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Kulibin or Kulidyaka? Kulich?
See more: https://www.fontsquirrel.com/fonts/list/foundry/alexey-kryukov
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/152204/unispace
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/942604/lexiconius
Eda (by Alexander Tarbeev)
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/shinn/bodoni-egyptian-pro/
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/shinn/scotch-modern/
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/artlebedev/mirta/
Kostro, 21 Cent (https://yurigordon.com/ru/shop/fonts)
Kazimir, Parmigano, Brioni, Karloff (https://type.today/en)
Marian family(19c), Caponi (https://commercialtype.com/)
https://www.paratype.ru/pstore/default.asp?fcode=PT_FIL&letter=F
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/itc/caslon-no-224/
https://www.paratype.ru/pstore/yfonts/ITC-Bodoni-72.htm
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/wiescherdesign/bodoni-classic-cyrillic/text-light/
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/redrooster/poor-richard-rr/monoline/glyphs.html
https://www.colophon-foundry.org/typefaces/peggs/
This is a dot-matrix version of a very popular classic computer!
This is a clone of Apple 2b Dot-MatrixGranenyi Stakan!
Stylising 19th-century grotesque.
See more: Differentura, Steinbeck (Roman Gornitskyi)
https://www.myfonts.com/fonts/blackletra/noka/
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/type-type/tt-firs/
LilienthalGrotesk (Vera Evstafeva)
(http://vdnh.ru/en/
https://daily.afisha.ru/archive/gorod/changes/oni-teplye-i-nezlye-dizaynery-masterskoy-barbanelya-o-novyh-simvolah-vdnh/)
http://vllg.com/klim/founders-grotesk#panel=poster
Helvetica World
http://www.dafont.com/k22-spotty-face.font
To read: http://letters.temporarystate.net/entry/1/
This is a clone of Antidot SansWhile suffering some serious fonter's block, here's another "wonky" experiment: this time, based on my "21st Century Dot Matrix" font. Random numbers were used to determine each dot's nudged position for the vertical (–½ / –¼ / 0 / +¼ / +½), and another set of random numbers for the horizontal. Each position had an equal 20% chance of placement.
On the previous "wonky" font ("Wonky Pins"), I adjusted some dots manually to be more visually pleasing, but I refrained from doing that here. Because so many dots were nudged to extreme positions (–½ & +½ vertically and horizontally) WITHOUT further adjustment, the printed text is still legible but definitely not as refined at "Wonky Pins"...
This typeface was also based on 2 sets of dots this time: one randomized set for an even number of dots across a row (6 or 8), and the other set for an odd number of dots (7). Sometimes, even dots and odd dots are used together on the same row in order to match the placement in the original design. These blocks are present in the "À" position. A slightly larger generic block in position "Á" is only present to prevent word processors from 'cutting off' dots nudged too far vertically up or down; initial test printings resulted in ½ dots being printed at those extremes.
Perhaps another "wonky" experiment will place the extreme ends at a lower chance of occurance (perhaps 10%) while the other three (–¼ / 0 / +¼) more at likely at 26.67% each. Or perhaps an even higher chance that the dot is not even nudged at all, with lower likelihoods as you move outwards to the extremes. This might alleviate the need for any manual adjustments, yet still get the point across that something... something has gone wonky with the printer...
Dot-line thin font. Inspired by Stag Dot.
Modern geometric serif(slab?) font.
See more: https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1675889/prototype-2-0-1
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/749833/fs_dot_serif
This is a thick dot-matrix version of a very popular classic computer, and it's normally used on word processors, electric billboards, etc. Probably a great font!
This is a clone of Apple 2a Dot-MatrixBumbu kacang is the actual name of Indonesian Salad’s (also known as gado-gado) peanut sauce. The round shape of the typeface inspired by the shape of lontong. The curvy part in the middle and the dots represent the peanut sauce.