I am an avid alphabetologist and enjoy studying, writing, reading, and creating alphabets.
Alphabets I have created:
- Myanrik
- Neo Runes Alphabets
- New Cyrillic
- Alphabet 1
- Atengwar
- Katemayar
- Altrimaya
All other conscripts I create for various constructed alphabets were based off alphabets found elsewhere on the internet invented by other people. I will do my best to link their source each time I publish a new font. Despite using CC and copyrights for many fonts, I do not claim intellectual property of the alphabets of which they are based on, only the fonts themselves.
Fontstructing since | 4th July, 2017 |
Fontstructions | 64 shared, 0 staff picks |
Shared Glyphs | 10270 |
Downloads | 2566 downloads made of this designer’s work |
Comments Made | 60 |
Here is my first conscript font on Fontstruct. Alphabet 1 is an alphabet I created from various inspirations to function for most European languages using the Latin alphabet. This is not however the first alphabet I have created in general. I hope you enjoy the alphabet.
Here is the font for my first rendition of Altrimaya. One might notice many of these letters differ greatly from my revised and refined Altrimaya alphabet I also have featured here. I figured I should publish this one as well to let users decide which version they prefer. Hope you enjoy!
Please note however that I will likely only make fonts from my Revised Altrimaya alphabet, not this one. Regardless if the title of these other fonts includes "revised" or not, unless specifically stated that it originates from this alphabet it will always originate from Altrimaya (Revised).
Heres an alphabet I created mostly from inspiration from the Atemayar (A, D, E, F, G, I, K, S, T, V, W) and Georgian-Nuskhuri (C, H, R, U) alphabets.
This alphabet is developed specifically for use with Kynaatt (link can be found in comments). Unlike my Atemayar Extended font, this font only covers these following letters and currency symbols:
For English: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ$
For Kynaatt: AÅÃÂBČDĎÐEĚFGĞHIJKLŁMNŇOØÕPRŘSŠTUÛVXYÝZŽ₮
(Please note this is an outdated version of the Kynaatt Alphabet)
Here is my Serif version of my Altrimaya alphabet. This alphabet is developed specifically for use with English and Kynaat (link can be found in comments). Unlike my Atemayar Extended font, this font only covers these following letters and currency symbols:
For English: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ$
For Kynaat: AÅÃÂBČDĎÐEĚFGĞHIJKLŁMNŇOØÕPRŘSŠTUÛVXYÝZŽ₮
This is a clone of Altrimaya (Revised)Here is an extended version of my Atemayar Rigid Script. This script has taken me years to get to the point where it is. It is incomplete however I figured I would release it with the current list of characters that I have created. While I plan to complete it, it will be some time before this is achieved so please bear with me as life tends to get in the way sometimes.
I began this font August 31, 2017, and I'm releasing it 30 days short of its 2 year anniversary.
Based off the original alphabet of Atemayar Qelisayér featured on Omniglot created by Simon Halfdan Hvilshøj Andersen. Credit for all the original characters of this alphabet goes to him, as well as credit for inspiration. Some characters in this alphabet are wholly original to this font (most are not however), these are inspired wholly by the original Atemayar alphabet in one way or another.
I truly and sincerely hope you enjoy, this font is made for all to enjoy and to spread such a beautiful alphabet to be used for all languages and all writing systems. I love Atemayar more than any existing writing system, I take all my notes in it, and I wish that Simon Halfdan Hvilshøj Andersen's alphabet will be spread around the world and used by many.
The alphabets can be categorized into groups based on the following criteria:
- Pseudo-Atemayar: shares no letters with Atemayar, but appears similar
- Semi-Pseudo-Atemayar: shares a few characters with Atemayar, but overall still looks like its base alphabet and can't be read by Atemayar users
- Modified Atemayar: Follows all/most of the same letters as Atemayar, however has added or modified letters as well
- Classic Atemayar: Original Atemayar alphabet without change
The alphabets' classifications are as follows:
Basic Latin: Classic (except X, which is a ligature of K and S)
Punctuation (all except . , : ; ? ! ... " '): Modified
More Latin: Modified
Extended Latin B: Modified
Extended Latin A: Modified
Greek & Coptic: Modified
Cyrillic: Modified
Arabic: Modified (reversed letters)
Devanagari: Modified (line above letters)
Georgian: Semi-Pseudo
Armenian: Semi-Pseudo
Katakana: Modified
Hebrew: Modified (reversed letters) ***Incomplete***
Hangul: Pseudo ***Incomplete***
Bopomofo: Modified (dots above letters, ligatures)
Thai: Pseudo ***Incomplete***
Here is my version of the Davé alphabet featured on Omniglot. I did my best to make the proportions as accurate to the handwriting seen on the original source of the alphabet, however some circular patterns (such as the punctuation) were somewhat difficult and sadly might not exactly match the proportions. I hope you enjoy nonetheless.
Here is my version of a serif Eriseci alphabet. It is the same format as the previous Eriseci font which this was cloned from, so for use of this font please referrence that one. I hope you enjoy :D
This is a clone of Eriseci AlphabetHere is my rendition of the Gryirhanli Alphabet featured on Omniglot. Since the font software is rather difficult when it comes to irregular or large arcing curves, it can be said with certainty that I used quite a bit of artistic liberty in creating this font. Having worked on this font for 2 years now, I'm very happy to finally release it for all to see. I used Ch in place of C, Sh in place of X, Aa in place of Á, Ee in place of Í, Oo in place of Ú, Ai in place of Ý, and finally Th in place of Þ giving every character an equal opportunity of typability. Although the alphabet chart did not specify punctuation, I based the period off the one used in the text example (and did not include any further punctuation).
Despite using artistic liberty I do however feel this font is still accurate enough in comparison to the original that both are easily mutually intelligible with each other (such as Comic Sans vs Times New Roman for Latin).
I truly hope you enjoy this font.