This font is Copyright 2014 to 2019 Doug Peters
( https://www.Doug-Peters.com/ or https://Dougs.Work/ ) and released as freeware under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike License. You are entitled to use this font however you want, but please credit me for my original work somewhere (website, blog or social media, preferably with a link back to one of my sites). Credit attribution IS greatly appreciated.
This is based on the SDSU (South Dakota State University) logo.
Categories: Famous, Logo Inspired, Collegiate & Sports (Jersey Lettering)
Type: Slab Serif
Weight: Heavy (Near Black),
Web font: Yes, sure.
Commercial use: Any use, yes, please credit me somewhere? Thanks!
Derivatives: OK (please use a different reserved font name).
Redistribution: Encouraged
P.S.:
Font-Journal:
https://www.Font-Journal.com
My best web hosting solution:
https://HDWebHosting.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued freeware font design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner
A vaguely Courierlike OSD (Onscreen Display) font which tries its best to be casual. The name is inspired by the old computer joke: "Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk?"
No filters or faux-beziers, just stock bricks and a bit of stacking/nudging!
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More about the design:
It started as a doodle and an attempt to make a smooth, low-resolution, low-poly font, and then it became a Courierlike. I have other fonts that tried to do polygonal round shapes before this (such as Cartoon Riot) but this design is my first real success in this area.
Initially, I made the angled glyphs before the round ones. I didn't want to change the angled ones, so glyphs like C, O, and Q became a bit wider than they are tall. I'm quite fond of this, because in most designs these glyphs tend to have a tall and narrow character. I think the mildly squat look of this font makes it cuter and gives it more personality.
A lot of glyphs were altered in specific ways to look more like metal type, especially anything with diacritics which touch the letters themselves. Other glyphs were altered specifically to be interpretable at small size. I also use angled contours and actual round bricks alongside each other within the same glyphs, another technique which is geared toward style and interpretability at small size.
This font came with many new challenges and an array of new techniques had to be designed. Loops were an insurmountable challenge because of the low resolution and heavy line weight, so I drew rounded areas to suggest them. You can see it on letters like Greek γ, ζ, and ξ.
This is a black sans serif minimalistic block font with a couple of repeating themes in the ends and such. I consider this freeware, but maintain my copyright and only allow distribution through fontstruct and my own journaled catalog of freeware fonts (@ font-journal.com).
Copyright 2013 & 2019 Doug Peters (https://www.Doug-Peters.com or https://Dougs.Work) of Symbiotic Design (https://SymbioticDesign.com). This font is released under the Fontstruct license as freeware with credit attribution as a requirment for using this font for free.
Credit for my original work IS greatly appreciated, and you only have to credit me with an active link from your website, blog, or in a public social networking post, with a link to any of my URLs. I also sell domains and web hosting if ever you need the best spam free solutions available online, anywhere.
Style: Playful.
Classified: Quirky or Whimsical.
Type: Sans (with a few Serifs)... Semi Sans?
Weight: Bold.
Web font: Yes.
Commercial use: Yes!
Derivatives: No.
Redistribution: Nope.
Credit URLs:
https://www.Doug-Peters.com
https://Dougs.Work
https://SymbioticDesign.com
https://Worthful.com (blog)
Font-Journal:
https://www.Font-Journal.com
Heavy Duty Web Hosting:
https://HDWebHosting.com
Domain Names:
https://www.DomainHostmaster.com
https://www.Domainance.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner
Version 1.5
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3x3 slab serif. This is based on Wallerton, Anachronistic Gunslinger, an IRC-based "TV show" which I used to write and produce. All the characters in the show were my AIs pretending they were cowboys.
Well, I managed to successfully produce a lowercase for this one!
Recommended: Use with kerning.
Version 1.5
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Experimental slab-serif. The added height from the serifs is quantized so that the serifs, rather than the normal lines, determine a glyph's geometry.
It reminds me of the Wild West and the old cartoon "The Jetsons" at the same time. It uses two kinds of serifs: normal slabs and "hangover" serifs. The hangovers are the ones that look like overhangs. Is there another name for them? I don't know.
This font is set to appear in several games at once! I'm not the developer of any of them! WOO
Despite what you may have heard, a "hoedown" is just a party.
This is a slab serif font that is meant to resemble the artchitecture of a castle from far away lands. With a worn effect to the characters and small embellishments like flags, windows, and lookouts, this font is meant for kings and queens from all lands. This font is best suited as a display type.
font was created by; and is Copyright 2017 by; Doug Peters of Symbiotic Design.
-Logos, graphics, web design, brand marketing, media, tech & consulting.
https://www.Doug-Peters.com/
https://Dougs.Work/
https://Domainers.Name/
http://www.DomainHostmaster.com/
http://www.Font-Journal.com/
My Font Groups:
https://W3N.US/fonts
https://W3N.US/f0nts
Pretro is a blocky and solid font with a modern touch to it, inspired by the late retro gaming era such games like Tron. The design consist of an inner open spaced font for diffrent variations: choices of color combinations. The font could be most seen for a title in a video game.