Meikayla Script is a classic decorative font with a modern twist. Meikayla is a handwritten font meant for vintage logos, fashion labels, custom cards headers, badges, food packaging designs, as there are a lot of fancy letter connections. Meikayla offers a decent amount of stylistic alternatives for many letters.
To enable OpenType Stylistic alternates, you need a program that supports OpenType features like Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe Indesign & CorelDraw X6-X7, Microsoft Word 2010 or later. (Windows), Font Book (Mac) or software programs such as PopChar (for Windows and Mac).
Download Mishora Script Font Family From Lettersams
Mishora Script is an elegant calligraphy font. This font is perfect for wedding invitations, logo branding, titles, signs, labels, signatures, book covers, posters, quotes, and more.
Mishora Script displays an alternative, binding, and OpenType International style for most Western languages. To activate the OpenType Stylistic alternative, you support programs that support OpenType features such as Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe Indesign & CorelDraw X6-X7, Microsoft Word 2010 or newer.
Mishora script is coded with Unicode PUA, which allows access to all features without special design software. Mac users can use Letter Books, and Windows users can use Character Maps to view and copy additional characters to attach to your favorite text / editor application.
If you need help or have questions, let me know or send an email "suratams@gmail.com" I am happy to help :) Thank you & Happy Designing!
Download Bestowens Font Family From Letterara
October 08, 2019
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Bestowens is the perfect handwritten font: Elegant, Sweet, innocent, light and charming, this one-of-a-kind typeface will add a unique charm to any design project!
Bestowens was created to look as close to a natural handwritten script as possible by including 44 ligatures. With built in OpenType features, this script comes to life as if you are writing it yourself. You can see it in the pictures shown.
A wide range of swashes (a-z) and alternates (A-Z, a-z) are included so that you can give your logo or name a custom, hand-calligraphy look.
This font is available in 10 Styles in 1 typefaces: Thin, Light, Regular, Semi Bold, Bold, Thin Italic, Light Italic, Italic, Semi Bold Italic, Bold Italic and most importantly, Bestowens is perfect for you!
don't wait anymore, put it in your shopping basket :)
and follow me, because there will be many promos!
Download Anything Script Font Family From Aldedesign
Anything Script is a stylish script font that features a varying baseline, smooth line, modern and with a depth love. For those of you who are need a touch of love and modernity for your designs or branding, it can be used for various purposes such as headings, wedding, invitation, signature, logos, branding, t-shirt, letterhead, signage, lable, news, posters, badges etc.
Download Baby Fun Font Family From Beary
Download Boisterous Fun Font Family From Missy Meyer
Have you ever been drawing out the letters for a font, then you start making some multi-letter ligatures? Then you think up some more to make, and you make those too? And you keep making them, until you have over a hundred of them?
No? Just me?
Boisterous Fun is a font that started out simple -- a nice handwriting style with a single stroke width. But add in the ligatures, plus a dozen single-letter alternates and my usual crowd of accented characters for language support, and this baby has grown to over 600 characters total. It's a great casual font for branding or packaging, but it's also smoothed so it's easy for cutting.
Boisterous Fun includes:
- The usual A-Z, a-z, 0-9, and lots of punctuation;
- Over 300 extended Latin characters for language support;
- 140 alternates and ligatures for variety, all PUA-encoded for easy use!
I had a ton of fun making it, and I hope you have a ton of fun using it!
Download Manufactory JNL Font Family From Jeff Levine
Manufactory JNL and its oblique counterpart were re-drawn from examples of a now-antique typeface used within many advertisements found throughout the pages of The American Stationer magazine, circa 1879.
The term ‘manufactory’ was popular during this era; the word being a more archaic form of ‘factory’.
There is a bit of Western flavor to this type design, as the spurred serifs and the top and bottom strokes are heavier than the vertical and mid-point stroke weights.
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