This type face was originally inspired by the title of horizon zero dawn, I have a love of Sci-fi and wanted to bring something bold with some movement built directly in. I veiw this working well being writen in an eastern style straight up and down, but also large and spread out.
This is Nokia Sans Small Condensed, you might have seen it on your old Nokia phones running with Series 30 or 40 operating systems. Redesigned by ChildishRifty7.
Thanks to ">gtrx<, my E52 good" and Romphonix Club for gathering the font resources of Series 40 3rd Version.
Made under 2 hours at first release.
Changelog:
Nov. 22, 2022 - First Release
Dec. 3, 2022 - Added Indian Rupee letter.
Dec. 25, 2022 - Adjustment and fixes.
A font in the style of the [retro]futuristic typeface seen in the 1981 movie "Outland". There are a few variations that appear in the film but this most closely resembles the almost square aspect ratio as seen in the opening credits.
Hello! Some of you idiots never made this /\ So I made it...
This geometric, sans serif typeface is based on the biological process endocytosis. Having an interest in science, I wanted to create a font that was both interesting to look at and, in some way, informative. Each letter (cell) is linked to the next by particles. The indents in each letter imitate the invagination of the plasma membrane, forming a pocket around the particle. In the cell, the particles are then ingested and transformed into vesicles. In summary, this is what endocytosis is.
I designed this font based on the word 'Thunderous'. My thinking in how the word relates is due to the Norse God Thor. I then started to look in to old Norse culture, this got me interested in runes. So with deeper research in to the Futharks spawned this type.
This blocky and industrial font was inspired by architechtural features on a large multistory car park near where I live. I took pictures of multiple elements from the building and rearranged and rotated the shapes to create letter forms, and used shading to create a 3 dimensional effect to mimic the structures depth when seen in person.