WIP
This is a clone of Sonda Rafeshi sans serif boldWIP ithkuil font
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DONE:
primare aspect characters
vertical/diagonal tail modifications
above/below/midline dicaritics
secondary and tertiary aspect characters
secondary and tertiary aspect character diacritics
consonantal characters
tail modifications for the horizontal sections
placeholders
punctuation
numbers
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The diacritic/tail modification placements would be handled using opentype GSUB and GPOS.
Enjoy the several hundreds of various zero width diacritics and modification characters stacking on top of each other.
The Namak script was originally derived from a logographic script and used for the language of Namariehak around 5000 years ago, but has since then spread and has become the most widely used script on Notasami. It is a bicameral, alphabetic script that uses a base-10 number system. This is a serifed version of the script resembling the original, traditional way of writing it, and includes the four Santieng diacritics.
The Namak script was originally derived from a logographic script and used for the language of Namariehak around 5000 years ago, but has since then spread and has become the most widely used script on Notasami. It is a bicameral, alphabetic script that uses a base-10 number system. This is a sans-serif, simple font along with the four Santieng diacritics.
A font for my friend's conlang called Anachek. Anachek uses a syllabary of 23 consonants and 5 vowels called porodowixme (/pɔrɔdɔʍiχmɜ/) for a total of 93 characters and 22 diacritics. This font also includes the number system, which is base 12. This should be the most complete font including all punctuation and numbers, and some math operations.
punctuation system might undergo changes because we are still working on the conworld
This is a cloneThis is a recent experiment on linear design. This includes all 26 letters in both upper and lower case a a small number of punctuation marks.
I wanted to try and create a stark linear script that would be easy and quick to write out in contrast with some of my more ornamental scripts.
This is a revision of the original Imrian script (my first fontstruct).
This revision has had some significant tweaks based on what I have learnt from my other designs.
The original script was laced with a strong botanical theme and draw from the Ogham language. All sentences should begin with a ( [open bracket] to create the root symbol. Words are then typed as in english using a - [hyphen] instead of a space. For example:
(The-quick-brown-fox-jumps-over-the-lazy-dog.
Enjoy!
This, as the name suggests, is a cubic version of the script helix. This variation removes all curved lines and approached the script with a box look rather than the traditional helix twist effect.
This has the same letter/punctuation as other helix variations.
A new conlang I've created based on LokiT's unlu and Evikræl and a few others I've found on the web. Although the time I spent fonstructing this one was minimal, I did put a lot of effort into designing it's style and method. You'll find a similar one to this on omniglot; trust me, I designed this without knowledge of the other one.
Hope you enjoy it; not much to explain about its usage, really, other than the advanced glyphs æ and á on a latin keyboard or a regular "special symbols" page on a mac make an Ai or Ay sound, like eye, or cry, or a japanes maegeri, and that á makes a kind of æ and eh hybrid sound not in our language, symilar to a heavily accented e in spanish.
Sooo, yeah.
BYEEEEE!
Vykra is a conlang script based on the concept of a syllabic alphabet and inspired by plants.
The upper case is the plant body, while the lowercase is the root. As such it is necessary to write this script in alternating case (AlTeRnAtInG CaSe) so as to place an upper and lower case letter together.
The full stop symbol is used for words consisting of one letter to provide a root.
Glyphr is a combination of shapes, design and ideas which I have seen and love. The combination of then creates a very linear chicken scratch script.
Generally you should start every word with an uppercase in order to get the preparatory line, however, the script is equally effective without this.