PIXymbols Dingbats
A package of three fonts, with well over 200 specially drawn pictorial symbols and pi characters and symbols, including web and e-mail symbols, and serif and sans-serif versions of copyright (C and ...
A package of three fonts, with well over 200 specially drawn pictorial symbols and pi characters and symbols, including web and e-mail symbols, and serif and sans-serif versions of copyright (C and ...
Attractive chess and checkerpieces, as well as board components, in a font. Generate boards with light, bold or no border, or a border with rank and file identifiers.
Braille fonts, for manufacturers of architectural signs for the blind, and for editors of instructional materials in braille for the sighted. Meets ADA specifications. PIXymbols Braille generates ...
A font with boxes, bullets, large brace segments, etc. Plus six pt. wide line segments which will generate lines in 16 weights, in any program which supports fonts.
A collection of astrological and related glyphs, signs, and symbols (174) in a font, plus an aspect chart, and several other chart components in EPS file format.
With these two fonts you can generate a variety of pointers, each in eight directions, some with extenders, plus several types of enclosing borders and shields.
The alphabet and numerals of the American Sign Language, in right-handed as well as left-handed versions, in two line weights.
Two symbol fonts based on African art and hand-crafts, such as bronze reliefs, wood carvings, and textiles. Use singly, as rules, borders or overall patterns.
Signage mandated by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, plus additional accessibility signs, in both font and EPS format in the same package.
Two fonts generate positive and reverse letters and numbers in circles. Six border line weights, and two character weights. Circles can be squared.
A set of authentic 18th century Belgian printers ornaments provided the reference for this creepy group of glyphs.
Designed as a companion to Autofont, this dingbat set was originally developed for What Car? magazine, the UK’s leading automotive consumer title. Use in charts and reviews to indicate metallic ...