Saturday, June 5, 2021

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Rock Concert JNL
Rock Concert JNL Rock Concert JNLRock Concert JNL

Designed by Jeff Levine, Rock Concert JNL is a display, hand display and retro font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


Rock Concert JNL is a playful free form type design inspired by the opening title and credits for the 1964 motion picture comedy “Send Me No Flowers” starring Rock Hudson, Doris Day, and Tony Randall.

Strongly resembling hippie movement poster lettering of the mid-1960s, this fonts fits well with any retro project emulating the “Peace and Love” movement or (as its name implies) re-creating period piece rock concert posters.



Rock Concert JNLDownload NowView Gallery


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Road Picture JNL
Road Picture JNL Road Picture JNLRoad Picture JNL

Designed by Jeff Levine, Road Picture JNL is a display sans and hand display font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


Road Picture JNL was modeled after the hand lettered title and credits for the 1940 Bob Hope-Bing Crosby semi-musical comedy “Road to Singapore”, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.

Although the lettering design doesn’t resemble anything that was probably used in Singapore at the time, its faux “exotic” look still makes for an interesting revival.

Bob Hope and Bing Crosby made a total of seven “road” pictures, hence the homage in the name of this type font.



Road Picture JNLDownload NowView Gallery


Thursday, June 3, 2021

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Road Picture JNL
Road Picture JNL Road Picture JNLRoad Picture JNL

Designed by Jeff Levine, Road Picture JNL is a display sans and hand display font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


Road Picture JNL was modeled after the hand lettered title and credits for the 1940 Bob Hope-Bing Crosby semi-musical comedy “Road to Singapore”, and is available in both regular and oblique versions.

Although the lettering design doesn’t resemble anything that was probably used in Singapore at the time, its faux “exotic” look still makes for an interesting revival.

Bob Hope and Bing Crosby made a total of seven “road” pictures, hence the homage in the name of this type font.



Road Picture JNLDownload NowView Gallery


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Captura Now
Captura Now Captura NowCaptura Now

Designed by Anita Jürgeleit, Captura Now is a sans serif font family. This typeface has eighteen styles and was published by Anita Jürgeleit.


Captura Now supports you create your next award-winning typographic experience.

Carefully refined shapes and sensitively balanced spacing and kerning create the gentle rythm that grants Captura Now its warm-hearted face, perfect in form and shape. Expanded with an enormous character set, Captura Now offers the freedom to transform your design into the Cyrillic-language world, as well as into any Latin based language — including Vietnamese.

Select one of the predefined styles or choose to continuously adjust the weights using the brand new variable font technology*. Numerous OpenType-features such as stylistic alternates, small caps, circled arrows, slashed zero and many more, have been implemented to simplify your work process.

1160 Glyphs | 18 Styles | 8 Weights + Italics | 2 Variable Fonts

Open Type Features:
Access All Alternates, Localized Forms, Subscript, Scientific Inferiors, Superscript, Numerators, Denominators, Fractions, Ordinals, Proportional Figures, Tabular Figures, Small Capitals From Capitals, Small Capitals, Ligatures, Slashed Zero, Stylistic Alternates

Captura Now supports 256 Languages — extended Latin incl. Vietnamese; Cyrillic incl. local forms:
Abaza, Abenaki, Adyghe, Afaan Oromo, Afar, Afrikaans, Agul, Albanian, Alsatian, Amis, Anuta, Aragonese, Aranese, Aromanian, Arrernte, Arvanitic (Latin), Asturian, Atayal, Avar, Aymara, Azerbaijani, Balkar, Bashkir (Latin), Basque, Belarusian (Latin + Cyrillic), Bemba, Bikol, Bislama, Bosnian, Breton, Bulgarian, Buryat, Cape Verdean Creole, Catalan, Cebuano, Chamorro, Chavacano, Chechen, Chichewa, Chickasaw, Chukchi, Chuvash, Cimbrian, Cofán, Cornish, Corsican, Creek, Crimean Tatar (Latin + Cyrillic), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dargin, Dawan, Delaware, Dholuo, Drehu, Dungan, Dutch, English, Erzya, Esperanto, Estonian, Faroese, Fijian, Filipino, Finnish, Folkspraak, French, Frisian, Friulian, Gagauz (Latin), Galician, Ganda, Genoese, German, Gikuyu, Gooniyandi, Greenlandic (Kalaallisut), Guadeloupean Creole, Gwich’in, Haitian Creole, Hän, Hawaiian, Hiligaynon, Hopi, Hotcąk (Latin), Hungarian, Icelandic, Ido, Igbo, Ilocano, Indonesian, Ingush, Interglossa, Interlingua, Irish, Istro-Romanian, Italian, Jamaican, Javanese (Latin), Jèrriais, Kabardian, Kaingang, Kala Lagaw Ya, Kalmyk, Karachay, Kapampangan (Latin), Kaqchikel, Karakalpak (Latin + Cyrillic), Karelian (Latin), Kashubian, Kazakh, Khinalugh, Kikongo, Kinyarwanda, Kiribati, Kirundi, Klingon, Komi, Kumyk, Kurdish (Latin), Kyrgyz, Ladin, Lak, Latin, Latino sine Flexione, Latvian, Lezgian, Lithuanian, Lojban, Lombard, Low Saxon, Luxembourgish, Maasai, Macedonian, Makhuwa, Malay, Maltese, Manx, Māori, Marquesan, Megleno-Romanian, Meriam Mir, Mirandese, Mohawk, Moksha, Moldovan, Mongolian, Montagnais, Montenegrin, Murrinh-Patha, Nagamese Creole, Nahuatl, Ndebele, Nanai, Neapolitan, Ngiyambaa, Niuean, Nogai, Noongar, Norwegian, Novial, Occidental, Occitan, Old Icelandic, Old Norse, Onĕipŏt, Oshiwambo, Ossetian (Latin), Palauan, Papiamento, Piedmontese, Polish, Portuguese, Potawatomi, Q’eqchi’, Quechua, Rarotongan, Romanian, Romansh, Rotokas, Russian, Rusyn, Rutul, Sami (Inari Sami), Sami (Lule Sami), Sami (Northern Sami), Sami (Southern Sami), Samoan, Sango, Saramaccan, Sardinian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian (Latin + Cyrillic), Seri, Seychellois Creole, Shawnee, Shona, Sicilian, Silesian, Slovak, Slovenian, Slovio (Latin), Somali, Sorbian (Lower Sorbian), Sorbian (Upper Sorbian), Sotho (Northern), Sotho (Southern), Spanish, Sranan, Sundanese (Latin), Swahili, Swazi, Swedish, Tabasaran, Tagalog, Tahitian, Tajik, Tat, Tatar, Tetum, Tok Pisin, Tokelauan, Tongan, Tshiluba, Tsonga, Tswana, Tumbuka, Turkish, Turkmen (Latin+Cyrillic), Tuvaluan, Tzotzil, Uighur, Ukrainian, Uzbek (Latin + Cyrillic), Venetian, Vepsian, Volapük, Võro, Wallisian, Walloon, Waray-Waray, Warlpiri, Wayuu, Welsh, Wik-Mungkan, Wiradjuri, Wolof, Xavante, Xhosa, Yapese, Yindjibarndi, Zapotec, Zarma, Zazaki, Zulu, Zuni

*Variable fonts work well in software that supports variable font technology.





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Post Production JNL
Post Production JNL Post Production JNLPost Production JNL

Designed by Jeff Levine, Post Production JNL is a display serif and wood type font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


A title card listing the supporting cast of the 1950 Humphrey Bogart and Gloria Grahame drama “In a Lonely Place” provided the hand lettered slab serif type design that served as the model for Post Production JNL – available in both regular and oblique versions.



Post Production JNLDownload NowView Gallery


Tuesday, June 1, 2021

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Chenile Deluxe
Chenile Deluxe Chenile DeluxeChenile Deluxe

Designed by Hendry Juanda, Chenile Deluxe is a brush display, hand display and hand drawn font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Letterhend Studio.


Introducing, Chenile Deluxe bold font duo. Chenile Deluxe is a handwritten pair of bold font that designed to complete each other. this font is perfect for branding, packaging, logotype, quotes, headline, etc.

Features :

- uppercase & lowercase
- numbers and punctuation
- multilingual
- alternates and ligatures
- swash
- PUA encoded

We highly recommend using a program that supports OpenType features and Glyphs panels like many of Adobe apps and Corel Draw, so you can see and access all Glyph variations.





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Golden Decades
Golden Decades Golden DecadesGolden Decades

Designed by Ryoichi Tsunekawa, Golden Decades is a sans serif font family. This typeface has sixteen styles and was published by Dharma Type.


Back to the basics.

In the last ten years, type design has been confronting chaotic scene. The font market is flooded with a mixture of wheat and chaff and typography becomes increasingly complex. But one golden straight path exists. The path began from the industrial revolution, passing through Swiss style, now we walk along the path as a matter of course. It is sans-serif.

The decades from the Swiss style, namely “less is more age” to the contemporary basic style “Less, but better age”, we call it golden decades. In those decades, type design met modernism.

Go back to a theory in the golden decades, we redesigned new geometric, minimal sans-serif. Less is more and better.

We added cool and calm spices to the modernism in the golden decades. As a result, letterform has a contemporary, sharp, and neutral atmosphere, and geometric rounded bowls and counters create a nice rhythm.

Golden Decades consists of 8 weights and their matching Italics for a wide range of usages.
Farther, Golden Decades is supporting international Latin languages and basic Cyrillic languages including Basic Latin, Western Europe, Central and South-Eastern Europe. Also, Golden Decades covers Mac Roman, Windows1252, Adobe1 to 3. This wide range of international characters expands the capability of your works. Lowercase “a” has OpenType stylistic alternate for advanced typography.





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