Search results
Results from the 24/7 Vacations Content Network
Date released. 1981. Text of Freestyle Script. Freestyle Script is an informal display script typeface that was designed by Colin Brignall in 1969 and Martin Wait in 1981, by Letraset. Freestyle Script is famously used for commercials in 1980s, birthday cards, decorative, logos and many others. The bold version was designed in 1986.
This is a list of script typefaces. This list details standard script typefaces and computer fonts used in classical typesetting and printing. Calligraphic
Vietnamese: for the Nom script formerly used Zhuang: for Sawndip Pan-Unicode: intended to globally support the majority of Unicode 's characters, and not specifically designed for one or a few writing systems (note that Pan-Unicode font ≠ Unicode font [Note 2] )
Samples of Monospaced typefaces. Typeface name. Example 1. Example 2. Example 3. Anonymous Pro. [1] Bitstream Vera Sans Mono.
Script typefaces are based on the varied and often fluid stroke created by handwriting. [1] [2] They are generally used for display or trade printing, rather than for extended body text in the Latin alphabet. Some Greek alphabet typefaces, especially historically, have been a closer simulation of handwriting.
Kuenstler Script. Kuenstler Script is a formal script typeface. The primary weight was designed in 1902 by the in-house studio at the D Stempel AG foundry. It was originally titled Künstlerschreibschrift, which translates from German to English as "handwriting of artists". The face is based on late nineteenth-century English copperplate scripts.
Mistral is a casual script typeface designed by Roger Excoffon for the Fonderie Olive type foundry, and released in 1953. The Amsterdam Type foundry released a version in 1955. Excoffon based the form of the typeface on his own handwriting. The stroke has an informal graphic quality similar to brush and ink.
Foundry. International Typeface Corporation. ITC Kristen is a casual script typeface consisting of two weights designed by George Ryan for the International Typeface Corporation (ITC). It was inspired by a handwritten menu at a Cambridge, Massachusetts restaurant, [1] [2] and has an asymmetric structure suggesting a child's handwriting.