Fett commands attention with its lavish uppercase letters. I had focused on creating an geometrical inverted slab serif incorporating features of Glyphic serifs. The distinguishing feature of Gylphic typefaces are the triangular shaped serif design, or a flaring of the character strokes where they terminate. Although Fett is not classified under either of those groups, I don’t think I wish it could be either- it shouldn’t be. Fett is meant to be very playful and tasteful. I named this font after its thick, fat stroke weight. Fett translates to “fat” in 3 different languages- German, Swedish, and Norwegian.
My second font of this day. More elaborate and less decorative, but useful for invitations that look like printed with a strange dot matrix printer. So far I've enjoyed using Fontstruct and I'm sure I'll continue this unusual a creative work to make something useful and attractive for everybody who likes to have a choice of fonts on their computer.
This design looks chunky and earthy, as if poked into damp soil with the end of a broken branch.
*Just waving to my friends whose carefully managed wild garden allowed peaceful walks and discovery of nature and self, followed by great food, long discussions and fabulous music* This font was inspired by what I saw in your gardens you worked hard to make look as-wild-as-nature-grows-without-human-interference. I'll add necessary glyphs with diacritics should my friends and families ask for them.
A playful stencil-type font that's best used for a headline or small amount of type. I'm not happy with some of the letters like the K and the R and they will need to be tweaked. This is a work in progress.
This is a clone