Rogue is a semi-upright slab-serif font. My first ever project to use ×2 Brick size filter.
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This originally started out as an attempt to recreate Anonoma Less Characters. But then, things took a turn and Rogue was born.
The reason I made the font "Semi-upright" was because bold upright serifs (at least to me) tend to look cool and stylish. Though, I still wanted to keep the sense of roman serif in the font. So the a, g and u are roman. The style of v, w, x, y, z in most italic serifs look too obscure and grotesque for my design, so those are all roman with y being the only exception. Basically, a mix between upright and roman.
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I have plans to expand the project into supporting Greek and Cyrillic as well as provide alternative glyphs for the font.
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Of course, the font has imperfections here and there. Comments for improvements or feedbacks are all welcome.
That's all I had to say.
This is a cloneTHIS FONT IS A COPY OF "FORMAL ROMAN"
I want to try to expand this font so it can have more characters and supports more varieties of languages
Expansions :
- Latin Extended-A
- Cyrillic
- Greek
- Added more letters and symbols in More Latin
If there are any mistakes, please inform me, and I will fix it asap
This is a cloneRenaissance-style Italic font, with straight capitals & old style numerals. The lower case letters are designed within a dot matrix, albeit slanted; with the uppercase letters I have deviated from this, in order to create well-proportioned Roman capitals.
Translator needed to get SH, ZH, CH, and TH characters:
Added some new Characters for vowels, Silent Ts and Rolled Rs.
https://lingojam.com/EnglishtoTranslatorEnglish%28TM%29
Or if you want to use an imperial font on ACTUAL IMPERIAL go here:
https://lingojam.com/ENGLISHTOIMPERIAL%28ROMTE%29
This is a clone of Formal RomanA fusion between Roman-style text and pixel art - the sort of font that might have existed in old 80s font software. It's fairly wide and verbose and is something of a colossus among pixel fonts.
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Original size: 13pt (use multiples of this value for pixel perfection)
A segmented display inspired by Lorica Segmentata.
I didn't make this to convey the idea of "Space Romans", but I can see how it might be used in such a context. For that I'm envisioning something like a flip-dot display which uses these metal plates. Perhaps in the future I'll get an Arduino and some servos, then set about trying to build such a display...
Pixelated or 8-bit version of the Times New Roman font. Alphanumeric, basic punctuation, and basic accented Latin are included. Foreign currency glyphs; Polish, Spanish, French, and Māori characters; and the (Russian) Cyrillic alphabet have been added.