960559
Published: 12th February, 2009
Last edited: 27th February, 2009
Created: 12th February, 2009
I like to use it in Illustrator or Photoshop, for web design. Lets try)
291466
Published: 25th August, 2008
Last edited: 12th March, 2009
Created: 22nd August, 2008
a temperature font. see comments for key or experiment and figure it out :)
651302
Published: 27th July, 2008
Last edited: 16th April, 2009
Created: 23rd July, 2008
blood, sweat & tears - sweaty and teary - the original bloodless version. started as raindrops then i thought it looked more like tears or sweat. then i filled in a drop and thought...blood!
684607
Published: 16th November, 2008
Last edited: 4th May, 2009
Created: 12th November, 2008
:) i use OF to signify an original font when i have used the same primary name for updated versions. original font, but i like original funk :)
6554416
Published: 27th March, 2009
Last edited: 13th May, 2009
Created: 27th March, 2009
Permutation: The act of changing the arrangement of a given number of elements.
One font, two different brick combinations.
Picking any two bricks from the 169 available gives a total possible combinations of 14196 (169C2) different fonts. Counting a certain kinds of bricks as one--all four 45degree, for instance--gives 36 unique bricks, resulting in 630 (36C2) unique combinations or fonts.
In this font, if the bricks are swapped with each other, the result will be a different font. Hence order of the bricks matter. In which case, nCr (combinations) is not the right choice. What's needed is nPr (permutations). 169P2 gives 28392 permutations and a 36P2 gives 1260 permutations.
So, at a minimum, 1260 fonts are possible with the current implementation of FontStruct, with just this particular layout of bricks.
886276843
Published: 21st December, 2008
Last edited: 8th June, 2009
Created: 21st December, 2008
The new spacing controls have added complications in this font. Set tracking to -64 to get the characters to join up.
376198025
Published: 7th October, 2008
Last edited: 12th June, 2009
Created: 30th September, 2008
I really like the way this one turned out. It uses minimal grid blocks to achieve the desired effect (although at ~2x2 and the slivers and the pinhole dots, there are a surprisingly large number of actual bricks used per glyph than evident at a quick glance, although not a single overlapping brick is used without express purpose). I think this is my favorite of all the ones I've done so far. It is with nervous anticipation that I let it free. Go forth and propagate, young font; it's You v World!
32034035
Published: 6th August, 2008
Last edited: 15th June, 2009
Created: 6th August, 2008
Flameon is extracted from the FLAME ON! battle cry created for the most excellent Bubble Lab Collaboration started by kix. Join in the fun already! I thought I might as well make the entire alphabet in the same style without the flames. The lines came from the style of old school renderings of the Human Torch from the Fantastic Four in Marvel Comics.
383353
Published: 9th December, 2008
Last edited: 15th June, 2009
Created: 9th December, 2008
back to my old habits i guess (putting a sample in A). oh well i couldn't help wanting to show off my filly. western font with a horse to pull the covered wagon. condensed version of wagon train. use [ for back of wagon, lowercase for text, ] for front of wagon and 0 or 1 for horse. 0 has mane. 1 does not :)This is a clone of Wagon Train
375583
Published: 5th December, 2008
Last edited: 16th June, 2009
Created: 3rd December, 2008
create an add-van (or ad-van) by using [ or { for back of the van and ] for front. use lowercase letters and numbers in between.
1445837
Published: 6th September, 2008
Last edited: 16th June, 2009
Created: 6th September, 2008
Synergy of two, energy go wild See the stars align to spell our name out in the sky —"Circuit Breaker", Röyksopp
311302
Published: 11th December, 2008
Last edited: 16th June, 2009
Created: 6th December, 2008
the western font family mostly uses the same grid size. started with wagon train, then desert rose, saloon, ironside, and finally cart before the horse which uses a narrower grid. they are similar, but unique and each evokes a different feeling - desert rose i think is simple and pretty with its flowerets, saloon is fancy and sassy, ironside is macho and machine-like, wagon train and cart before the horse are simple but also have some embellishments :)
114128110
Published: 19th February, 2009
Last edited: 19th June, 2009
Created: 11th February, 2009
This came out of the same exercise that produced FIROX.This is a clone of fs FIROX