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Thursday, January 19, 2017

[7-Day Flash Sale] The Saturday Font

2152502      by WornOutMedia Co. in Fonts  Script
2152503215250421525062152507215250821525092152510
⚡️ 7-DAY FLASH SALE! ⚡️ SAVE 25% - NORMALLY $16! ENDS JAN 26TH!! 🔥

The Saturday Font is a mega-modern Instagram-salted ad-breaker 😆 Use it in any design like sale-ads, logos, branding, posters, text overlays etc. This one will instantly give your project that authentic hand-drawn look to it!
On top of the all-gorgeous main font, you'll get full alternates for the lowercase characters and swashes to underline your finesse designs!

Masterblush Typeface includes (total 3 fonts):
1. The Saturday Script and Alt (2 fonts)- Upper and lowercase characters, numerals, punctuations and a wide language support. Alternates for lowercase characters. Including both, OTF and TTF filetypes.
2. The Saturday Swashes (1 font) - Underline swashes to make your design look superb!! Access alternates either via Glyphs Panel (OTF) or individual fonts (OTF, TTF). Just use characters a-j for swashes :)

Commercial Use Allowed (Extended License)
You Can Use This Font For:
✔ Commercial Use
✔ Unlimited Number of Projects
✔ Unlimited End Products For Sale

100 Vector Mandala Illustrations- FREE

Graphic of Goodies of the week 
Today we're happy to share a massive set of 100 vector mandala circles which getting more and more popular. Designed by Julia Dreams, these illustrations offer exceptional quality and variety! Now it's so easy to create a logo or branding of your dreams. Combine mandala with your logotype or just add mandala circle to your photo.
Format:AI, EPS. PNG
Size:69 mb
Author:Julia Dreams
FREEDOWNLOAD 
100 Vector Mandala Illustrations

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Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Logo Design Trends for 2017


Logo Design Trends for 2017

By Marc Schenker on Jan 9, 2017 in Inspiration
Logo Design Trends for 2017
One thing that’s always certain in the design world is that there’s never a dull moment. Trends are always being born and coming and going; sometimes, trying to keep up with all of the changes in design can literally make your head spin.
As we close out 2016 and look to the next year with anticipation of what awaits, I thought of focusing my sights on one, major area of design: the logo. Whether it’s for brand recognition, instant communicability, or simply visual appeal, logos impact our daily lives in numerous ways.
When browsing the grocery store for food and drink, your eyes naturally settle on the logos on the product packages of various brands. When you’re looking at magazine covers on a newsstand, deciding on which one to pick up and leaf through, each magazine’s logo is what stands out to you and helps you make a faster selection because it already communicates brand identity.
Keep your eyes peeled for these logo design trends in 2017.

Cleanliness

Logo design has already started to get a lot cleaner in presentation, and this trend is only going to continue with much haste in 2017. Don’t believe me? Just look at what Mastercard did with its much-vaunted, 20-year logo not too long ago.
For the past couple of decades, this brand used combination mark with the text, “Mastercard,” appearing inside of the red and yellow circles. Where the circles interlocked, there were red and yellows lines.
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-4-58-57-pm
After the company’s rebrand last summer, the company’s logo still looked recognizable, yet markedly different. The company succeeded at this by moving to a much cleaner look that separated the wordmark from the symbolic aspect of the logo (the red and yellow circles).
Instead of having “Mastercard” sit inside the circles, the new logo now has the wordmark beneath the iconic treatment above. Further, the interlocking area of the two circles is now orange, which makes sense when you think about it because mixing red and yellow produces orange. Gone is the line effect in the interlocking area!
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-4-59-32-pm
The new typeface also doesn’t cast any shadows, whereas the old typeface had a bit of a drop shadow.
The end result is a more concise, cleaner look that minimizes the brand’s identity going forward. Mastercard said that the redesign was inspired by a desire to brand itself consistently across all digital devices.
As we move into 2017, more and more brands will also realize that using a cleaner design will greatly help them in cross-channel and cross-device branding.

Anti-Serif or the Move Toward Sans Serif

When the world’s most powerful search engine and one of the most powerful and influential tech companies changes its wordmark by removing any hints of serifs—which its logo used to have for many years—then you can bet we’re in the middle of a sea change.
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-5-06-43-pm
Late in 2015, Google changed its wordmark from a serif font to sans serif. The redesign is significant because it represents a change to a long-standing design that Google hadn’t messed with in almost forever. In fact, Google’s logo has pretty much had from the very beginning (the late 1990s) serif fonts. I can only take an educated guess that the company saw the writing on the wall for serif fonts…at least on the web!
This is backed up by real-world data on web fonts, too. For two years running, Typewolf, one of the most popular typography sites on the Internet, has revealed that nine out of 10 of the most popular fonts on the web are sans serif:
Google’s current wordmark is, as a result, sleeker and more modern, which should appeal to more people. It features:
  • No serifs
  • Fatter stems
  • Better legibility
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-5-05-07-pm
With such a big company recently abandoning serifs, I predict that more and more brands will follow suit in 2017.

Abstract Shapes to Form a Brand Identity

Almost everyone’s familiar with Zendesk, the customer-service software company. More people have probably seen its mascot, which was the smiling Buddha with a headset. Its old logo was a lotus flower with a heart inside of it, though some probably thought the Buddha mascot was the logo!
In any case, the company, just a couple of months ago, abandoned the lotus flower-heart logo in favor of something built upon simple shapes as components of its brand identity. Going back to basics, the company recently rebranded by choosing a big, capital “Z” as its new symbol logo, with the old “Zendesk” workmark retained in its combination logo.
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-5-44-41-pm

However, the big “Z” isn’t what you’d expect: It’s actually a smart and unexpected approach to logo design, featuring “hidden” shapes that you won’t see at first. You see…the “Z” is composed of two triangles and half-circles, formed so carefully that you’ll swear you’re just looking at a stylized Z and nothing more.
But when you study the new logo a bit deeper, you’ll see that the two triangles really form the stroke of the Z, and the two half-circles make up the arms of the Z. The logo illustrates how using deceptively simple shapes can be the building blocks for creating a new brand identity that packs a punch and is memorable.
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-5-43-37-pm
As 2017 gets started, I predict that more businesses will take their cue from Zendesk and try something as unique as this experiment.

Logos Based on One, Unifying Visual Identity

Try as they may, sometimes, when companies and organizations brand themselves, their brands are inconsistent. For instance, the logo design may change depending on the size of the product packaging or on the platform (mobile, etc.) in which people are experiencing it. One prominent company recently rebranded its appearance across all of its product lines in a way that’s going to powerfully resonate throughout 2017.
Coke is a global brand whose products are always associated with the color red—that’s instant brand recognition. As far as its logo goes, though, it’s essentially a wordmark on top of a red background. While memorable, that didn’t necessarily ensure brand unity, however, as the company features a line of different drinks (Coca-Cola Zero, Classic, etc.).
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-5-49-47-pm
The company solved this dilemma of brand disunity, if you will, by using what it called the Red Disc. The Red Disc is essentially a big, red bottle cap with the wordmark “Coca Cola” spelled out on top of it. The company changed the logo for all of its products so that this Red Disc would always be prominently featured on the packaging—even if the specific Coke product (Coca-Cola Life, for example) had a different color. What resulted was a unifying logo design that told you right off the bat that all these different drinks are from the same brand.
Look for 2017 to feature more companies striving to create one, unifying design logo as well.

Category Consistency

Everyone remembers the big Instagram logo redesign a few months back. While the company said that it was a change from the well-known retro logo to a more modern design, observers criticized the logo as generic and somewhat indistinguishable from other logos or icons that users may see on their smartphones!
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-5-57-41-pm
Indeed, the new Instagram logo has no immediately interesting characteristics as the old, retro one did. For all intents and purposes…it does look almost like a cookie-cutter approach to logo design.
Nonetheless, other companies are following suit in this trajectory, for better or worse.
Take Google’s redesign of its now-named Google Home logo, previously Chromecast. The new logo is a very literal interpretation of Google Home, as it’s in the shape of a house and features Google’s trademark colors. However, such a logo, just like the new Instagram one, is also pretty easy to lose amidst the slew of icons on one’s digital device.
screen-shot-2016-12-22-at-5-59-39-pm
As logo design becomes an ever increasingly saturated field, I expect that 2017 will continue this trend of companies redesigning their logos…and running out of unique ideas.

It’s Going to Be an Exciting Year for Logo Trends

As you can see, companies of all shapes, sizes and industries always rebrand at some point. Some redesign their logos frequently while others don’t mess around with their logos in a significant way for many, many years (the more prominent examples above being Mastercard and Google). Of course, when these companies finally do make adjustments to their designs, it’s huge news because many are asking, why mess with a brand identity people have known for so long?
As we enter a new year, 2017 is looking like it’s going to be full of dynamic and exciting logo updates/redesigns/changes, on the back of these significant logo alterations of the past few months.
The big takeaways include:
  • Cleaner logos
  • More sans serif wordmarks
  • Simple shapes
  • Unified brand identities
  • Generic oversaturation
As we proceed through 2017, more brands will incorporate more minimalism into their designs. We’ve already seen this with Mastercard, Google and Zendesk, and there’s no sign of stopping this trend. Unfortunately, some brands are also going to produce quite generic logo redesigns, but that’s all part and parcel of logo design!


Monday, January 16, 2017

Modern calligraphy font Willow Bloom

Willow Bloom is a beautiful, modern calligraphy font with a dancing baseline. This hand-lettered script will look gorgeous on all your designs, wedding invites, branding materials, logo's, business cards, and quotes.
WHAT'S INCLUDED? Willow Bloom contains standard characters, lowercase, uppercase, numbers, punctuation, ligatures and international characters. This font also comes with two sets of alternate lowercase characters with initial and end swashes. You will receive the OTF and TTF files.
1480465

Sunday, January 15, 2017

465 Logos Bundle - 90% off


465 Logos Bundle - 90% off - Logosby vuuuds in Templates  Logos


665 Logos Bundle only $20 

INTRODUCING 465 LOGOS BUNDLE!
ITEMS YOU GET IN THIS BUNDLE:
  • 30 Vintage Logos (AI, EPS, PSD)
  • 45 Minimalist Logos (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 60 Minimalist Logos (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 50 Retro Badges (AI, EPS, PSD)  
  • 20 Vintage Logos & Badges Vol 01 (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Vintage Logos & Badges Vol 02 (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Minimal Badges (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Line Badges (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Vintage Grunge Badges (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Retro Badges (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Vintage Badges (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Name Badges (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Grunge Logos (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Tiny Logos (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Simple Badges (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Luxury Logos (AI, EPS, PSD) 
  • 20 Decorative Badges (AI, EPS, PSD) 
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509601509603543922

Friday, January 13, 2017

Charlottes Script

2120855

by Wacaksara Co. in Fonts  Script


Introducing Charlottes Script a bold connected script font inspire by a good smell and delicious taste of pancake, with a clear style and dramatic movement this font is great for your next creative project.
Charlottes comes with uppercase, lowercase, numerals, punctuations and so many variations on each characters include opentype alternates, common ligatures and also additional swash to let you customise your designs. Perfect to use for Logotype, Letterhead, Poster, Apparel Design, Label and etc.

If you have any question please do not hesitate to contact me.
Enjoy this font
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Custom Branding Creator- 100+ Items

Custom Branding Creator- 100+ Items - Product Mockups

Create your own custom branding scenes with our all new Custom Branding Creator. The perfect bundle to help you easily brand yourself, your client, or your business.
The Custom Branding Creator features 100+ fully customizable branding objects, 8 pre-made scenes, 10 background options, 2 pre-made Pinterest creators and 2 bonus mockups.

Items Included:
  • 100+ Hi-Res Fully Customizable Branding Objects
  • 8 Pre-made Scenes / 6 landscape + 2 portrait
  • 2 Pre-made Pinterest Creators
  • 2 Bonus Mock-ups
  • Help Document
Backgrounds:
  • 2 Marble
  • 1 Sheet
  • 1 Faux Fur
  • 3 Granite
  • 1 Stone
  • 1 Slate
  • 1 Concrete

Free Fonts Used- Links Provided

Easy to Edit
Arrange items to create your own scenes or choose from several pre-made scenes to display your branding. Smart objects make it fast and easy to change colors, backgrounds, text, and designs.

High Resolution Imagery
All items are hi-res and perfect for display on both print and digital media formats.
>> Download Now 
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Thursday, January 12, 2017

100 Brilliant Web Typography Examples

100 Brilliant Web Typography Examples
Typography is one of the most underappreciated parts of design, which is ironic. I mean designers need to understand the ins and outs of good typography to choose the correct fonts for brochures, flyers, business cards…and especially web fonts.
You need to consider factors like readability, legibility, contrast, serif or sans serif—and the list goes on and on. The font you choose has to complement your overall design in an aesthetically pleasing way, whether that’s on the web or in print.
The best way, for my money, to get familiar with what typeface works and what doesn’t is to simply study great examples of web typography.

Kickstarter

This well-known crowd-funding website sports bubble letters! Its wordmark is spelled out in glorious bubble letters in the header of the homepage. That takes us right back to childhood.
kickstarter

Upwork

Find-me-a-freelancer site Upwork uses gorgeus sans serif typeface in its value proposition. The simple cleanliness of this typeface and the fat stems of the individual fonts make it pop.
upwork

Ask.fm

This social network built on the premise of Q&As features a combination of bubble letters and slanted typography that’s instantly memorable. The white-on-blue contrast is perfect to help it stand out.
ask-fm

The Wall Street Journal

This highly regarded publication goes the serif route with its all-uppercase title/header. Creating a classic and old-school feel, this typeface makes sense for a traditional newspaper.
wsj

Scribol

This listicle and strange-news site uses a combination of Stag Web and Helvetica Neue fonts for a look that’s clean and super-readable. Note the beautiful spacing the words for extra legibility.
scribol

The Telegraph

This highly trafficked British news site sports a very ornate and almost medieval-inspired typeface, but it’s really Austin News Text Semibold. It gives the homepage a touch of grandeur.
telegraph

Autopilot Technology

Noto Sans JP is the star of the show on the Japanese tech company’s site. Its strong, bold and determined sans serif fonts contrast well with the futuristic-looking background.
autopilot-technology

League of Legends

This computer game’s site features imposing, bold typeface for its logo. Plus, the fonts for the headline and description provide a sense of balance due to their minimalism.
league-of-legends

Zendesk

This customer-service software company’s homepage features magnificent, ultra-simple and understated fonts—that clearly communicate the unique value proposition of this business.
zendesk

Fiverr

Fiverr’s site displays fatter serif typeface that’s highly stylized as well. This mix of blatancy and readability creates a memorable visual that makes an impression.
fiverr

Falter Inferno

With bolded strokes, stems, stresses and bowls, the typeface for Falter Inferno is aesthetically appealing and memorable. Its neutral colors also make it evocative.
falter-inferno

Spiegel Online

This famous German publication boasts its own Spiegel Sans Web font that features alternating fatter and thinner stems and strokes in the individual characters. The result is one that commands attention.
spiegel

Kohl’s

The handwritten font on Kohl’s homepage—for a banner declaring there’s still time for last-minute Christmas gifts—is a superb example of a stylized and festive typeface.
kohls

GSMArena

GSMArena’s wordmark features very stylized and unique typography. Note the use of both uppercase and lowercase characters, as well as the stylized “A.”
gsmarena

Possession Begins

The typography for this horror site is doubly effective: Blood-red/dripping font in the headline and then a stylized effect in the subheadline.
possession

The Boat

Note the very striking and dramatic typeface of “The Boat.” The choice of font is perfect for the stormy-seas motive of this storytelling site, as it really pulls site visitors in immediately.
the-boat

Wix

Wix, the free site-building platform, uses simple-though-effective sans serif font. Against a light-blue background, the contrast makes this typeface pop all the more effectively.
wix

Battle.net

An online gaming community, Battle.net features header typeface that’s sleek, sharp and nicely stylized. The logo next to the typeface adds to its effectiveness.
battle-net

Le Dernier Gaulois

This French site features extremely memorable and evocative Playfair Display font that ties together the whole design and appearance of the site.
le-dernier-gaulois

Clouds Over Cuba

A retrospective about the Cuban Missile Crisis, this site features elegant serif fonts that capture the drama of this highly intense moment in American history.
clouds-over-cuba

Make Me Pulse 2016

Talk about a highly stylized typeface. The font for Make Me Pulse 2016’s font is absolutely imaginative, to say the least. Its minimalist colors further elevate its presentation.
make-me-pulse-2016

Life Buzz

Inspiring-stories site Life Buzz features an interesting take on its wordmark logo. Its all-uppercase design with parentheses thrown in for good measure is eye-catching.
life-buzz

Macy’s

Macy’s festive “Merry Christmas” font stands out with its classic and handwritten approach to typography. The slanted cursive conveys a sense of personal touch.
macys

USPS

The U.S. Postal Service’s homepage shows off a unique font in the wordmark logo. Slanted and sans serif, its all-uppercase design communicates authority.
usps

MIT

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s site displays an almost stencil-like typeface that’s really just a bunch of rectangles joined together to form the MIT acronym.
mit

Peugeot Catch the Dragon

Peugeot’s Catch the Dragon site showcases bold, striking and unafraid typography that’s all at once confrontational and exciting.
catch-the-dragon

The Happy Forecast

This site’s typography is so unreal that it’s basically “out there.” With trippy font that’s made out of different geometric shapes, it invites visitors to study it like some art exhibition.
happy-forecast

The Law of the Jungle

This site for last year’s “The Jungle Book” remake shows what you can do when you use evocative typeface. The font perfectly captures the wildness and mystique of the movie.
the-law-of-the-jungle

Samsung

Samsung’s site features simple, bold and thick sans serif typography to alert visitors to the urgency of getting that great gift—before Christmas is over.
samsung

Asos

Asos features ultra-basic font that’s so simple that it’s almost unassuming, but this creates a perfectly readable contrast with the background.
asos

Poptm

Creativity rules in the typeface of this popover and popunder site: The alternating black-and-white backgrounds make the simplicity of the sans serif font more striking.
poptm

Dictionary.com

The use of Verdana for its defined words provides Dictionary.com with a font that’s well-suited for readers trying to learn spelling and pronunciation.
dictionary

Utorrent

This downloading client’s homepage makes use of elegant and airy fonts that are just as elegant as its downloading prowess.
utorrent

Freepik

What makes the typeface of this site so interesting is the subtle nod to 3D in the form of drop shadows, which you can see (if you look closely enough) under each letter.
freepik

Taboola

Note the highly unique, stylized wordmark logo of this company, in the header of the site. What makes this content-delivery network’s logo so memorable is the resemblance to a pair of smiling eyes.
taboola

UPS

With its very basic, sans serif typography, the UPS wordmark is dedicated to pure minimalism. The all-lowercase characters are a further, neat touch.
ups

Instructure

This software company’s homepage displays some exceptionally neat fonts: Pencil-thin sans serifs as part of a bigger formula that ties into its value proposition.
instructure

House of Borel

House of Borel’s typography is very mysterious and minimalist: Just a white-on-black presentation to make a noticeable impact.
house-of-borel

Train Robber

Train Robber’s typeface makes us long for a western. With stylized protrusions on the sides of the individual fonts, Train Robber’s typeface is evocative.
train-robber

Future Living

Almost childlike typography is the star on Future Living’s site. Its relaxed, elementary and all-uppercase design reminds us of grade school all over again.
future-living

Bolden

Almost too hard to read for entirely artistic reasons, this design and development firm’s homepage typography is literally comprised of layered fonts on top of each other.
bolden

Breitbart

This political site’s rough and raw font creates a thought-provoking, weathered look that complements the wooden-themed background nicely.
breitbart

McWhopper

When you want a font that grabs visitors’ attention, go with something rare, like Block Berthold Condensed. McWhopper uses this font to great effect on its homepage.
mcwhopper

Vangarde Music

This small music label’s site features notably stylized typography and flat fonts that also help in branding this company. Overall, a neat and professional representation.
vangarde-music

Melanie F

Melanie F’s lookbook site gives visitors an opportunity to admire the beautiful, slanted font that easily draws the eye with its color contrast and fanciness.
melanie-f

The New Yorker

This long standing publication’s site demonstrates what elegant and timeless typography can be if it’s done excellently. This font combines serifs and sans serifs in a memorable medley.
the-new-yorker

Quanta Group

Handsome serif fonts make a strong case here for the power of ornamentation in typography. The Quanta Group’s site offers a very readable value proposition.
quanta-group

Shutterstock

Shutterstock uses typeface that displays a minimalist, sans serif look, thus making it super-easy for visitors to read the info at a glance.
shutterstock

Fox News

This news site’s typography is reminiscent of the searchlights in 20th Century Fox, with its very fat and thick stems, strokes and stresses.
fox-news

Scribd

Notice right away the refined and gorgeous typeface that offers more than adequate spacing between each character for super-easy reading, a luxury in today’s slew of different typefaces.
scribd

The Anonymous Hamburger

With its powerfully bold and serif typeface, The Anonymous Hamburger epitomizes stunning typography. The simplicity of using a black-on-white color scheme only adds to the drama.
the-anonymous-hamburger

Calendas Plus

This font site showcases gorgeous, cursive type that is as classic as it is modern. With its serifs and elaborate ornamentation, this type makes quite the impression.
calendas-plus

Standard Films

This typeface puts the drama into dramatic. Its faded, golden-to-rusty color and the dark, black background are the perfect combo for a memorable font.
standard-films

Gestrandete Wale

A German site with a conservationist message, Gestrandete Wale features fat, bold and minimalist fonts along with some serif ones, which excel at getting the message across clearly.
gestrandete-wale

Panache

The use of very thin and fine characters creates a very refined look for this font. Together with a few stylized elements, Panache exudes charm.
panache

B & O Play

This ecommerce site for audio gear uses extremely thin sans serifs that speak to the high quality of the headphones that are available.
b-o-play

Cappen

Wide stems and stresses unite with striking sans serif characters to create a very minimalist but effective typeface. It’s short and to the point.
cappen

Liputan 6

This foreign news site’s workmark logo melds letters with number for a distinctive look.
liputan-6

Wed’ze

Perhaps matching the rugged, outdoorsy vibe of the site, Wed’ze’s typography screams on-the-edge and wild, which indicates smart branding choices.
wedze

Naver

This Japanese retailer features deceptively elementary typography that seems almost childlike in its simplicity, but is actually very readable and so helpful.
naver-jp

SourceForge

SourceForge’s font is best described as utilitarian meets stylized. The hard and sharp edges are refreshing in today’s aesthetic-obsessed design world.
sourceforge

Rester Avec Toi

This site features fonts with aesthetic color contrast that works to create an outline for every character. The end result is something basic, but attractive.
rester-avec-toi

Sirin Labs

Simplicity rules the day at Sirin Labs, with the bold, sans serif typeface that’s used for extreme readability, clarity and overall legibility.
sirin-labs

Slack

The world-famous messaging app for great team communication relies on minimalist, sans serif fonts with spacious tracking for extra clarity and readability.
slack

Locus Solus

Words like sleek, elegant and sublime are all words that come to mind when you gaze at this font. That’s because its all-uppercase font and roomy tracking give off a luxurious quality.
locus-solus

Five Minutes

This site’s homepage features typography that’s part of a logo design, which always makes fonts so much more interesting.
five-minutes

Protest

This outdoor outfitter site’s fonts double down on accessible and open, showcasing fonts that are easy to read and inviting, which is perfect from an ecommerce standpoint.
protest

Forbes

With its close tracking, but wide stresses, stems and bowls, Forbes demonstrates some very readable and aesthetically pleasing typography in its navigation menu.
forbes

Trello

Trello’s wordmark logo is a great study in typography: Note its cursive, slanted style that still makes for easy reading, mainly due to its intelligent tracking.
trello

Weebly

Weebly’s homepage tagline is written in a font that almost resembles having been applied with a paint brush; this stylistic nuance makes it very aesthetic.
weebly

Weather.com

Weather.coms’ typography is very interesting because of its clean, almost understated presentation. This is obvious in both the letters and the degree numbers.
weather-com

Camden Town Brewery

Camden Town Brewery’s typeface is strikingly bold: Clean, clear-cut and very neat. Fat characters and generous tracking add to the appeal of the typeface.
camden-town-brewery

Cantina Dei Colli Ripani

This wine-selling ecommerce shop relies on GaramondPro font to create an attractive, visual presentation that shows the potential of serif fonts.
cantina-dei-colli-ripani

Christmas Express

A festive site, this celebration of Christmas uses some exceptionally aesthetic fonts that are heavily stylized with Christmas symbols and themes.
christmas-express

Siemen’s Santa’s Factory

Siemen’s Santa’s Factory site boasts some amazing typography that’s perfect for Christmas. Note the whimsical, wispy font and the old-school motif.
santas-factory

Big Youth

With its vibrant, bold, blue colors, the typography for Big Youth is truly unique: It looks like bubble letters and cursive, but it’s really not either…
big-youth

Cuberto

This digital agency’s choice of font is a good indicator of its creativity: Serif typeface that’s at once readable and visually pleasing.
cuberto

Perturbator

Perturbator’s typography is definitely 80s-inspired, retro gloriousness…all wrapped up in a neat, handwritten font that’s not that readable, but definitely memorable.
perturbator

Studio Details

This Japanese company features utterly minimalist typography that gets the job done: Sans serif fonts with a bit of stylization for maximum effect.
studio-details

Up to Tab

This site’s typography is the epitome of cartoony and non-serious, but when you look a bit closer, you’ll see solid typography techniques like clarity, tracking, colors and legibility.
up-to-tab

Cienne New York

With easily readable, clean font design, Cienne New York’s typography is pleasing to the eye and attractive. It’s excellent for an ecommerce store that needs to persuade to sell.
cienne-new-york

Audiko

This free-ringtones site uses slanted serif typeface to create a 404 error page that’s very memorable for anyone who should stumble upon it.
audiko

Roblox

Game site Roblox makes a unique contribution to typography by showcasing a font that’s very childish, but ultimately consistent with the fun vibe of the site.
roblox

Blue Egg

Digital branding agency Blue Egg draws positive attention by using an all-lowercase font that’s entirely handwritten and features no tracking at all.
blue-egg

Mozilla

Mozilla’s value proposition is written on a slant without being cursive, with sans serif typeface and bold characters for a readable and appealing look.
mozilla

The Washington Post

This old newspaper’s site features, unsurprisingly, very old-school typography that works very nicely for its publishing/newsy vibe.
washington-post

Lucy Hardcastle – The Fifth Sense

Almost dreamlike in its typography, this site showcases what fonts would look like if we could see and experience them…underwater. An ultra-interesting effect is offered.
lucy-hardcastle-the-fifth-sense

Converse “Diamonds”

Shoeseller Converse tries something different with this site and displays a remarkable typeface that’s graffiti font-inspired and showcases a lot of personality.
converse

Nissan Kicks View

Nissan’s homage to the Rio Olympics, this site features all-caps typeface with some very interesting characters. The hefty space between the letters adds to readability.
nissan-kicks-view

Pomerleau

This building-experts site uses bold and heavyset typography to make the point that its construction and design are strong, sturdy and reliable.
pomerleau

Sequence

Sequence utilizes a sans serif font that’s extremely legible, clear and smart. What better way to make the point that it’s a creative agency that gets design and branding?
sequence

Xavier Bourdil

Graphic designer Xavier Bourdil’s About section uses Freight big typeface, which is characterized by elegant and thin serifs, tall cap heights, and great tracking for clarity.
xavier-bourdil

Outbrain

Outbrain’s wordmark logo is an interesting take on a stylized typeface. Note the use of the person with glasses in the “O” of the wordmark.
outbrain

India Times

A site of few characters, its homepage features India Times’ sparse wordmark, which is really just the acronym “IT.” However, its lowercase slanting action is more than enough to be memorable.
india-times

Adam Underwear

Kudos to this site for using sans serif fonts that are bolded and normal on the same product page. The juxtaposition creates a visually appealing typeface design.
adam-underwear

Frederique Constant

This watchmaker’s site uses serif fonts that have an almost classical feel—you could picture this typeface on an old Greek or Roman building.
frederique-constant

Tio Luchin

With a smart and spiffy handwritten typeface, Tio Luchin’s site typography gives off personality and character in droves.
tio-luchin

Indian Type Foundry

Unsurprisingly, this design shop for fonts sports amazing-looking typeface right on its homepage. Its neutral color scheme helps the refined and dignified serifs stand out with purpose.
indian-type-foundry

Indeed

Lowercase bubble letters and a slightly stylized design over the “i” make for an eye-catching wordmark. Each character is extremely legible in spite of the design.
indeed

Daily Mail

This British newspaper’s site features a stimulating typeface combination: Very old-school fonts and very modern, slimline sans serif fonts for a commanding wordmark.
mail-online