| American
Cheese Dingbats
| Candide
Dingbats | New Year Dingbats
| Koch Dingbats | Fabulous Prizes | Essene
Dingbats
Each of these dingbat fonts are offered as a free download. Thes copyrighted fonts are made available for commercial and non-commercial use when downloaded from Harold's Fonts. They are not intended to be copied, shared, sold, or reposted. |
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16 wonderfully cheesy clip-art style pictures of passé pop Americana, each depicted wrapped in plastic. Adapted from the uncredited tissue paper backing from clear vinyl, still sold by the yard here although the illustrations are older. Read Me file contains a full list of the images. Couch! Typewriter! Lamp! Barbecue grill! Endless ideas for the home... |
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So Voltaire wrote this book called Candide. The beautiful 1928 edition was illustrated by the artist Rockwell Kent. Beside full page drawings and decorative drop caps, there were eleven tiny dingbats used--instead of indenting--to separate paragraphs. Each is a posing figure. Although my drawings are very clean, don't use them too big; they're best as small details. Two weights contained in one font. |
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These are derived from a pattern sheet provided with a set of Japanese wood-carving tools. The only thing I could read on the page: '82 New Year. There are 22 charming graphics, including a few nice dogs, some handsome calligraphy, and some cute cartoony stuff. Julie tells me the blue character at left means "long life"; any help with the others? |
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Rudolf Koch designed these nature-inspired images to coordinate with his rough-hewn classic Neuland. I've recreated them as a companion to my BRIDE OF THE MONSTER fonts. I've included all the available images, flipped and rotated some for easy use, and the original German accented characters--Ä, Ö, Ü--styled to match the "Bride" varieties. |
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Like my Rebus Font, these images were culled from the parts of a long lost game. 15 stylish images ranging from the gag prize broken eyeglasses to the grand prize trip to Paris. Not recommended for commercial use as the owner of the images, if any, is unknown. |
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These 16 mysterious dingbats were culled from a small text called Ecce Orienti or Rites and Ceremonies of the Essenes. Published in 1894, this appears to be a ritual manual of a defunct, quasi-Masonic order. The symbols were integrated in the heavily contracted text to make it nearly unreadable to the outsider. |
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