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 PCWThe Bit-Config font series is inspired by the Lucida font family.
This specific font is inspired by Lucida Bright.
Context:
An average 5x7 pixel slab-serif font. Originally meant to be a replacement/alternative for other Pixel Optimzed slab-serif fonts, Times New Roman in particular.
This is a clone of Bit-Config SansNarrowed version of Bytogryph code. More suitable for coding.
This is a clone of Bytogryph CodeJust in case anybody wanted a small, serifed, pixel-sharp font with personality and figure (old-style) numerals, I whipped this up... then overachieved, perhaps. It has full Latin-1 and Latin Extended-A support, extended punctuation, most Greek, and as much Cyrillic as I could justify working on. It also has some Roman numerals, many arrows, and a few other random things.
If anyone out there actually wishes to use this for setting anything with Greek or Cyrillic alphabets, please let me know if I've made any terrible errors or if more characters are desired. I know better than to trust my typographical sense for alphabets I don't use in an actual language context!
My first entry for Serifcomp. Originally created in 2013, when I still had little knowledge about the finer details of type design. I've made major changes to the original design while trying not to lose its original feel (avoiding diagonal strokes, for example). I ended up making major changes to M, Q, T, W, f, k, m, q, r, t, and w, and minor changes to a bunch more; a ton of kerning was also required. It's not very polished yet, but it's a start...
Some alternates are available in Latin Extended A. As always, suggestions and critiques are welcome. Thanks and enjoy!