Xilla Regular, part of the Xilla family.
Other weights are on my profile.
Pixel slab serif typeface in 2 weights with italicised variants. Inspired loosely by Zilla, the Google open source font. This type is half the scale of Xilla Pro.
Further work and links here: willalbinclark.com.
Xilla Regular Italic, part of the Xilla family.
Other weights are on my profile.
Pixel slab serif typeface in 2 weights with italicised variants. Inspired loosely by Zilla, the Google open source font. This type is half the scale of Xilla Pro.
Further work and links here: willalbinclark.com.
This is a clone of XillaXilla Bold Italic, part of the Xilla family.
Other weights are on my profile.
Pixel slab serif typeface in 2 weights with italicised variants. Inspired loosely by Zilla, the Google open source font. This type is half the scale of Xilla Pro.
Further work and links here: willalbinclark.com.
This is a clone of Xilla ItalicMy first entry for Serifcomp. Originally created in 2013, when I still had little knowledge about the finer details of type design. I've made major changes to the original design while trying not to lose its original feel (avoiding diagonal strokes, for example). I ended up making major changes to M, Q, T, W, f, k, m, q, r, t, and w, and minor changes to a bunch more; a ton of kerning was also required. It's not very polished yet, but it's a start...
Some alternates are available in Latin Extended A. As always, suggestions and critiques are welcome. Thanks and enjoy!
I don't fucking know anymore!
This is a clone of EK Sonikku NRBy request, a semimodular font which looks like a casual interpretation of "General Failure". This is also more condensed and more Pixel Optimized than its predecessor. It makes me think "fire station in a cartoon".
It uses a technique which folds some slabs in, which prevents slabs from altering the heights of letters - but slabs are still allowed to alter width to some extent. The slabs which do this are incorporated into glyphs' structures to such an extent that they are integral parts of the linework.
This could be kerned more closely, but like me, the requestor uses software which doesn't support kerning. Consider the spacing as part of the desired quirkiness.