A clone of the bold version of Contorra, with a 7 edited to look irregular.
What is a mosaic?
A mosaic is a pattern or image made of small regular or irregular pieces of colored stone, glass or ceramic, held in place by plaster/mortar, and covering a surface.[1] Mosaics are often used as floor and wall decoration, and were particularly popular in the Ancient Roman world.
Did you know?
Mosaic today includes not just murals and pavements, but also artwork, hobby crafts, and industrial and construction forms.
Early history
Mosaics have a long history, starting in Mesopotamia in the 3rd millennium BC. Pebble mosaics were made in Tiryns in Mycenean Greece; mosaics with patterns and pictures became widespread in classical times, both in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome. Early Christian basilicas from the 4th century onwards were decorated with wall and ceiling mosaics. Mosaic art flourished in the Byzantine Empire from the 6th to the 15th centuries; that tradition was adopted by the Norman Kingdom of Sicily in the 12th century, by the eastern-influenced Republic of Venice, and among the Rus. Mosaic fell out of fashion in the Renaissance, though artists like Raphael continued to practice the old technique. Roman and Byzantine influence led Jewish artists to decorate 5th and 6th century synagogues in the Middle East with floor mosaics.
Later History
Figurative mosaic, but mostly without human figures, was widely used on religious buildings and palaces in early Islamic art, including Islam's first great religious building, the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, and the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus. Such mosaics went out of fashion in the Islamic world after the 8th century, except for geometrical patterns in techniques such as zellij, which remain popular in many areas.
GUESS WHAT? Mosaics still exist!!!
Modern mosaics are made by artists and craftspeople around the world. Many materials other than traditional stone, ceramic tesserae, enameled and stained glass may be employed, including shells, beads, charms, chains, gears, coins, and pieces of costume jewelry.
This is a clone of Mosaic EtchDenial is a pixel based monospace bitmap outline font with a missing baseline outline and is created by, and Copyright 2018, Doug Peters of Symbiotic Design.
-Logos, graphics, web design, brand marketing, media, tech & consulting.
https://www.Doug-Peters.com/
https://Dougs.Work/
https://Domainers.Name/
https://DomainHostmaster.com/
https://Domainance.com/
https://HDWebHosting.com/
https://ServerDN.com/
https://SiteDN.com/
https://SiteHostPros.com/
https://www.Font-Journal.com/
https://Worthful.com/
A pretty simple looking variable sans-serif design.
The font allows you to modify the width of nearly every glyph. The one exception that can not be changed is the exclamation mark. I tried to simplify it the best I could, but it remains a little tricky to use, sorry.
HOW TO USE:
To type any sensible text you should start with the uppercase of a certain letter (this will create the left side of it). Followed by the corresponding extender to widen the glyph (repeat this step for a even wider result), and to complete the full letter you close the string with the lowercase glyph for this specific letter (this will create the right side).
There are a couple of glyphs that work slightly different.
These are I,M,T,W,Y, numerals and some punctuations.
To widen "I and T" the extenders are typed before and after the actual letter combination instead of in between.
M,W and Y are split in three (center stem is isolated) in order to allow one to make changes on both sides. To correctly type one of these you start with the uppercase for this specific letter, followed by the corresponding extender, followed by the corresponding center stem, followed with the extender once more, and as last to complete the full letter close the string with the lowercase glyph for this specific letter.
To extend the colon and semi-colon you complete the string for either period or comma first, followed by ;(semi-colon). This will place a dot above it.
And as last, to make a underscore simply use the string for period but with extra extenders.
The numerals work as listed bellow:
• 1:|_
• 2z
• #3
• 4-|-
• 5s
• 6s
• 7*
• 8b
• 9$
• 0o
The extenders are located in the following locations:
` - _ # = :
The isolated stems are located in the following locations:
| }
Photo by Abdelkarim Achtaou from Pexels
Now I made it a Neue font!
This is a clone of Press PlayA font based off the Sea Quest book title and logo font.
You can find their books at seaquestbooks.com.
this is a font that has a lot of components and reuses them a lot.
or, in other words, the font uses the other glyphs and modifies them to make another glyph, creating strange looks of the glyphs.
WARNING: font not meant for text, only meant for display or headlines!
(i accidentally made the lowercase more legible than the uppercase.)
some letters like K, V and Y are made from the A, so they may look inconsistent.
Avery Block is a typeface that is intended to be a serifless and futuristic-looking version of Cooper Black, and because of this, it provides a combination of fun and bold futurism. So, it can be a great choice for an impactful typeface.
This is a cloneThe heaviest version of Sea Quest
This is a clone of SEA QUEST BOLDMy first published FontStruct based on something I did 4 years ago. Constructive criticism is appreciated. Visibility is sort of low when zoomed out, I'm aware, but it's perfect for larger titles. Also, no idea why the preview isn't loading...
A sans-serif font inspired by MS Reference Sans-Serif and the grotesque font used in comics.
This is a clone of Digetica BoldA font that is totally pilch!
YUCK! Pilch. I rate this font -10000000000000000000000000000000/10!
Maybe -1000... is not an option, it's only 1-10!
CLONE OF Cubetopia FONT WHICH IS A BIT MORE ACCURATE.
Challenge: Try using Extensis to scale your font to a cubic design like this!
a sans serif faunt with a pure dual nature - Pilch Seriff and Pilch.
para fonts, Your Next to clone Mystery Std. As Clone name:
Mystery Underlined Std.
saberrider will make an art of this Typeface font.