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Based on Damien Guard's Amstrad PCW font but redrawn with narrow, rectangular pixels to look more like the PCW's display. (No doubt there's some clever thing you can do to redraw them automatically, but that's too advanced for me, and I did them all by hand!)
BTW I'm still not happy with the accented letters. IIRC the PCW reduced the size of the letters on screen to fit the accents in their 8x8 grid. I might try doing a version like that at some point.
This is a clone of Amstrad PCWNarrowed version of Bytogryph code. More suitable for coding.
This is a clone of Bytogryph CodeThe Serif Font As Seen In Kirby's Adventure (NES).
Please see "K'Atemayar" for information about this script and credit to the creator.
This is a clone of Katemayar Sharp Sans SerifTHIS IS BASED ON MY HANDWRITING. NOT MY REGULAR HANDWRITING — THAT DOESN’T ALLOW FOR LOWER-CASE LETTERS; SO WHENEVER I NEED TO WRITE SOMETHING WITH LOWER-CASE LETTERS (SUCH AS IN EXAMS.), I USE THIS STYLE.
I KNOW THAT IN PLACES IT LOOKS A BIT BROKEN. BUT AT THE SMALL SIZES OF BULK TEXT, IT SHOULDN’T BE TOO NOTICEABLE; IT’S NOT REALLY DESIGNED AS A DISPLAY FONT.
AND I ALSO KNOW THAT SOME SERIFS AND STROKES AREN’T EXACTLY COMMONPLACE (SEE THE UPPER SERIFS ON THE LETTER: “u”). IT’S JUST HOW MY HANDWRITING TURNED OUT.
INTENDED LANGAUGE SUPPORT
• ENGLISH
• RUSSIAN
• TE REO MĀORI
“WHAKAITI” IS A MĀORI WORD MEANING “TO MAKE SMALL”. IT’S ROUGHLY PRONOUNCED: “ɸɑkɑiti”.
See more:
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/898234/nfs_attic
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/204251/legality
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/894584/ds_blacky_serif
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/322284/indiglo
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/894584/ds_blacky_serif
This is a clone of zircus eYe/FSPixel + Serif
Best at pixel size (12px)
Because of the pixel design I was able to create lots of characters. Even control pictures (no matter if someone needs them). If you need more, just ask.
Cyrillic and IPA under construction.
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 Cartographic