Streamliner
Inspired by the typefaces used for company insignia on aircraft in the 1930's and 1940's, Streamliner is light, friendly and open.
Inspired by the typefaces used for company insignia on aircraft in the 1930's and 1940's, Streamliner is light, friendly and open.
Loose and irregular, Slowhand is an easy display face to implement.
One of our original typefaces, the Shiloh family is a strong Art Deco-inspired font with both serif and sans-serif versions.
Messy and sloppy, Pillowbiter is one of the few grunge fonts that Zang-O-Fonts has produced.
Strict, strong and narrow, Perpetuity is clean and perfectly designed to be used as a more formal display face.
Eroded, skeletal and gaunt, Obsessed was one of Zang-O-Fonts first typefaces, and is loosely based on a couple of Art Deco faces.
Strong, hard lines inspired the name of this font, based on the "nuclear standard" set by the U.S. and the Soviets during the cold war.
Inspired by a hypnotism show, McGurdy is a heavy display face that works well in both casual and formal settings.
An imperfect mix between a Roman and a Modern font, Marc Anthony can be used easily for display or body text.
The best way to describe it is a drunken Roman font. Very imperfect, narrow and full of little curls and quirks, Lush is distinct and easily adaptable.