The design was inspired by Josef Albers Kombinationschrift alphabet. A modular typeface built using a limited number of basic shapes. Need a condensed stencil typeface? Look no further! Little Tittle was created for those tight spaces. A condensed set width paired with short ascending and descending strokes allows for tight spacing vertically as well. Little Tittle is exclusively lowercase; however, it does have a stencil and solid version so you can mix and match styles for more typographic variety.
The typeface Chop originally came into fruition as Chop Chop and was later shortened for convenience. The name comes from the process in which it was made, by chopping off what would normally be rounded. It has both playful and sinister qualities. Chop reminisces of a simpler time when computer games still came on floppy disks and the Internet was dial-up.
Common uses for Chop include but are not limited to: laser engraved ax handles, mix CDs, laser engraved knife handles, mixtapes, album covers and graffiti.
Arcadical is a geometric sans serif display typface characterized by angled stems, counters, and terminals. It consists of 26 uppercase characters, 10 numerals, and 16 punctuation marks.
Born of a mid-life reminisce, this font was inspired by the arcade culture of the 80's. It was a time when game playing was done at an aracade rather than a game system or computer at home. It could be considered a mix of 80's pop with a major dose of heavy metal since it was a time when music defined fashion and behavior (and both were questionable, in retrospect). Like, totally.
This is a clone