Provides a suite of tools to help people overcome reading struggles caused by dyslexia.
Turns the font on all pages into Open Dyslexic on every page AND allows for a wide array of super useful font manipulation tools to help ease the pain of reading online. The font is designed to ease the pains of reading with dyslexia by combatting commonly occurring symptoms. For more information visit opendyslexic.org.
The reading feature lets you tag along while your browser reads to you! If you have a hard time tracking, and loose your place (like I so often do) this feature is designed for you. Just highlight what you want read, click "Read Selected" in the right click menu, and it will read the highlighted text in the voice of your choosing!!
A Firefox extension that makes web pages more readable if you have dyslexia. All changes made are tested by real people who use it every day. All fonts are changed to OpenDyslexic. Special color overlay for websites. Optional forced markup for websites with a bad or a difficult to read user interface.
Departure Mono is a monospaced pixel font with a lo-fi technical vibe inspired by the visual constraints of early command-line and text mode user interfaces. Think 80's dot matrix printers, ancient documents, airline tickets, and receipts.
Excels with tabular data. Includes characters for drawing in text mode. Seems to cover the classic IBM 256 character set. Includes .woff and .woff2 versions for web design.
A cute computer environment can bring you joy! Here are some of my favorite resources to help make your computing cuter!
Over 50 Pre-patched fonts designed for enthusiasts who love to rice their terminal, window manager, and more, featuring over 60k icons as glyphs for ultimate customization and flair!
Tweak Mode lets you customize your patched fonts to suit your needs. You can include or exclude specific icon packs from a selected font using the corresponding index file. This index file, available in CSV format, makes it easy to search for glyphs with tools like fzf and can be seamlessly integrated with other tools for enhanced functionality.
Forge Mode allows you to create your own iconic fonts by converting SVG icons into a font format.
The world's biggest collection of classic text mode fonts, system fonts and BIOS fonts from DOS-era IBM PCs and compatibles - preserving raster typography from pre-GUI times. Includes 8-bit and 16-bit fonts as well, including Atari, Tandy, and even some BIOS' characteristic typefaces.
TrueType (.ttf), bitmap (.fon) and web (.woff) remakes for 200+ character sets. Both pixel-perfect and aspect-corrected reproductions of the original raster fonts. Multi-lingual Unicode enhancements of selected system character sets. Free to use under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Topaz is a highly nostalgic monospaced typeface for people of a certain age and geographical distribution, but it's also a genuinely good font. It's high contrast, it's consistently designed (within the limits of 8x8px), and it's quite compact. It implements the ROM font of the Amiga 500 as a Truetype font, has all of the original symbols, and is Unicode compliant.
Spleen is the default OpenBSD terminal console font. It's been recreated as a monospaced bitmap font for use elsewhere. Each size is provided in the Glyph Bitmap Distribution Format (BDF), and release tarballs contain the fonts in the following formats: PCF, PSF (for the Linux console), OTB, OTF, .dfont for macOS users, and FON for Windows users. All font sizes contain all ISO/IEC 8859-1 characters (Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode block), Latin Extended-A characters, as well as Box Drawing, Block Elements, and Braille Patterns Unicode blocks, except for the 5x8 and the 6x12 versions.
In the AUR.
An open source typeface for hardware people! It renders text like serial data viewed on an oscilloscope, i.e., as a series of visual pulses. The site has a realtime playground so you can see what it looks like. Note that only ascii values are generated currently! There are 1-bit utility characters that can be used to generate arbitrary waveforms, so read the docs on Github.
Programmers use a lot of symbols, often encoded with several characters. For the human brain, sequences like ->, <= or := are single logical tokens, even if they take two or three characters on the screen. Your eye spends a non-zero amount of energy to scan, parse and join multiple characters into a single logical one. Ideally, all programming languages should be designed with full-fledged Unicode symbols for operators, but that’s not the case yet.
Fira Code is a free monospaced font containing ligatures for common programming multi-character combinations. This is just a font rendering feature: underlying code remains ASCII-compatible. This helps to read and understand code faster. For some frequent sequences like .. or //, ligatures allow us to correct spacing.
Free fonts have met their match. We know how hard it is to find quality freeware that is licensed for commercial work. We've done the hard work, hand-selecting these typefaces and presenting them in an easy-to-use format.
Comic Sans wasn't designed to be the world's most ubiquitous casual typeface. Comic Neue aspires to be the casual script choice for everyone including the typographically savvy.
The squashed, wonky, and weird glyphs of Comic Sans have been beaten into shape while maintaining the honesty that made Comic Sans so popular.
It's perfect as a display face, for marking up comments, and writing passive aggressive office memos.
Atkinson Hyperlegible font is named after Braille Institute founder, J. Robert Atkinson. What makes it different from traditional typography design is that it focuses on letterform distinction to increase character recognition, ultimately improving readability. We are making it free for anyone to use!
Both desktop and web fonts are included.
VHS is a tool for creating GIFs that can be used to demo CLI tools. But what if we used it to do something different? Like re-create some classic scifi movie scenes. Such as Trinity using NMAP in the Matrix or hacking WOPR in War Games? This project has some VHS tapes that generate:
Fontshare is a free fonts service launched by the Indian Type Foundry (ITF). It’s a growing collection of professional grade fonts that are 100% free for personal and commercial use. Our mission is to make high-quality and technically sound fonts accessible to everyone.
Apart from ITF’s own fonts, Fontshare also distributes free fonts from the other publishers. We identify-top notch open-source fonts, review their quality, fix any design or technical bugs and publish their latest versions on Fontshare. We ensure that these fonts are of the same quality as ITF’s own free fonts on offer.
All Fontshare fonts are 100% free for personal and commercial use.
As it turns out, Bionic Reading isn't all that special, it's just a bunch of CSS hackery. This is an open source version that, theoretically, could be turned into a browser plugin or added to a website.
Material Design Icons' growing icon collection allows designers and developers targeting various platforms to download icons in the format, color and size they need for any project. 26,000 icons and counting.
Fonts Changer allows users to change fonts in the browser. Chrome’s advanced font settings let users change system fonts in your browser using the Fonts Changer. Over 80 fonts available for your Chrome browser.
In a single collection, Fork Awesome is a pictographic language of web-related actions. Completely free for commercial use. Originally designed for Bootstrap, Fork Awesome works great with all frameworks (even plain HTML). Doesn't require JavaScript. Easily style icon color, size, shadow, and anything that's possible with CSS. Scalable vector graphics means every icon looks awesome at any size. Accessibility minded and aware.
Welcome to AurekFonts, an archive of fonts from across the galaxy. We are in the never-ending process of expanding our library of in-universe fonts for the languages of the Star Wars universe.
To date, we have catalogued 98 fonts, representing over 28 writing systems and 26 foundries & artists!