

It’s a hand-drawn font perfect for children’s comics, books, posters, flyers, games, packaging, and virtually any design that needs a cute and playful vibe. Here we have Sidekick, a member of the Screwball comedy font family. The font is bold and joyful, and it works great to make short fun titles. Add this font to your favorite creative ideas and notice how it makes them come alive! Chunky Comic FontĬhunky is a comic condensed playful font designed with thick letters. Incredibly versatile, this font fits a wide pool of designs, elevating them to the highest levels. Asterix Comic FontĪsterix is a relaxed and flowing Handwritten Font.

The font comes in regular and Italic styles with alternate characters. It has a classic cartoon letter design that will fit in perfectly with designs related to children’s products and brands. If you’re looking for a groovy cartoon-style font for your casual and fun projects, give this font a try. It comes in multiple styles, including 3D style, brush, and lots of bonus glyphs. This font will make your titles and headings look like something out of a classic comic book.

Each of the four fonts comes with a glyphset of over 370 characters, quite a few alternates, and support for the majority of Latin-based languages.Monospace Fonts Decorative Fonts Condensed Fonts Serif Fonts Classic Fonts Script Fonts Browood – Layered Comic Fontīrowood is a layered font with a fun comic book-style letter design. Meticulously scrutinized and tested outlines expand the versatility of this set to also cover non-comic text and display applications.Ĭommon Comic’s two very interchangeable sets of caps are available in regular and bold weights, with italic counterparts, all in one style-linked and affordable package. The forms were constrcuted with a slightly condensed individual build, without sacrificing the clarity, legibility and scalability of the overall setting. This set was made for information-heavy comic balloon text use. Common Comic joins Collector Comic, Captain Comic, Caper Comic, and Classic Comic, all popular fonts in their own right. The Common Comic volume is the fifth in Canada Type’s ever-growing series of comic book fonts, which really is the expression of Patrick Griffin’s continued obsession with the genre.
