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Cry Wolf
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/hanoded/cry-wolf/ I couldn’t resist creating a scary font and naming it Cry Wolf. It was called ‘Last Night In Sweden’ originally, but that name was just too long. So I created a poster. Cry Wolf is a scary font with a message, just like the story.
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Down The Wall
https://www.fontspring.com/fonts/hanoded/down-the-wall I have no great love for walls, especially those designed to keep people out. Therefore a messy script font called Down The Wall.
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Teacup
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/hanoded/teacup/ Teacup is a handmade sans – quite stylish, with just enough ‘rough’ to make it stand out. Comes in an open and a closed style.
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Xanthine
Xanthine… is a purine base found in most human body tissues. Yes, you can forget that. I don’t even know what it means, but I suddenly realised that I was running low on fonts with an ‘x’ in the name. Xanthine font is a messy brush: it is all caps, but upper and lower case…
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Bonedigger
Bonedigger is a rough and eroded display typeface. Quite handy for your titling or product packaging. Comes in a regular and inline style + italics. Get it here
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Rough & Eroded: Buckthorn
I really like rough & eroded fonts, so I have created a new one called Buckthorn. Comes with a very handy shapes dingbat style as well. Get it here
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Loose & Lovely: Burobu
My latest font is a blob-like affair: Burobu means blob in Japanese. Comes with a cute doodle pack as well. Get it here
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Cute & Eroded: Terpentijn
My latest font is a bit weird: it is called Terpentijn. Get it here
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New font family: Colporteur
A Colporteur is a peddler of books, newspapers, and similar literature. When I was young, we often got visits from colporteurs – mostly they wanted to sell us a very expensive encyclopaedia. I haven’t seen them for a while – the internet probably killed their trade, as there are numerous free encyclopaedias out there. Colporteur…
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You Work For Them Newsletter
Your Work For Them’s newsletter features Hanoded Fonts! This is what they said: David Kerkhoff began his career as a type designer in a way that so many others do: after experiencing the difficulty of finding the “perfect” font for a project, one decides to solve the problem simply by creating their own. When David…