Zero To Hero fonts from Olivetype - (abhbq)

Zero To Hero


Zero To Hero is a bold handwritten font, carefully handcrafted to become a true favorite. Its casual charm makes it appear wonderfully down-to-earth, readable, and ultimately, incredibly versatile. Zero To Hero will look outstanding in any context, whether it’s being used on busy backgrounds or as a standalone headline!


This font is supporting Multi-Languages, which includes: Afrikaans Albanian Catalan Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Italian Norwegian Portuguese Spanish Swedish Zulu.


You will get : Zero To Hero OTF


Thank you



Zero To Hero


Gladies fonts from DYSA Studio - (doabo)

Gladies


Gladies is a New Modern Serif Typeface. This another collection of Serif is perfect for your next branding project, excellent for your business. Gladies have a smooth edges, so this font gives an authentic handcrafted feel style.


Gladies is perfect choice for people looking for clean, modern, minimalist, elegant, beauty design styles. Suitable for almost any graphic designs such as logo, branding materials, business cards, gift cards, t-shirt, cover, thumbnail, print, poster, photography, quotes .etc



Gladies


Speeday fonts from deFharo - (dvogh)

Speeday


Speeday is a Display and Sans Serif typeface family, slanted at 23 ° with a rounded finish, with 3 styles, Regular, Bold and Small Caps that include 9 sets of numbers, 3 sets of uppercase and alternate letters, as well as advanced Open functions Type.


Thick typography with a contemporary appearance that brings great dynamism to the texts written with it, its use in graphic, editorial and advertising design guarantees originality, difference and maximum readability, the kerning has been carefully configured in all versions.


See specimen in PDF



Speeday


Authenticity fonts from Doehantz Studio - (ndxsc)

Authenticity


Authenticity is an authentic signature font. It made with a neat touch making it easy to read. This font is suitable for use as web logos, signatures, invitation, prints, headers, magazines, book covers, t-shirt prints, craft, product brand, business card, logo, and gift card



Authenticity


Neue Rasant fonts from Neue - (sydlm)

Neue Rasant


→ neue Rasant is an interpretation of a typeface used by the Singapore Land Transit Authority for its directional signage. The typeface design is based on a rigid grid with little to no room for optical compensations or any kind of harmonisation whatsoever. This approach can be seen as epitomic to an engineer’s way of designing which offers paradoxically unorthodox solutions in a seemingly orthodox system.

→ neue Rasant is a uniwidth design which means that the individual characters are occupying the same amount of space across all weights and styles. This way of designing a type family turns out handy if one wants to avoid unintentional line breaks or space consumption.

→ neue Rasant comes in five weights ranging from Thin to Bold. For the Italics the designer has the choice between 

a traditional slant to the right or an unconventional slant to the left. All weights and styles are equipped with arrows matching the individual weight’s stroke thickness.

→ For trial and variable fonts reach out to hi@neuefoundry.com



Neue Rasant


Harland Roselyn fonts from Namara Creative Studio - (daygw)

Harland Roselyn


Harland Roselyn is a romantic and sweet calligraphy typeface with characters that dance along the baseline. It will add a luxury spark to any design project that you wish to create!


Bold decorative script with modern handwritten touch, warm, romantic and jolly. perfect for wedding invitations, logos, branding, packaging as well as cuttable designs.



Harland Roselyn


Halfway There fonts from Hanoded - (gojif)

Halfway There


Halfway There… We love to go camping as a family and we usually go to France (because France is only a 5 hour drive from where we live, it is usually sunny and they have the best bread in the world - enough said!). Somewhere around Lille, or Luxembourg City (depending on our destination in France), the kids always ask: ‘are we almost there?’ and my answer is always: ‘we’re halfway there!’.



Halfway There