The 7 segment digts come from the Atari ST.
If you use this, please make sure to credit me somewhere…
feel free to post suggestions, but please no abugidas (except for UCAS, Thai, or Laos, if the font is not monospace) or abjads that are really hard to do or get working correctly (I can do Hebrew, but no yiddish marks)
(And here goes a new font!
This font may be weird-looking, indeed, but it has this particularity to be read the same even if mirrored (if you put the mirror just below the text) as each single glyph is symmetrical following the X-axis (the baseline).
The R, the lowercase Y and some of the numbers were true challenges but I had fun doing them all anyway.
I wanted to do an ambigram-ish font and here it is. Well, good luck trying to do an actual ambigram out of this but this could surely be helpful for a number of other things. You to choose!
EDITS:
1. Improved the $ and tried to improve the Y/y.
2. Re-improved the $ and the Y/y, also improved the U/u and the n.
3. Improved the 2. And edited a bit the b and the h.
4. Improved 1 and 7.
5. Edited the F and the y for them to look less "out" of the font. (May not being an improvement.)
A strong and rounded fixed-width font, aimed at single-font apps such as consoles and text editors. Good for programming and text interface design. Has more glyphs and complete Unicode subsets than most default monospaced fonts.
NOTE: If you want to use this font in Windows console apps, please do NOT download it from here because this website is unable to mark TTF font files as Monospaced, in the way that Windows requires. Instead, read the comments below for 22nd May 2019 and download it from the link provided.
This is a clone