Lambresia is a handwritten script with a natural & stylish flow. This font has a multitude of natural looking ligatures in its OpenType features - making the font look as close to natural handwriting as possible. This collection of scripts is perfect for personal branding.
Lambresia is perfect for many different projects such as logos & branding, invitation, stationery, wedding designs, social media posts, advertisements, product packaging, product designs, label, photography, watermark, special events or anything.
I highly recommend using a program that supports OpenType features and Glyphs panels such as Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop CC, Adobe InDesign, or CorelDraw, so you can see and access all Glyph variations.
This font is encoded with Unicode PUA, which allows full access to all additional characters without having special design software. Mac users can use Font Book, and Windows users can use Character Map to view and copy one of the extra characters to paste into your favorite text editor/application.
We hope you enjoy the font, please feel free to comment if you have any thoughts or feedback. Or simply send me a PM or email me at kotakkuningstudio@gmail.com. Thanks for purchasing and have fun!
Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 Bodoni Z37 is a twenty-first century Didone typeface with a dynamic range of widths, weights and optical sizes. Stylistically, what really sets it apart from other typefaces in its category are flat sides and a geometric Deco style. Razor thin lines are captivating at large sizes but can be hard to deal with when you get really small. Rather than compromising, Bodoni Z37 was created with three optical sizes: Large (Bodoni Z37 L) with high contrast, fine lines and tight spacing Small (Bodoni Z37 S) with sturdy lines, more generous spacing Medium (Bodoni Z37 M) which is right in-between Bodoni Z37’s cute, curly italics have loose spacing for clarity and emphasis. Lining numerals are kerned and proportionally spaced. There are OpenType fractions, numeric ordinals and old-style (lowercas