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Typing comic papyrus font
Typing comic papyrus font








typing comic papyrus font

Famous Logo Fonts A look at most popular fonts used in the logos of Future Font Friday 1Ī handy how-to to make any word look like it’s from THE FUTURE! Via Dave Addey at Typeset in the Future. From Famous Font FridayĮver wondered what all the world’s most famous companies’ fonts are? Yes? Congratulations! You are a type nerd who will probably enjoy this fascinating info! No? Give it a look anyway, you might get hooked on letterforms in spite of yourself. This post deals with matters cheerier, cheekier, and altogether less grim. Not to be confused with my post Found Font Friday 1, the tale of a bitter turn-of-the-20th-century rivalry which led to economically valuable-and artistically priceless-metal type being flung into London’s River Thames, to be recovered only after a lapse of a hundred years. So it seems high time that someone made a similarly reality-defying font. This font will make your brain hurt Oxymora is a typeface that evokes the twisting, non-Euclidian geometry of MC Escher’s artwork By Carl Franzen (Birgit Palma/Cargo Collective/Inspiration Hut) Impossible, twisting geometric artwork abounds across the internet (see The Verge‘s logo for one prominent example). Golly gosh, folks, this Sunday, March 8 is International Women’s Day! Isn’t it neat that they let us ladies have a whole day to ourselves? And a whole month to ourselves too? One out of twelve is just nifty! In any case, I thought I’d celebrate the day’s novel status with some typography for this, Fourth-Dimension Font Friday By CARA GIAIMO for Atlas Obscura Fonting While Female Font Friday Dwiggins The pioneering designer created dozens of fonts, only a few of which are still around today. Phone Font Friday: A Glowing Font Created by Waving an iPhone in the Darkįrom : Next > View all Forgotten Font FridayĪ lovely type-related article from Atlas Obscura, chroniclers of the strange and wonderful.










Typing comic papyrus font