Tag: woodcut

Alegria Font

Alegria is a font family for joyful communication. The family consists of Alegria Roman (with upper/lowercase and oldstyle figures), Alegria Caps (with uppercase, small caps and lining figures), Alegria Bright (a small caps version with a three-dimensional feel) and Alegria

Fnord Font

Fnord is a contemporary humanist serif typeface, it is ideally suited for display purposes and branding. The family has been designed to be highly versatile, containing a total of 23 fonts – each font features discretionary ligatures, swash alternates and

Log Jam Font

Log Jam is a font design published by Fonthead. Published by Fonthead Design Inc.Download Log Jam

Furius Font

Furius is a display typeface inspired by the split serif style of woodcut or chiseled letters found in roman inscriptions and later popularized by the western genre in the United States. Created as a display typeface, Furius combines a host

P22 Koch Nueland Font

Neuland has been used since its introduction in 1923 as a rugged type with more black space than almost any other BOLD font. The appeal of Neuland, however, is much more than just heavy ink coverage. It has stood the

Machete Font

Machete is the hulky, overfed distant cousin of Bayoneta. Enthusiastically in your face and full of humour, Machete is exactly the kind of big alphabet that takes a skinny actress camping at the top of a really tall building downtown.

P22 Woodcut Set Font

P22 Woodcut is a rough-hewn font similar in style and mood to our Vienna Black font. It was inspired by the woodcuts of Edvard Munch, Max Beckman, Ernest Ludwig Kirchner and other Expressionist artists of the “Blaue Rieter” and “Die

Neuerland Font

Neuerland is an attempt to update Rudolf Koch’s traditional hand-cut display typeface, adding ligatures and alternate characters inspired by the forms of Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase’s Avant Garde. Published by WordshapeDownload Neuerland

Bayoneta Pro Font

Bayoneta is not your usual handcut alphabet, though it can seem so. It can also seem like carefully constructed lettering inspired by Polynesian cultures. By bridging that gap between knife-wielding kitsch and studied display lettering, Bayoneta offers quite a various