80761
Published: 28th September, 2011
Last edited: 19th January, 2012
Created: 27th September, 2011
A sharp and biting font! Still in development, just to exercise with fontstruct……
4419810
Published: 15th September, 2011
Last edited: 11th January, 2012
Created: 9th September, 2011
This font features abundant 90-degree angles and a unique hollowed style. It's great for anything that needs an angular edge, or a smooth pixelated look.
2579910
Published: 12th April, 2010
Last edited: 5th May, 2010
Created: 15th March, 2010
Freak out all over your paper or project with Spaz! Can be used as both display and body text in large and small sizes. Have fun spazzing!
130983
Published: 15th February, 2010
Last edited: 16th February, 2010
Created: 24th January, 2010
My first fontstruction, I tried to keep it simple yet classy with a clean, keen style using a tablet. Full block only.
681313225
Published: 10th September, 2009
Last edited: 14th September, 2009
Created: 6th September, 2009
Serpentine is another easygoing Outline-type which can be used for headlines. Take a look at the example, hope you like it. I´m open for any suggestions.
*=alt.B, #=alt.R, %=alt.e
127914711
Published: 19th August, 2009
Last edited: 4th September, 2009
Created: 17th August, 2009
If Bold is not enough...try Ultrabold! Part two of the Samoa-Typefamily. Hope you like it, take a look at the example. Write a comment if you have any suggestions!This is a clone of Samoa
104613410
Published: 17th August, 2009
Last edited: 2nd October, 2009
Created: 14th August, 2009
"Samoa" is another bold typeface experiment where I used the filters (1.6). Looks striking to me although I´m not sure about Z, 4 and 7...How do you like it? Write a comment!
291965
Published: 31st July, 2009
Last edited: 31st July, 2009
Created: 29th July, 2009
What can I say? Just another very simple, edgy typeface...A mix of Bauhaus and 80s-style. Hope you like it. Check out the example.
292163126
Published: 10th March, 2009
Last edited: 22nd June, 2009
Created: 9th March, 2009
it looks so simple but this one was so hard to do. because of the high resolution i was working on my browser used to freeze several times during process.
651492
Published: 29th August, 2008
Last edited: 11th November, 2008
Created: 29th August, 2008
Another attempt from me! I am very new to it and I try to do things that entice me. And this font is enticing me! But please again feel free to critique, comment or suggest any modifications! I will be glad to hear from you and learn! And yes everyone, please feel free to use this type! I would love to see its use if you can link me to them :)
Peace
250620
Published: 19th April, 2024
Last edited: 16th December, 2008
Created: 18th July, 2008
A display font that is a contemporary take on gothic novels and B-grade horror flicks. Perfect for editorials with bite and indie movie and music posters.
130323
Published: 19th April, 2024
Last edited: 2nd November, 2014
Created: 2nd November, 2014
Fashionably Anarchic Striped Edition.
"Fashionably Anarchic" is a typeface inspired by the 1970s Punk movement- paying notice to the political, economical and social issues of the time and how they affected what we commonly refer to as the “Punk Aesthetic”. Ransom note lettering, stencils, silkscreen printing and the appropriation of current cultural imagery aided the movement to deliver its important message of rebellion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Starting off with the theme "Dangerous", my focus for this project drifted to the definitions of both “rebellion” and “anarchy”. This naturally led me to the Punk movement and how it’s graphic style has been adopted into contemporary design practice. These graphics were often rough, raw, weathered and distressed- all of which I’ve tried to incorporate into my own type’s design. Ironically, the fact that this “style” is being used for commercial gain goes against the very foundations of Punk itself. This realisation spurred on the font’s name “Fashionably Anarchic”.
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This typeface would be best utilised in consideration to posters, flyers and possibly book covers (providing the content matches the attitude of the font). Thank you very much, all comments are welcome!This is a clone of Blimey! Rough
140346
Published: 19th April, 2024
Last edited: 25th November, 2014
Created: 25th November, 2014
"Blimey!" is a typeface inspired by the 1970s Punk movement- paying notice to the political, economical and social issues of the time and how they affected what we commonly refer to as the “Punk Aesthetic”. Ransom note lettering, stencils, silkscreen printing and the appropriation of current cultural imagery aided the movement to deliver its important message of rebellion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Starting off with the theme "Dangerous", my focus for this project drifted to the definitions of both “rebellion” and “anarchy”. This naturally led me to the Punk movement and how it’s graphic style has been adopted into contemporary design practice. These graphics were often rough, raw, weathered and distressed- all of which I’ve tried to incorporate into my own type’s design. Ironically, the fact that this “style” is being used for commercial gain goes against the very foundations of Punk itself. This realisation spurred on the font’s name Blimey!, an ironic expression that is perhaps the furthest away from punk itself.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This typeface would be best utilised in consideration to posters, flyers and possibly book covers (providing the content matches the attitude of the font). Thank you very much, all comments are welcome!
Blimey! Rough - http://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/blimey_rough
Blimey! Chunky - This is a clone
135015510
Published: 19th April, 2024
Last edited: 10th July, 2017
Created: 28th March, 2012
A display type from the edge of the future.
Free for personal use only. Please contact for commercial.
Update: March 22nd 2015
Redesigned a few characters and added extra weight. Slightly chunkier than previous version. Cyrillic in development - basic uppercase only for now.