Here is a quick font I made based on my Tedoless Eriseci font. I was curious to see how Eriseci would look if it was written with completely separated characters like Altrimaya or Atemayar. I hope you enjoy. :D
Eriseci is featured on Omniglot where you can find the original alphabet and creator, the numbers are credit of Atemayar (also featured on Omniglot). I understand this font is not how the alphabet was intended, it is simply an artistic take on the script. If you truly enjoy Eriseci, please do see my first Eriseci font on this website which has the capability to type the alphabet as intended. Thank you.
This is a clone of Tedoless EriseciHere is my rendition of the Tuimuq Qanaa alphabet featured on Omniglot (specifically, the Lanuuq Qanaa version). I have used Latin Accents in place of the double vowels and for NG (Á for AA, Í for II, Ú for UU, and Ñ for NG). UI is typed with O, and the vowel base is typed with E. Use capital letters for the high diacritics (for above NG, F/V, M, & N) and lowercase for all others. I hope you enjoy this font. :D
Here is my rendition of the Gryirhanli Alphabet featured on Omniglot. Since the font software is rather difficult when it comes to irregular or large arcing curves, it can be said with certainty that I used quite a bit of artistic liberty in creating this font. Having worked on this font for 2 years now, I'm very happy to finally release it for all to see. I used Ch in place of C, Sh in place of X, Aa in place of Á, Ee in place of Í, Oo in place of Ú, Ai in place of Ý, and finally Th in place of Þ giving every character an equal opportunity of typability. Although the alphabet chart did not specify punctuation, I based the period off the one used in the text example (and did not include any further punctuation).
Despite using artistic liberty I do however feel this font is still accurate enough in comparison to the original that both are easily mutually intelligible with each other (such as Comic Sans vs Times New Roman for Latin).
I truly hope you enjoy this font.