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Showing posts with the label bifurcated

Download Poblano Font Family From Niche

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Download Poblano Font Family From Niche Poblano is a masterfully designed flared typeface, inspired by Gothic Tuscan that incorporates an aura of modern fun and classic southwest whimsy. With serifs that embody the beautiful, natural curve of the Poblano Pepper, it captures the pepper’s essence and attitude of having the perfect amount of piquant heat. Perfectly suited for menus, headlines, and logos, Poblano will be the ideal garnish to complete and elevate your food, rustic, grunge and hipster themed designs. The Poblano menu includes: • A range of styles from elegantly thin to boastful black • Over 400 glyphs per weight • More than 50 stylistic alternatives • Upper and lowercase characters • Uniquely stylized to elevate your design and add that finishing touch This is the ultimate niche solution to both display and functional Tuscan serif fonts. Download Poblano Font Family From Niche Download Now

Download Sexbomb Font Family From K-Type

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Download Sexbomb Font Family From K-Type SEXBOMB is a frolicsome display face, a hybrid of two styles inspired by the countercultural quality of the K-Type Zabars font. Sexbomb retains the sharp, bifurcated upper portion of Zabars characters, but lower portions morph into sensuous, bulbous curves. The Sexbomb family comprises three fonts that share spacing and kerning, so can be overlapped to produce bicolor and multicolor effects. In addition to the regular, solid style there is a shaded ‘Popdots’ style and a matching outline font. Download Sexbomb Font Family From K-Type Download Now View Gallery

Download Cowboya Tuscan Font Family From deFharo

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Download Cowboya Tuscan Font Family From deFharo Cowboya is a typography with concave Tuscan serif very contrasted and modernist inspiration with letters in small caps, includes 4 versions of the font that can be used by superimposed layers which results in multicolored typographic titles. For the design of this typeface I was inspired by the credit titles used in the black film directed by Frizt Lang in 1950 called “The House of the River”, to the drawing of the original forms of the letters i added decorative elements to give the fonts a festive character, traditionally this type of decorative fonts that emerged in Italy in the nineteenth century were used in large headlines and posters that were closely related to circus shows, carnival or environments of the Far West American. I have also rounded the sharper joints of the antlers and counterforms to create a contrast with the sharp