126277
Published: 13th May, 2015
Last edited: 18th May, 2015
Created: 11th May, 2015
This is a collection of letterforms chosen for their looks and not historical correctness, making a (hopefully) wonderful anachronism. I am still a bit undescided about some forms, such as the c and t (are they too plain?) and the x (is it too foreign?). Please pitch in with ideas.
The name "Eerie" I have chosen, because it is one of my favourite words of the English language. It consists of only common letters, but their combination is strange: So many vowels for one consonant, initial double e, final ie. A more "English" way to spell it would be "eary", but that, of course, would have another meaning. Even the sound of it is like a creaking door, making it very self descriptive.
1051182
Published: 4th April, 2013
Last edited: 8th January, 2014
Created: 2nd April, 2013
My little girl loves fairy stories and history so we designed this font for use in her school projects
140411
Published: 20th December, 2009
Last edited: 20th December, 2009
Created: 28th October, 2009
The style and "letterforms" are Based on a hand written Ancient Runic Alphabet called the Futhorc. This is linked to the begginings of the Archaic Greek alphabet and our ancient Latin alphabet.I See my adaptation more as a collection of simplistic sort of stick symbols? or drawn symbols? rather than precise letterforms, there wasn't much technique to making it because it had to be so simple
140200
Published: 20th June, 2009
Last edited: 24th June, 2009
Created: 17th February, 2009
Based on viking runes, an extended version that included more characters.
Alphabet: Rabdefghiklmnorstuy