Name is a pun and a work-in-progress.
This is my first try at a serif-style font.
If you need any character set specifically, message me and I'll add them ASAP.
Contains:
-Basic Latin 100%!
-Latin Supplement 100%!
-Latin Extended A 100%!
-Latin Extended B ~65% (will most likely never be finished)
-Cyrillic (Basic Russian: 75%)
More coming soon!
The idea is to read other alphabets as if they were Roman.
This is a clone of CheckovsFunClone 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.
https://www.Doug-Peters.com
https://Dougs.Work
https://SymbioticDesign.com
https://Worthful.com
https://Font-Journal.com
My best Domain Name registration service:
https://www.DomainHostmaster.com
My best web hosting solution:
https://HDWebHosting.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner
Clone of Tirrel (by Doug Peters). Copyright 2019 Doug Peters.
This version has the 'hard' alternates. These are the caps in 'Tirrel'. The idea is that if someone is used to using the shift key and only wants the harder style of the font, they can use this version and they will 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: Heavy Bold.
Web font: Yeah, sure.
Commercial use: Yes.
Derivatives: No.
Redistribution: No.
https://www.Doug-Peters.com
https://Dougs.Work
https://SymbioticDesign.com
https://Worthful.com
https://Font-Journal.com
My best Domain Name registration service:
https://www.DomainHostmaster.com
My best web hosting solution:
https://HDWebHosting.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner
Tirrel font is Copyright 2019 Doug Peters.
This is the original version of Tirrel. Although a display caps font, the uppercase has a hard, bold, brash version of capitals while the lowercase holds the 'softer' alternates with more defined characters. If you only want one or the other and have the habit of using shift (or caps lock), there should be two other versions of this font accompanying it, one "Tirrel Hard" and the other Tirrel Soft" to relieve frustration of those who type well.
Categories: Monospaced Sans/Stencil.
Types: White Space, Striped, Display Caps, Logotype, & Novelty.
Weight: Heavy Bold.
Web font: Yeah, sure.
Commercial use: Yes.
Derivatives: No.
Redistribution: No.
https://www.Doug-Peters.com
https://Dougs.Work
https://SymbioticDesign.com
https://Worthful.com
https://Font-Journal.com
My best Domain Name registration service:
https://www.DomainHostmaster.com
My best web hosting solution:
https://HDWebHosting.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner
A font I'm working on that will support most Unicode.
I will continue working on this until i get to over 8240 characters, beating 7:12 Serif.
Status:
Basic Latin - DONE
Latin 1 Supplement - DONE
Latin Extended A - DONE
Latin Extended B - DONE
Greek and Coptic - In Progress
This project is dead. I'd appreciate it if you'd check out my new Unicode-Project, "Maxenisei". Thank you.
So, I did this today in nearly one session. Yep, all latin characters in one session. It was waaaaay more work than it looks like.
But I think it still looks pretty decent...
And you can literally write any language which uses the latin script with it.
Cyrillic and Greek may be coming soon.
and I tried making every character 5 pixels high. Just things like diaresis, accents, etc. may make it higher than that.
With Simbraille, is easier to see the where the dots are placed in the 6-dot cell. It may be used to teach about dot placement.
If you typed Braille with Perky Duck, you can copy and paste it into a Word Editor, like Microsoft Word. Then you just change the font to be this font, Unicode Braille Font. 16 pt font size is recommended.
You can also take text, copy and paste it into an online braille translator, and take that brailled text, and use that text in Microsoft Word. Then change the font type.
You might need to adjust height spacing if it's too cramped. In Microsoft Office, you can right click, and go to Paragraph, and change the Line spacing to 2. That would make it easier to read.
You may adjust margins to give more space as well.
This is a clone of Unicode Braille FontIf you typed Braille with Perky Duck, you can copy and paste it into a Word Editor, like Microsoft Word. Then you just change the font to be this font, Unicode Braille Font. 16 pt font size is recommended.
You can also take text, copy and paste it into an online braille translator, and take that brailled text, and use that text in Microsoft Word. Then change the font type.
You might need to adjust height spacing if it's too cramped. In Microsoft Office, you can right click, and go to Paragraph, and change the Line spacing to 2. That would make it easier to read.
You may adjust margins to give more space as well.
If you're producing print-braille materials, then you can use this braille font alongside a print font, add outlines of pictures, diagrams, and etc., to your documents.
Then documents can be printed on swell paper to form tactile graphics.
The Unstructed series is obsolete with the construction of GS Unicode 2.0, and the addition of all Unicode blocks into the FS inventory. I won't delete this font for those of you who still use the original, pixelated GS Unicode (for compatibility purposes).
Though I'm only fluent in English (and somewhat Spanish), I do know the Cyrillic / Russian alphabet by heart. While studying this script, I recalled a story my mother told me about the CCCP and the Soviets. She talked about having air raid drills in her school years. I'm no communist, but her story seemed fascinating to me. I also thought the initialism was odd, as standard Russian (including Soviet Russian) doesn't have the equivalent to the Latin C.
It turns out that the Ss in Russian look identical to Cs in English and the Rs in Russian look identical to the Ps in English. This makes the initialism SSSR (es es es ar) and not CCCP (si si si pi).
For this font:
Unicode Block: Cyrillic Extended-C (Added in U9.0)
Unicode Range: 1C80~1C8F
Font Range: 0100~010F
Unicode Link: http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U1C80.pdf
For more information on USFs see "UnStructed: Syriac Supplement"
The Unstructed series is obsolete with the construction of GS Unicode 2.0, and the addition of all Unicode blocks into the FS inventory. I won't delete this font for those of you who still use the original, pixelated GS Unicode (for compatibility purposes).
German dialectology seems to have quite the influence on Unicode, as a lot of the recent Latin and combining character blocks are partly or entirely dedicated to the subject. Medieval times must've been weird.
Anyway, I personally have neither seen nor used these obscure combining characters, but if you happen to need them, they're here.
Unfortunately, as with the UnStructed UCAS block that I published about an hour ago, "Unstructed: Combining Diacritical Marks Extended" was apparently too long of a name for FS to handle, so I had to abbreviate it.
For this font:
Unicode Block: Combining Diacritical Marks Extended (Added in U7.0)
Unicode Range: 1AB0~1AFF
Font Range: 0100~014F
Unicode Link: http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U1AB0.pdf
For more information on USFs see "UnStructed: Syriac Supplement"
The Unstructed series is obsolete with the construction of GS Unicode 2.0, and the addition of all Unicode blocks into the FS inventory. I won't delete this font for those of you who still use the original, pixelated GS Unicode (for compatibility purposes).
For all USFs:
With the all new UnStructed Fonts (USFs) I aim to include those pesky uncommon and unavailable characters that can't be drawn in FS (even with the advanced Unicode setting) and/or will be included in Unicode 11, 12, 13, and beyond.
I was bored after completing GS Unicode and decided "why not stop at 14,000 characters when there are 86,000+ left to be included - this won't take too long". It seems my ambitions got the best of me again.
As FS includes more blocks for drawing I will remove these fonts, as they will be incorporated into GS Unicode instead.
These fonts are meant to be used with GS Unicode; they have the same 5x9 block format. The Basic Latin space (0020) is included in all fonts.
CJK, Tangut, Oracle Bone, Small Seal, and all that jazz WILL EVENTUALLY BE INCLUDED, but only after every other Unicode block to be added / not in FS (which one would find here: https://unicode.org/roadmaps/ ).
For this font:
Unicode Block: Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics (Added in U3.0)
Unicode Range: 1400~167F
Font Range: 0100~037F
Unicode Link: http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U1400.pdf
For more information on USFs see "UnStructed: Syriac Supplement"
The Unstructed series is obsolete with the construction of GS Unicode 2.0, and the addition of all Unicode blocks into the FS inventory. I won't delete this font for those of you who still use the original, pixelated GS Unicode (for compatibility purposes).
I've always had a fascination with Arabic calligraphy. It's one of my favorite scripts (second to Burmese) and never fails to amaze me. While my low-level pixelated fonts obviously can't do calligraphy very well, I've here provided a handy supplement for Arabic typists in the hopes that it will be at least somewhat useful for basic writing.
Arabic is also one of the few scripts I can write my name in, as the letter j doesn't appear too often worldwide.
For this font:
Unicode Block: Arabic Extended-A (Added in U6.1)
Unicode Range: 08A0~08FF
Font Range: 0100~015F
Unicode Link: http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U08A0.pdf
For more information on USFs see "UnStructed: Syriac Supplement"
The Unstructed series is obsolete with the construction of GS Unicode 2.0, and the addition of all Unicode blocks into the FS inventory. I won't delete this font for those of you who still use the original, pixelated GS Unicode (for compatibility purposes).
For all USFs:
With the all new UnStructed Fonts (USFs) I aim to include those pesky uncommon and unavailable characters that can't be drawn in FS (even with the advanced Unicode setting) and/or will be included in Unicode 11, 12, 13, and beyond.
I was bored after completing GS Unicode and decided "why not stop at 14,000 characters when there are 86,000+ left to be included - this won't take too long". It seems my ambitions got the best of me again.
As FS includes more blocks for drawing I will remove these fonts, as they will be incorporated into GS Unicode instead.
These fonts are meant to be used with GS Unicode; they have the same 5x9 block format. The Basic Latin space (0020) is included in all fonts.
CJK, Tangut, Oracle Bone, Small Seal, and all that jazz WILL EVENTUALLY BE INCLUDED, but only after every other Unicode block to be added / not in FS (which one would find here: https://unicode.org/roadmaps/ ).
For this font:
Unicode Block: Syriac Supplement (Added in U10.0)
Unicode Range: 0860~086F
Font Range: 0100~010F
Unicode Link: http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U0860.pdf
Currently Supports:
- English
- Some Latin
- Russian Cyrillic
- Google Fonts
- Georgian
- Hebrew
- Armenian
- Greek
- Thai
- Currency Symbols
- Arabic (WIP)
- Japanese/Katakana
- Bopomofo
My First Published Font
My Second Made Font
Goal: At least 5000 glyphs. Wish me luck!
4/10/2018: Creation {Italunica}
5/15/2018: 210 Glyphs!
5/20/2018: 238 Glyphs! T_T Changed name to Italunicoda
contact me on shon.zou05@gmail.com for previous versions of font
VERSIONS 1 THROUGH 3.0 ARE UNAVALIBLE
WORK IN PROGRESS!! ):) (:(
Sorry if the sone of the Kanji is unreadable, but I have to do it within an 8x8 grid...
6200 Glyphs Reached!!
Any double vowels or vowels where there is a consanant in between them should NOT be used!!
Tamil: Use with Consanants: For the O, Use E + Consonant + Aa; for the Oo, Use Ee + Consonant + Aa; For the Au, Use E + Consonant + Au Length Mark. Use the vowels itself: For the Au, Use Oo + Vowel Sign Au Length Mark
Malayalam: Use with Consonants: For the Ai, Use E + E + Consonant; for the O, Use E + Consonant + Aa; For the Oo, Use Ee + Consonant + Aa, for the Au, Use E + Consonant + Au Length Mark. Use the vowels itself: For the Ii, Use I + Au Length Mark; for the Uu, Use U + Au Length Mark, for the Ai, Use Vowel Sign E + E, for the Oo, Use O + Vowel Sign Aa, for the Au, use O + Vowel Sign Au Length Mark.
I used Tile Molester (I didn't name it that way!) and extracted the Earthbound and Mother 2 font (English ROM and Japanese ROM) that was used in the game's menu and tried to combine and insert them here myself. (I used the Earthbound's Latin instead of Mother 2's bolder one, because most recognize it that way)
I've added a few hundred more glyphs to it, hoping this may come in handy for some fans out there. ^^ I'll add more languages (maybe use all the glyphs available) if you request it, otherwise, I'll only leave it at 878 glyphs. ;D
This font includes:
- Basic Latin
- More Latin
- Extended Latin A
- Extended Latin B
- Katakana
- Hiragana
- Greek and Coptic
To reference the game a little more... Katakana Middle Dot, More Latin's Middle Dot, and More Latin's Bullet are actually the middle dots that you see in the Japanese and English character naming screen, respectively. ^^
I don't have status conditions and the battle font in here, because it's pretty much its own font and I honestly can't find it in the game's file for some reason... (no clue what settings to use see those)
Supported:
Basic Latin
More Latin
Latin-A
Latin-B
IPA Extensions
Spacing Modifier Letters
Combining Accent Marks
Greek and Coptic
Cyrillic
Hebrew
N'Ko
Cherokee
General Symbols
Currency Symbols
Variation Selectors
Specials
Partly Supported:
Laos
Hangul Jamo
Block Elements
Circled Letterforms
Its not finished yet...
Will release the first open-source variation for everyone to expirement at 4000 glyphs.
GS Unicode is a project I worked on over the course of several years so (almost) all languages get support! With 14,564 non-spacing characters, this font is finished (as of Unicode 13.0, and as of FS's pre-July 2021 glyph inventory). Please tell me if some of the characters aren't working. I'll try to fix them as best as I can!
This font will no longer be updated except in the case of fixing errors. I'm now working on GS Unicode 2.0, a non-pixelated(!) font that uses FS's current (all of Unicode!) glyph inventory, and is set to take much, much longer....
...so I'll see y'all on the other side~
anything goes in this book-style pixel font. it is for secret project.
maximum of 11 pixels tall (plus 3 px descender below)
====================================
[1.7d] Still working on CJK and Hangul. Still not even halfway there!!!
[beta 1.7c] More CJK, Aboriginal Canadian Syllabics, Bengali
[beta 1.7b] More CJK but still not nearly enough
[beta 1.7a] I found a stray pixel which stretched the font two pixels too high. It's gone now.
[beta 1.7] ??? stuff? korean jamo, like 0.3% more of the CJK, Greek Extended, and one of the East Asian scripts (the name I forgot :<)
[beta 1.6d] assorted CJK and symbols
[beta 1.6c] devanagari (hindi script), thai
[beta 1.6b] thai and other junks. some characters improved
Clone of 9x9 Strict. This font was originally made on my alternate account (winty5alt), but I don't plan on using that account anymore unless I have a problem logging on to this one.
Anyway, this font is a 9x9 strict pan-unicode font, great for LCD displays & stuff. Hope you enjoy! :)
This is a clone of 9x9 StrictCarthage Sans LKE is an expanded version of my Carthage Sans font, which in itself is a reimagining of Apple's Espy Sans 12 bitmap font. It aims to cover as much as possible of the Latin, Cyrillic, and Greek blocks of the Unicode standard (thus the initials -- "Latina, Kirilitsa, Elleniki"). I'm open to expanding it to any of the other scripts Unicode covers, but I have little to no personal experience with most other alphabets; if you'd like to contribute, I'd particularly be interested in Arabic, Devanagari, Katakana, Hiragana, Armenian, and Hangul. (I would like to add Hebrew as well, but it's hard to get the diacritics right in what's essentially a pixel font. We'll see.) The current status as of 10/28/2015 (the date of initial publication):
-Latin: all of Latin-1, Latin Extended-A, and "Even More Latin"; Latin Extended-B is missing some characters that seem to be mostly either phonetic notation or obsolete.
-Greek: All Greek characters supported by FontStruct. If you need some of the ancient dialect characters like Pamphylian digamma, they're now in the GitHub version; polytonic will appear there as well, if anyone asks for it. Basic Coptic support is there, although I tried to fit it into the Espy Sans aesthetic rather than trying to duplicate the Byzantine-Egyptian traditional style.
-Cyrillic: Still a work in progress, but all Slavic languages using Cyrillic characters should be covered. The main holdup is Abkhazian, which is spoken by just over 110,000 people in the world and also has one of the longest alphabets in the world; I have no idea how many of them would be interested in this, so it hasn't been a huge priority. (Besides, the PT family from Russia's Paratype is excellent and far better than I could do with most Cyrillized languages.) I've emphasized support for several languages, the most important being Vietnamese (75 million speakers deserve some support no matter how tedious it is to do so).
I've also added characters for Old Irish, Old Church Slavonic, and Icelandic. There's a number of characters used in pan-African linguistics I am not sure if I need or not; they'll get filled in eventually alongside the Cyrillic, but how fast I have no idea.
Carthage Sans extended version on GitHub: https://github.com/csyde/carthage-fonts
I am deeply indebted to Keith Martin (@thatkeith on Twitter), formerly of the UK MacUser magazine, and his Espy Sans Revived project for a reference for the original letter bitmaps; Carthage is entirely my work but it's hard to find Espy Sans specimens in the wild, and his work is probably the best.
This is a clone of Carthage Sans