Skip to main content

Download Auteur Fonts Family From Up Up Creative

Download Auteur Fonts Family From Up Up Creative

Download Now
Server 1
Download Now
Server 2
Download Now
Server 3


Introducing Auteur, a graceful, full-featured script font with tons of alternate characters and OpenType features. Hand-lettered with a heavy right slant and realistic disconnected letters (connected versions also included), Auteur’s casual elegance is particularly well-suited to invitations, branding, and editorial design.


Auteur comes with more than 1200 glyphs! Specific OpenType features include contextual alternates, stylistic alternates, optional initial and final forms, multiple alternate glyphs for many letters (accessed through the glyphs panel), multilingual support (including multiple currency symbols), ligatures, multiple numeral forms (standard, tabular, proportional oldstyle), and ten ampersand styles. 


Perhaps the most fun thing about Auteur is that it includes multiple versions of all ascending and descending letters, making it lots of fun to play with layouts and compositions.


Download Auteur Fonts Family From Up Up Creative
Download Auteur Fonts Family From Up Up Creative



Download Auteur Fonts Family From Up Up Creative


Popular posts from this blog

[eolcl] Download Rig Sans fonts from Jamie Clarke Type

Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 Rig Sans is a streamlined geometric typeface, that speaks in a confident, affable tone. Its open, clean structure lends text a neutral, transparent quality. Distinct features enable Rig Sans to thrive, both in print and on screen: Minimalist Design Terminals clipped at 90º Generous x-height Wide apertures Distinct I,l,1 (uppercase i, lowercase L, Number 1) Rig Sans ’ sturdy characters produce text settings with excellent clarity and readability. Their shape has been adapted from robust letterforms originally designed to withstand 3D distortions. This unique approach has resulted in an original sans serif rendition and an adaptive, durable type family. Rig Sans is comprised of eight weights and accompanying italics. Each weight contains 514 glyphs. OpenType features include: Alternate characters Three figure styles All caps punctuation Fractions Ordinals Superscript Subscript Rig Sans

Download Maille Fonts Family From The Paper Town

Download Maille Fonts Family From The Paper Town Maille is a bold display font powered by OpenType, featuring contextual alternates, beautiful ligatures and stylistic sets with just a hint of retro feel. Maille comes with a set of  720+ glyphs and can cover a wide range of projects from branding to advertising, stationery, headers, quotes and so much more. OpenType features include stylistic alternates with lovely swashes, initial and terminal forms and contextual alternates to enhance your text and create beautiful designs. It also includes 139+ standard and discretionary ligatures with multilingual support. The OpenType features can be easily accessed by using an OpenType capable software such as Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop or InDesign. Maille supports multilingual characters for western, central and south-east European languages. Download Maille Fonts Family From The Paper Town Download Now View Gallery

Download Schotis Text Font Family From Huy!Fonts

Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 Schotis Text is a workhorse typeface designed for perfect reading on running texts. Its design is based in Scotch Roman 19th-century style but designed from scratch, with a more contemporary and not nostalgic look. It has seven weights plus matching italics, with 1100 glyphs per font, with a very extended character set for Latin based languages as well as Vietnamese, and shows all its potential with OpenType-savvy applications. Every font includes small caps, ligatures, old-style, lining, proportional and tabular figures, superscript, subscript, numerators, denominators, and fractions. The Scotch Romans were one of the most used letters during the 19th and early 20th century, but they don’t have their own place in the main typographical classifications. They appeared at the beginning of the 19th c...