You can alternatively get the font from FontSpace.
Font from the link has imrpoved metrics (64 em units per brick instead of 85.3̅ per brick), custom .notdef glyph, and cleaner outlines (i.e. no redundant points)…
A flat version of elmoyenique's Zugarup so that you can extrude it to a 3D space…
This is a clone of zugarup eYe/FSPlans for the near future:
▪ Mathematical Operators
▪ Letterlike Symbols + Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols
When a future version of the Unicode comes out:
▪ Symbols For Legacy Computing Supplement, Mainly the Kaypro Octets and Large Print Pieces: Unicode 16.0
Some Japanese letters may look a tad illegible…
Also, I would not recommend using the kanji that's currently in the Ethopic Block because some of them aren't very legible. If you speak Japanese, please type in all Hiragana/Katakana with this font, even if you want to use the yuan sign, DON'T! Please type "えん" for that…
Also, I thought I pressed the Publish button, but forgot to do…
A conscript that I created for English.
This uses the 44 phonemes that are found in English, the words are spelt out how they sound, and accent marks in the pronounciation are ignored.
If this is written out right to left, the glyphs are flipped horizontally and aligned to the right, and every glyph is written out from right to left if written in that direction…
This font is best used at font sizes 32, and multiples of 64
Mapping:
U+f020: - Vowel æ In cat
U+f021: - Vowel eɪ In bay
U+f022: - Vowel e In end
U+f023: - Vowel i: In be
U+f024: - Vowel ɪ In it
U+f025: - Vowel aɪ In pie
U+f026: - Vowel ɒ In swan
U+f027: - Vowel oʊ In open
U+f028: - Vowel ʊ In wolf
U+f029: - Vowel ʌ In lug
U+f02a: - Vowel u: In who
U+f02b: - Vowel ɔɪ In join
U+f02c: - Vowel aʊ In now
U+f02d: - Vowel ə In about
U+f02e: - Vowel eəʳ In chair
U+f02f: - Vowel ɑ: In arm
U+f030: - Vowel ɜ:ʳ In bird
U+f031: - Vowel ɔ: In paw
U+f032: - Vowel ɪəʳ In steer
U+f033: - Vowel ʊəʳ In cure
U+f034: - Consonant b In bubble
U+f035: - Consonant d In add
U+f036: - Consonant f In cliff
U+f037: - Consonant g In guest
U+f038: - Consonant h In who
U+f039: - Consonant dʒ In jam
U+f03a: - Consonant k In kit
U+f03b: - Consonant l In live
U+f03c: - Consonant m In summer
U+f03d: - Consonant n In net
U+f03e: - Consonant p In pin
U+f03f: - Consonant r In run
U+f040: - Consonant s In sit
U+f041: - Consonant t In tip
U+f042: - Consonant v In vine
U+f043: - Consonant w In why
U+f044: - Consonant z In pizza
U+f045: - Consonant ʒ In treasure
U+f046: - Consonant tʃ In watch
U+f047: - Consonant ʃ In ocean
U+f048: - Consonant θ In thoughtful
U+f049: - Consonant ð In leather
U+f04a: - Consonant ŋ In ring
U+f04b: - Consonant j In you
U+f04c: - Mathematical Period (Decimal point)
U+f04d: - Mathematical Comma (Digit seperator)
U+f04e: - Negative Sign For Numbers (Use this to represent negative numbers)
U+f04f: - Sign For Nth Roots (Used to represent roots other than two of numbers, Use this before an exclamation point to represent factorials)
U+f050: - Digit Zero
U+f051: - Digit One
U+f052: - Digit Two
U+f053: - Digit Three
U+f054: - Digit Four
U+f055: - Digit Five
U+f056: - Digit Six
U+f057: - Digit Seven
U+f058: - Digit Eight
U+f059: - Digit Nine
U+f05a: - General Use Period (Avoid using this for mathematics)
U+f05b: - General Use Comma (Avoid using this for mathematics, also a list comma)
U+f05c: - Exclamation Point (Can be used for factorial numbers, but it must have the symbol for nth roots before it)
U+f05d: - Question Mark
U+f05e: - Single Quotation Mark
U+f05f: - Double Quotation Mark
U+f060: - Ampersand
U+f061: - Caret For Powers Of N (Used for exponentation)
U+f062: - Percent Sign (Parts of 100)
U+f063: - Forwards Solidus (Can be used to represent fractions)
U+f064: - Reverse Solidus
U+f065: - Left Bracket (Round, Square, Angled, Curly, etc. left braces)
U+f066: - Right Bracket (Round, Square, Angled, Curly, etc. right braces)
U+f067: - Ellipses (Use this instead of 3 periods)
U+f068: - Number Sign
U+f069: - Colon (Can be used to tell time)
U+f06a: - Semicolon
U+f06b: - Addition Symbol
U+f06c: - Hyphen Or Subtraction Symbol (Two for an en dash, and three for an em dash)
U+f06d: - Multiplication Symbol
U+f06e: - Division Symbol
U+f06f: - Square Root Symbol (Used to take the square root of a number, Use the sign for nth roots symbol to take the root of a number other than two)
U+f070: - Financial Digit Zero
U+f071: - Financial Digit One
U+f072: - Financial Digit Two
U+f073: - Financial Digit Three
U+f074: - Financial Digit Four
U+f075: - Financial Digit Five
U+f076: - Financial Digit Six
U+f077: - Financial Digit Seven
U+f078: - Financial Digit Eight
U+f079: - Financial Digit Nine
U+f07a: - Financial Number Start
U+f07b: - Financial Number End
U+f07c: - Stress Marker (To mark stressed syllables)
U+f07d: - Name Marker (Use this at the start and end of a name)
I might re-make this from scratch in FontForge in the future…
I got inspired by züricher Eye/FS from elmoyenique to create my own rounded font.
Inspired by Greenstar987's GS Unicode 2.0 series (General idea), and Paul Hardy's GNU Unifont (Proportions). I gotten the idea to create a pixel font that supports Unicode.
-- Planes --
Plane 0 - Basic Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 1 - Supplementary Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 2 - Supplementary Ideographic Plane — [This]
Plane 3 - Tertiary Ideographic Plane — [Here]
[No characters have been defined in planes 4 through D as of Unicode 15.0]
Plane E - Supplementray Special-purpose Plane — [Here]
Plane F - Supplementary Private Use Area-A — [PUA]
Plane 10 - Supplementary Private Use Area-B — [PUA]
Inspired by Greenstar987's GS Unicode 2.0 series (General idea), and Paul Hardy's GNU Unifont (Proportions). I gotten the idea to create a pixel font that supports Unicode.
-- Planes --
Plane 0 - Basic Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 1 - Supplementary Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 2 - Supplementary Ideographic Plane — [Here]
Plane 3 - Tertiary Ideographic Plane — [Here]
[No characters have been defined in planes 4 through D as of Unicode 15.0]
Plane E - Supplementray Special-purpose Plane — [This]
Plane F - Supplementary Private Use Area-A — [PUA]
Plane 10 - Supplementary Private Use Area-B — [PUA]
-- Note --
This font encompasses a plane, which doesn't have very many meaningful Unicode characters, but will still contain everything that is encoded.
A WIP for now, there is basic kerning in the font. Accented latin letters intentionally not kerned at the moment as I'm still figuring out how the accented letters should be kerned and I cannot directly type them on a keyboard. I might post a sample if/when I get the other letters kerned. Speaking of spacing, Should I have the left and right most bounds of the accented letters touch the left and right guides respectively?
This is how the Illager runes look like from 21w37a of Minecraft (minus the one extra pixel in the image on the right of the 0…)
If there are any new glyphs added or changed in a future snapshot, please tell me in the comments…
A pixel font that I have created. This is a monospace font, but the monospace flag is not set. This is to allow for zero-width letters… This means there are bound to be one or two spacing mistakes, (And no, setting the width to zero is not a spacing mistake). If you find any, please tell me in the comments…
My grandma passed away recently…
This font is not yet finished
Inspired by Greenstar987's GS Unicode 2.0 series (General idea), and Paul Hardy's GNU Unifont (Proportions). I gotten the idea to create a pixel font that supports Unicode.
-- Planes --
Plane 0 - Basic Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 1 - Supplementary Multilangual Plane — [This]
Plane 2 - Supplementary Ideographic Plane — [Here]
Plane 3 - Tertiary Ideographic Plane — [Here]
[No characters have been defined in planes 4-D as of Unicode 15.0]
Plane E - Supplementray Special-purpose Plane — [Here]
Plane F - Supplementary Private Use Area-A — [PUA]
Plane 10 - Supplementary Private Use Area-B — [PUA]
Inspired by Greenstar987's GS Unicode 2.0 series (General idea), and Paul Hardy's GNU Unifont (Proportions). I gotten the idea to create a pixel font that supports Unicode.
-- Planes --
Plane 0 - Basic Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 1 - Supplementary Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 2 - Supplementary Ideographic Plane — [Here]
Plane 3 - Tertiary Ideographic Plane — [This]
[No characters have been defined in planes 4 through D as of Unicode 15.0]
Plane E - Supplementray Special-purpose Plane — [Here]
Plane F - Supplementary Private Use Area-A — [PUA]
Plane 10 - Supplementary Private Use Area-B — [PUA]
-- Note --
Ignore the fact that the "TIP" tag is all in lowercase when it should have been in capital letters. Whoever thought of the tag wrote it like that.