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fs EthoSlab
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This font is based on a heavy font I saw somewhere which really caught my eye. I tried to recreate it as best as I could, and it turned out maybe a little better than I had expected.
So far it's just all the basic latin, I will expand it later when I have time.
This typeface is based on the hand-painted names seen on the side of canal boats. The inconsistent, grainy texture of each letter is meant to represent the irregularities in using paint, for example the general wear and tear from the elements like chipped or peeling edges. This was my approach to the idea of “analogue” and a brief set to explore what that means. To me, in the context of the brief, analogue could be defined as possessing a nostalgic or "old school" quality- something replicated in an unauthentic manner in order to create a look-alike imitation of a time gone by. I focused on the old method of transport in Bristol: boats.
A typeface that provides you with a glimpse into brickwork construction.
Monospace lowercase and duospace uppercase (double the width of lowercase), with negative-space diacritics.
Strong tensile and compressive strength (works well stretched, squeezed, and warped in general).
This is my first ever font using ideas to make an heavy sans-serif typeface. I was inspired by elmoyenique and Jamie Place (FontBlast). I'm not stealing ideas from anybody by the way, I've wanted to share something to explain a journey of making my own fonts in life.
I got some aspect of making the glyphs look heavier. I've tried to make the letter f, but it flawlessly has the same height as the other glyphs. If I make number four, than I've obviously make it like this because the slanted bricks are not enough to make up a four glyph. Some of the glyphs (for example: ð, ß, ™, ®) are hard to build it because it was considered to be rounded by its curve and too small if the text was heavier.
When I run out of name ideas, the only idea of this font name i've chose is Lourde (french word for heavy).
A blocky, futuristic, industrial style font.
This is a clone of Lootcrate DiamondThis is a black sans serif minimalistic block font with a couple of repeating themes in the ends and such. I consider this freeware, but maintain my copyright and only allow distribution through fontstruct and my own journaled catalog of freeware fonts (@ font-journal.com).
Copyright 2013 & 2019 Doug Peters (https://www.Doug-Peters.com or https://Dougs.Work) of Symbiotic Design (https://SymbioticDesign.com). This font is released under the Fontstruct license as freeware with credit attribution as a requirment for using this font for free.
Credit for my original work IS greatly appreciated, and you only have to credit me with an active link from your website, blog, or in a public social networking post, with a link to any of my URLs. I also sell domains and web hosting if ever you need the best spam free solutions available online, anywhere.
Style: Playful.
Classified: Quirky or Whimsical.
Type: Sans (with a few Serifs)... Semi Sans?
Weight: Bold.
Web font: Yes.
Commercial use: Yes!
Derivatives: No.
Redistribution: Nope.
Credit URLs:
https://www.Doug-Peters.com
https://Dougs.Work
https://SymbioticDesign.com
https://Worthful.com (blog)
Font-Journal:
https://www.Font-Journal.com
Heavy Duty Web Hosting:
https://HDWebHosting.com
Domain Names:
https://www.DomainHostmaster.com
https://www.Domainance.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner