Sierra Duo 2K17 © Sierra Hedgehog. All rights reserved.
The FontStructions that are created and/or made available on this Site are the copyrighted work, of the respective creator.
This is a rendition of one of A. V. Hershey's dot fonts from his 1967 paper "Calligraphy for Computers", the "Mathematical" (serif) font. This version is really a hybrid of the original "Mathematical" and "Cartography" fonts, having some symbols such as the circle drawing and map symbols that the "Mathematical" font originally lacked.
This is a clone of Hershey Dot CartographicThis is the main game version of the digital font used on Family Feud throughout Richard Dawson's run from 1976 until 1985; the numbers are used on the left and right sides of the board to display families' scores (or banks, since they played for dollars at the time).
This is a thick dot-matrix version of a very popular classic computer (fixing 1 pixel wider than the original), and it's normally used on word processors, electric billboards, etc. Probably a great font! Update: I just updated to the better, thick dots for all letters and symbols.
This is a clone of Apple 2b Dot-MatrixRecreated character set of the Brother EP-20/22 Electronic Thermal Typewriter (1983).
Square-pixel variation also available.
Clone of Dot24Pin Sans Outline.
Still dreaming of 24-pin printers...
This original 24×15 typeface is designed around the limitations presented by the near letter quality (NLQ) output of dot matrix printers (DMPs) during the '80s & '90s. Partially inspired by J. David Sapir's DOS font design program, LQMATRIX, it could have easily been created using that program back in the day.
(The "smart phone"-looking character in the À position is simply a placeholder, used as a quick reference to set vertical height lines while FontStructing.)
This is a clone of Dot24Pin Sans Outlinemore arrows, and some fractions!
This is a clone of ElevatorInd 5.0