Sunday, 10 January 2010

More fonts


http://www.buyfonts.com/fnt10.htm


Abbess

An unusual decorative font. Ideal for creating headings when you want to create an
artistic feel to a page.


Author

An elegant script that looks like old fashioned copperplate writing such as you find on certificates. The letters join together (technically called "cursive script") to give a flowing style. Useful where you want a formal look.


Blarney

A Celtic-style font, similarly to lettering first used over a thousand years ago. Excellent if you want to conjure up an image of the Dark Ages.


Calvin

A very informal script font that looks like you just jotted something down. The two sets of letters are different so you can mix them to give a better 'jotted-down' look.


Calvin Italic

The italic version of Calvin. What more is there to say?


Coleridge

Another elegant script. Lighter than Author and looks more like handwriting. You can imagine an 19th century letter written in Coleridge.


Dicot Medium

Where you're short of space, a slightly condensed font like Dicot Medium is invaluable. There's also Light and Bold variants in the Dicot family.


Marker

Looks like someone's used a thick marker pen to write with. An excellent font when you want to create an informal-looking heading. To continue the informal appearance you could use Calvin for the body of the text.


Rigamarole

Useful for posters and notices.


Splash

A stylish font suitable for headings and short blocks of body text.


Toledo

A very informal script font that looks like you just jotted something down.

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