THIS FONT IS A COPY OF "FORMAL ROMAN"
I want to try to expand this font so it can have more characters and supports more varieties of languages
Expansions :
- Latin Extended-A
- Cyrillic
- Greek
- Added more letters and symbols in More Latin
If there are any mistakes, please inform me, and I will fix it asap
This is a clone of Formal Roman (Extended, Disbanded)THIS FONT IS A COPY OF "FORMAL ROMAN"
I want to try to expand this font so it can have more characters and supports more varieties of languages
Update: The "bug" is fixed, turns out I accidentally activated the "Lock Guides" without me knowing that that is a thing (I'm new to Fontstruct), I was so confused at that moment, thank you @user-juli for pointing out! but, I'm still going to continue expanding this font in the "Formal Roman (Extended)" because I've made many many expansions, fixes, and detail improvements that cost hours, so I have decided to disband this and I will still continue adding more features in the other project
[Formal Roman (Extended): https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1819229/formal-roman-extended-3-3]
This is a clone of Formal RomanRenaissance-style Italic font, with straight capitals & old style numerals. The lower case letters are designed within a dot matrix, albeit slanted; with the uppercase letters I have deviated from this, in order to create well-proportioned Roman capitals.
Translator needed to get SH, ZH, CH, and TH characters:
Added some new Characters for vowels, Silent Ts and Rolled Rs.
https://lingojam.com/EnglishtoTranslatorEnglish%28TM%29
Or if you want to use an imperial font on ACTUAL IMPERIAL go here:
https://lingojam.com/ENGLISHTOIMPERIAL%28ROMTE%29
This is a clone of Formal RomanA fusion between Roman-style text and pixel art - the sort of font that might have existed in old 80s font software. It's fairly wide and verbose and is something of a colossus among pixel fonts.
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Original size: 13pt (use multiples of this value for pixel perfection)
A segmented display inspired by Lorica Segmentata.
I didn't make this to convey the idea of "Space Romans", but I can see how it might be used in such a context. For that I'm envisioning something like a flip-dot display which uses these metal plates. Perhaps in the future I'll get an Arduino and some servos, then set about trying to build such a display...
Pixelated or 8-bit version of the Times New Roman font. Alphanumeric, basic punctuation, and basic accented Latin are included. Foreign currency glyphs; Polish, Spanish, French, and Māori characters; and the (Russian) Cyrillic alphabet have been added.