Fashion is about style, pairing the right one with the best one. Let me introduce Mode Style, best paired font between Sans Serif and Handwritten Script. It's suitable for logo, display purpose, or something else that needs elegant style.
YOU'LL GET:
1. Mode Style Sans, an elegant Sans Serif font with medium wide characters. This is All Caps font with large range of punctuation and multilingual support.
2. Mode Style Script, a classy thin Handwritten Script font with natural pen stroke feel. Comes with ligature make this font more close to the real handwritten, also support multilingual and already PUA Encoded.
Download Sigmund Font Family From BORUTTA GROUP
June 18, 2019
Sigmund is a visual journey around Poland. The main style is inspired by the Polish road signage typeface – designed by Marek Sigmund. With the increase of weight, Sigmund turns into a geometric display – in the spirit of vernacular typography from the signs of Polish streets. Thanks to this span of styles Sigmund will work both in visual identifications and posters. The family consists of 10 varieties and has many alternative characters.
Download Slab Compact JNL Font Family From Jeff Levine
June 18, 2019
Download Masny Font Family From Tour De Force
June 18, 2019
Download Pamplemousse Font Family From The Ampersand Forest
June 15, 2019
Meet Pamplemousse, a display font that's part fun, casual script and part elegant typeface! Pamplemousse is most decidedly a fellow who enjoys lazy Sunday mornings spent sipping mimosas or bloody marys over a plate of eggs benedict and the New York Times crossword puzzle. He enjoys dressing up for use in branding and headlines (he looks particularly dashing in all caps) and also sitting back and composing a casual note to a dear friend. Pamplemousse is mostly sweet and just a little sophisticated, and he likes being just as he is.
Pamplemousse started out as a typeface based on the lettering of Gustav Klimt in his poster for the first exhibition of the Vienna Secession movement (Art Nouveau). This drifted into an homage to Rea Irvin's iconic masthead typeface for the New Yorker magazine. Finally, with the addition of a lowercase (absent from Irvin's typeface), a significant revision away from both Klimt and Irvin into a more casual space, Pamplemousse was born!
Oh — why "pamplemousse?" "Pamplemousse" is French for grapefruit. What goes better in your Sunday gin and tonic than an aromatic slice of pamplemousse? Say it a few times. Preferably after a couple of those g & t's. You'll see how fun he can be...
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