Showing posts with label 20th century. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 20th century. Show all posts

Girl Lock fonts from Lady Rose - (zikrx)

Girl Lock


Girl Lock is a sleek sans-serif typeface. With space age curves and sharp corners, it is a type to make your project forward-looking.


In addition to that there are italics, adding up to a total of two high-quality fonts. This font also supports a majority of European and Latin-based languages.


Thanks and have a wonderful day,



Ladyrose



Girl Lock


Girl Lock fonts from Lady Rose - (xzzgi)

Girl Lock


Girl Lock is a sleek sans-serif typeface. With space age curves and sharp corners, it is a type to make your project forward-looking.


In addition to that there are italics, adding up to a total of two high-quality fonts. This font also supports a majority of European and Latin-based languages.


Thanks and have a wonderful day,



Ladyrose



Girl Lock


Girl Lock fonts from Lady Rose - (jjgxo)

Girl Lock


Girl Lock is a sleek sans-serif typeface. With space age curves and sharp corners, it is a type to make your project forward-looking.


In addition to that there are italics, adding up to a total of two high-quality fonts. This font also supports a majority of European and Latin-based languages.


Thanks and have a wonderful day,



Ladyrose



Girl Lock


Download Mozsar Font Family From Miklós Ferencz

Download Mozsar Font Family From Miklós Ferencz


Mozsár, named after Mozsár Street in the downtown of Budapest (pronounced ‘mo-zhar’, meaning mortar in Hungarian.) Mozsár is a unicase display typeface with constructivist characteristics from the early 20th Century. It uses pure geometric shapes and purposefully departs from strict typographical rules to give a more friendly look. With Mozsár you can create really unique and awesome looking displays, titles and even name plates for your business. It works very well in big size. The central idea behind the design was that two variants of the typeface would randomly alternate as the user types. The typeface uses Contextual Alternates (CALT) created with the OpenType’s semi-random feature to mix the variants. The width and height of the letter shapes are generally equal, but I made some exceptions to lend the type a character of unexpectedness. The curves are identical in both versions of each letter, and the intersections of the axes are always perpendicular (with some evident exceptions).


Download Mozsar Font Family From Miklós Ferencz