Clone of Tirrel (by Doug Peters). Copyright 2019 Doug Peters.
This version has the 'soft' alternates. These are the lowercase characters in 'Tirrel'. The idea is that if someone is used to using the shift key and only wants the softer style of the font, they can use this version and they will only get all the caps versions of Tirrel whether they use shift or caps lock (or not).
Categories: Monospaced Sans/Stencil.
Types: White Space, Striped, Display Caps, Logotype, & Novelty.
Weight: Bold.
Web font: Yeah, sure.
Commercial use: Yes.
Derivatives: No.
Redistribution: No.
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A YouTube user named, Willow Rolfe, So it's time to make a typeface for real.
I trying to make this font look like somebody drew it on paper...
I WANT TO MAKE ALL UNICODE
do-oh is a display typeface inspired by the word 'squishy'.
I looked at squishing and the movement of squishing something hard and soft and the different forms it would take; I became interested in how an object changes form when squished but how it retains sections of the previous form too but slightly distorted.
I was also interested in the different ways of squishing something and how that changed the outcome.
The typeface is focused on shapes made when I created letters from squashing dough together.
This is a cloneThis typeface was designed from using the word 'Squishy' as a starting point. Which i then went on to pinpointing it down to fat in particular looking at animal fat. I feel this font can be used in a large poster or sign, advertising or for promoting against animal cruelty.
This is a cloneMy first advanced font, with composite curves!