72522
Published: 23rd April, 2011
Last edited: 24th April, 2011
Created: 21st April, 2011
Well I made this font for the Illustrator Competition, and all the lines are not letter, are just for my own reference...
10082488
Published: 24th April, 2011
Last edited: 2nd September, 2012
Created: 9th April, 2011
It's a lanky monospaced font: Monkey! Tall, sturdy, and 6 px wide (14 px line-height), most things work here, and it should be usable for programmers. Making diagonals appear to have a consistent width was tricky, so some of the letters look a little weird (lower-case z, upper-case K...), but in my opinion it isn't enough to hamper readability. This fontstruction uses a 2x2 filter and composite bricks, and it was fun to make.
243676
Published: 10th May, 2011
Last edited: 10th May, 2011
Created: 8th May, 2011
I've had my own personal cipher for years that I've wanted to make into a font for a very long time. I happened to stumble upon FontStruct (thankfully) and here it is! Enjoy.
146364
Published: 18th May, 2011
Last edited: 13th March, 2012
Created: 17th May, 2011
A font creation made up of QR codes (that totally work BTW). A-Z right now - perhaps more characters later.
Update: Numbers added.
3504211
Published: 26th May, 2011
Last edited: 23rd April, 2012
Created: 26th May, 2011
Xikaimsa heading font, more info on wiki.
http://wiki.xxiivv.com/Traumae
2108911
Published: 12th July, 2011
Last edited: 12th July, 2011
Created: 12th July, 2011
A cryptographic typeface I developed when I was 12 years old, looks pretty cool and alien-like on paper. You could use it in sci-fi production, or to prank your coworkers.
In terms of security it's arguably somewhat less secure then pig pen, but makes up for it by being easier to learn (10 minutes and you're golden), actually having numbers and punctuation and obviously by being less well-known (major plus).
140521
Published: 26th July, 2011
Last edited: 21st April, 2010
Created: 31st October, 2009
Masonic Writing - based on an ancient secret writing system used by the freemasons. Also known as Pigpen Cipher.
250985
Published: 31st July, 2011
Last edited: 11th March, 2014
Created: 11th May, 2011
Clone of Dragon Script. A work in progress. Please download! Your comments will be a great help with my other fonts I am working on. I cloned Dragon Script and edited/improved it. Added more symbols and smoothed out some of the letters
UPDATE: Added an ampersandThis is a clone of Dragon Script
41974
Published: 3rd August, 2011
Last edited: 3rd August, 2011
Created: 3rd August, 2011
This is for games like, Translate the words to words you can actually read xD or write secret letters!:D Lol (btw read my comment)
81991
Published: 4th August, 2011
Last edited: 4th August, 2011
Created: 2nd August, 2011
Ever dream of writing in genetic code? Now it is possible (Sort of).
How? Cells make up anything living. A lot of the functions in a cell, which are required for a cell to survive (and function normally in a multicellular organism) are carried out by complex molecules called proteins. There are 1000’s of proteins in a typical cell, and each protein has a specific, unique shape that defines what function they are going to perform in a cell. Proteins are made by cells, using 20 different building blocks called amino acids. These amino acids are joined in a long chain, and folded up to give each protein its unique structure. Cells make proteins using instructions written in stretches of DNA called genes. The instructions are written in DNA using four “letters” called nucleotides (A,T,G, and C). To make a protein, the gene first has to be rewritten into another molecule called RNA (again, using four “letters”, this time A, U (instead of T), G, and C). This happens in the cell nucleus, or if the cell is a prokaryote (lacks a nucleus), the nucleoid (where the nucleus could have been). The RNA molecule is translated into a protein in a cell structure called the ribosome. For that to happen, the letters on the RNA molecule are read off in bunches of three (called codons), and the order of the three letters will signal for a particular amino acid to be added to the growing chain of amino acids. The sequence of amino acids on the chain, as well as the unique properties of each amino acid determine how the protein will fold, and ultimately, what function the protein will carry out.
How does this font work? Well, scientists use a one – letter abbreviation for each amino acid when recording the structure of a protein. Since using a one-letter abbreviation for each amino acid requires 20 letters… Well, that covers just about the entire alphabet. To create the code you could type with, and in such a way that each letter is not obvious, each letter you see on the keyboard is reverse translated into a DNA sequence of three DNA “letters” (for curious scientists out there, the antisense strand of DNA is used). Some letters are not used for amino acids. Due to this problem, the letters closest to those not used are back-translated instead. The problem letters are listed with the substitute in parentheses - B (R), J (L), O (Q), U (V), X (K), and Z (S). Simply hit the normal keys on your keyboard, and watch your message being encrypted as you write. Although all punctuation marks are present, if you are going for a realistic this-is-how-you-see-it-in-a-large-database-that holds-DNA-sequences feel, you can leave them out. The period is one of three stop codons (a stop codon signals that the amino acid chain has been completed and can be released by the ribosome) – TAA. The space bar is a short dash. Why? When the order of the DNA letters on a gene is sequenced (read in order), sometimes there is uncertainty about a particular letter, and if you look on a database that stores DNA sequences, the problem letter will be signified by a short dash.
If you print out what you wrote, it will be nicely encrypted. To decrypt it, one can simply use a genetic code table from online or their biology textbook (remember to substitute each T with a U)
Have fun!
- EcoRII
611288
Published: 17th August, 2011
Last edited: 17th August, 2011
Created: 30th July, 2011
English characters manipulated to look like Hindi or something.
340621
Published: 19th August, 2011
Last edited: 19th August, 2011
Created: 18th August, 2011
THE KEY IS HERE:
http://bit.ly/pfH5vY
Also known as the pigpen cipher and the Rosicrucian cipher, this is one of the most simplistic and well known ciphers to date. The key is known for being very easy to memorize (as long as you can write it down!)
More info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigpen_cipher
3401633
Published: 20th September, 2011
Last edited: 28th September, 2011
Created: 20th September, 2011
Conscript near irish ogham, ancient alphabet of insular Celts (Ireland for ex.). Created for the virtual micronation Umujo and its celtic country the Towtobroghi, author Aëlo Gwion. Utilisez librement cet alphabet. - Ecriture très proche des ogham. Bien qu’il s’agisse d’un conscript apparemment distant de l’original, la distance entre les deux écritures concerne en réalité la présentation des éléments graphiques. Les ogham sont une écriture gravée ancienne des Celtes insulaires, principalement utilisée pour la magie et la divination. Elle est basée sur le chiffre 5, et l'alphabet s'énonçait ainsi sur extrémités doigts et les jointures des phalanges ainsi que les anciennes numérations digitales. Cette écriture est apparentée de près à d'autres écritures du même type dont on connaît des exemples notamment en Afrique (selon Lyall Watson, Lightning Bird). Le cercle égale 5 traits. Les traits sont remplacés par des points. 'ng' est rendu par 'k' (l'irlandais ancien ignorant cette lettre). Quelques lettres sont inventées : 'j', 'v', 'w', 'y' s'inspirent directement de 'i' et 'u'. Pour les diphtongues 'ae', 'ea', 'ia', 'oi' et 'ui', utiliser toute voyelle accentuée. Comprend: majuscules et minuscules, chiffres, caractères spéciaux les plus usuels seulement. Version .4 Cette police a été créée pour l'univers d'Umujo par son auteur Aëlo Gwion.
110732
Published: 2nd October, 2011
Last edited: 2nd October, 2011
Created: 2nd October, 2011
This is a code, going in alphabetical order, with capitalization first. That should be enough info to decode it. I created this code in the 3rd grade, and I always wanted to make it a font. Enjoy!
131930
Published: 26th October, 2011
Last edited: 26th October, 2011
Created: 24th October, 2011
Extension of the pigpen cipher, with numbers and extended character set added.
1090640
Published: 22nd November, 2011
Last edited: 22nd November, 2011
Created: 22nd November, 2011
This is a code font. You interpret it using a tic-tac-toe chart. A is shaped like the first block in the board (like a backwards capital L), B is the second block (looks like a capital U), C is the third block (looks like an L) Pattern continues, when the first nine squares run out, start over but add a dot. And again...
140720
Published: 4th December, 2011
Last edited: 4th December, 2011
Created: 4th December, 2011
Pigpen is a cypher of the English language. It is easy to learn, and if you want something written nobody else can understand, then it is perfect. I have added some things (new punctuation and a number system) to make it harder to decipher, but it is still just as easy to learn
601001
Published: 16th December, 2011
Last edited: 13th December, 2011
Created: 11th December, 2011
The code that was invented by Steven and Nick is now in font format
2002441
Published: 16th December, 2011
Last edited: 16th December, 2011
Created: 16th December, 2011
For when vertical space is tight, but legibility would be nice to have too... there's Cap Nap! The upper case letters are the same as my font Low Rider (with minor updates), but the lower case ones are snug-fitting small caps. Some small caps letters look weird, to fit under a 6-pixel limit, but it makes lower case letters look distinct from the upper case every time. This font uses the 2x2 filter method and is monospaced at 6 px wide and 10 px tall (including 1 px decent). Box drawing characters are thrown in for good measure.This is a clone of Low Rider
210774
Published: 10th January, 2012
Last edited: 12th January, 2012
Created: 10th January, 2012
Ogham runes... for the most part. The "ng" character is "k" Both uppercase and lowercase are the same. I used "ea" for !, "ui" for ? and fudged on letters that aren't Gaelic, such as k, w, and y. They are the runes that slant down.
150995
Published: 14th January, 2012
Last edited: 14th January, 2012
Created: 12th January, 2012
I invented this alphabet in high school so I could write secret messages to myself and my friends without anyone else being able to read it. It's pretty simple; the pattern of lines coming out of the shapes repeats itself twice, and the alphabet is divided into circles for the first half and squares for the second half. The space character used to consist of a double-sided arrow with a vertical line (sort of like this <+>) but I took that out.
200642
Published: 25th January, 2012
Last edited: 25th January, 2012
Created: 25th January, 2012
This batch contains UC, LC, numerals, and period. Meant to be symbols based for graphic design purposes rather than to be a legible font.
100530
Published: 27th January, 2012
Last edited: 31st January, 2012
Created: 18th August, 2011
Based on the old Masonic style of coding, this font has taken it a step further and used Latin style letters that were most closely related to the Masonic symbols used in their alleged encryptions.