22523139545
Published: 31st May, 2014
Last edited: 12th April, 2018
Created: 31st May, 2014
I thought the round celtic/gaelic/insular forms of the latin letters would lend themselves well to a typewriter-esque font. Only later did I google it to find that Michael Everson is the king of this area.
Now I should really get back to my exam paper.
299276586
Published: 1st February, 2014
Last edited: 2nd February, 2014
Created: 1st February, 2014
Clone of RM Celtic open. (Modified to comply with the 48 brick high maximum).This is a clone
53715913
Published: 11th October, 2012
Last edited: 17th August, 2014
Created: 26th September, 2012
Third StencilComp entry, a mixture of archaic Celtic and modern styles.
Edit: changed the name
185138972
Published: 29th May, 2010
Last edited: 15th November, 2010
Created: 15th April, 2010
Celtic knotwork in an insular style. Based on lettering from the Book of Kells. Some alternates in the lower case, some ligatures in the "More Latin" set, and a "construction kit" on ~ so you can create your own knotty fonts :-)
UPDATE June 3 2010: Removed some artefacts from the 'E' and 'e'. Please re-download.This is a clone
15481268
Published: 29th September, 2008
Last edited: 24th June, 2009
Created: 29th September, 2008
Old celtic style font. Now with some diacritics and variants. Most of the vowels can have an acute over them, and many of the consonants can have dots. The dots make them be pronounced as if they were followed by an H, e.g. Th, Sh. Ë is a variant of R, Ì is a variant of S and Î is a variant of S with a dot above. Ï is the Irish symbol for "agus" or "and".