FONT COLLECTION (1600+ FONTS)



HEY GUYS HERE IS THE COLLECTION OF MORE THAN 1600 FONTS IN A  SINGLE ZIP FILE.
IF YOU NEED TO WANT TO DOWNLOAD IT THEN THE LINKS ARE GIVEN.

1. DOWNLOAD FROM DATAFILEHOST(WEBSITE) -DOWNLOAD
AND DIRECT LINK IS- https://www.datafilehost.com/d/0bfb5b71

2. DOWNLOAD FROM MEDIAFIRE(WEBSITE) -DOWNLOAD
AND DIRECT LINK IS- https://www.mediafire.com/?zuwnyxwks9qb7do







A font is a specific typeface of a certain size and style. For example, one font may be Arial 12 pt bold, while another font may be Times New Roman 14 pt italic. Most word processing programs have a Font menu that allows you to choose the typeface, size, and style of the text. In order to use a font, you must have it installed on your computer. Windows provides access to fonts using the Fonts control panel. The Mac OS stores fonts in a Fonts folder and includes a separate "Font Book" application for managing fonts.

In a manual printing (letterpress) house the word "font" would refer to a complete set of metal type that would be used to typeset an entire page. Upper- and lowercase letters get their names because of which case the metal type was located in for manual typesetting: the more distant upper case or the closer lower case. The same distinction is also referred to with the terms majuscule and minuscule.

Unlike a digital typeface, a metal font would not include a single definition of each character, but commonly used characters (such as vowels and periods) would have more physical type-pieces included. A font when bought new would often be sold as (for example in a Roman alphabet) 12pt 14A 34a, meaning that it would be a size 12-point font containing 14 uppercase "A"s, and 34 lowercase "A"s.


The rest of the characters would be provided in quantities appropriate for the distribution of letters in that language. Some metal type characters required in typesetting, such as dashes, spaces and line-height spacers, were not part of a specific font, but were generic pieces which could be used with any font.[2] Line spacing is still often called "leading", because the strips used for line spacing were made of lead (rather than the harder alloy used for other pieces). The reason for this spacing strip being made from "lead" was because lead was a softer metal than the traditional forged metal type pieces (which was part lead, antimony and tin) and would compress more easily when "locked-up" in the printing "chase" (i.e. a carrier for holding all the type together).


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(ABK COLLECTION)

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