723104926
Published: 10th April, 2008
Last edited: 24th June, 2009
Created: 10th April, 2008
They're looming over your town. Use them as is or mix and match bodies and arms (numerals = body, uppercase = left arm, lowercase = right arm)
This is a clone of juggrnut
532431868
Published: 16th January, 2009
Last edited: 23rd June, 2009
Created: 16th January, 2009
to draw the outlines i used overlay images of real maps.
you can recommend a country for me to do next if i can finde the time.
See borders 2 for more countries.
A - Germany
B - France
C - United Kingdom
D - Italy
E - Russia
F - Spain
G - USA
H - Canada
I - Japan
J - China
K - Indonesia
L - Portugal
M - Australia
N - New Zealand
O - Philippines
P - Mexico
Q - Europe
R - Denmark
S - India
T - Asia
20263119
Published: 19th April, 2009
Last edited: 26th September, 2010
Created: 19th April, 2009
Dings of the Intellivision Running Man. A-Q = Football ; a-n = Night Stalker
3512337191
Published: 15th August, 2009
Last edited: 12th April, 2012
Created: 3rd August, 2009
ASL is not a written language, but this font should, hopefully, assist anyone wishing to learn ASL.
The following is a quote from Wikipedia:
"American Sign Language (or ASL, Ameslan) is the dominant sign language of the Deaf community in the United States, in the
English-speaking parts of Canada, and in some regions of Mexico. Although the United Kingdom and the United States share English as a
spoken and written language, British Sign Language (BSL) is quite different from ASL, and the two sign languages are not mutually
intelligible
ASL is often written with English words in all capital letters, which is known as glossing. This is, however, a method used simply to teach
the structure of the language. ASL is a visual language, not a written language. There is no one-to-one correspondence between words in
ASL and English, and much of the inflectional modulation of ASL signs is lost.
There are two true writing systems in use for ASL: a phonemic Stokoe notation, which has a separate symbol or diacritic mark for every
phonemic hand shape, motion, and position (though it leaves something to be desired in the representation of facial expression), and a more
popular iconic system called SignWriting, which represents each sign with a rather abstract illustration of its salient features. SignWriting is
commonly used for student newsletters and similar purposes."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Sign_Language
184342669
Published: 17th April, 2011
Last edited: 22nd April, 2011
Created: 17th April, 2011
*Updated to 26 characters*
I started this Fontstruction with a blank canvas and blank mind, and decided to draw my phone (guess which one that is!) to just warm up. Before I knew it, the idea for the whole design was staring me right in the face. Hopping around the internet, looking for images and information on which phones to draw was great fun. Who knew that the first ‘personal communicator’ was the IBM South Bell Simon, which combined the features of a mobile phone, a pager, a PDA, and a fax machine. Yes, you read that right! The Simon was also nine inches tall.
153175328
Published: 29th June, 2013
Last edited: 19th September, 2013
Created: 8th June, 2013
Uppercase everybody with Fontstruct F
Lowercase everybody without F
12689238
Published: 12th May, 2015
Last edited: 20th May, 2015
Created: 7th May, 2015
Nice little smartphoneicons for everyone. Feel free to use them.
Please mention my Website/author: www.weisser-raum.de