin, it can be used for writing English with no problems.
There are many latin letters that don't exist in this alphabet,for example,q is actually a strong r,while r is a soft one;c has the spanish ch sound,and ñ (you can only use it if you have a spanish keyboard,sorry) is replaced by the sh sound;there are also 3 extra vowels:y (long i/russian й),w (even more closed spanish u,or woo if you speak english) and a schwa (you can use it by typing the letter h);also,every vowels has its accented version (á,é,í,ý,ó,ú,w and h can be used by typing ü and ö respectively)
This is a recent experiment on linear design. This includes all 26 letters in both upper and lower case a a small number of punctuation marks.
I wanted to try and create a stark linear script that would be easy and quick to write out in contrast with some of my more ornamental scripts.
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