Undergroundnf|
by Nick's Fonts
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The love light in your eye.
lady dufferin
Undergroundnf
Some books are lies frae end to end.
robert burns
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
Undergroundnf
Undergroundnf

featuring 2 fonts
Most women have no characters at all.
alexander pope
The quick brown fox
Jumps over the lazy dog
supported charset
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz1234567890€%‰#!?.,:;{[()]}¶§†‡&''‚...¡¿•·«»‹›-−—_\/|@©®™^~+<=>×÷−±*µªº°º¹²³æø¿¡¬ƒ¤æœÆŒßðþÞÁÀÂÄÃÅÇÐÉÈÊËÍÌÎÏÑÓÒÔÖÕØŠÚÙÛÜÝŸŽááàâäãåçéèêëíìîïñóòôöõøšúùûüýÿžμ
HEX: #381C2C
RGB: 56 28 44
HEX: #6E1643
RGB: 110 22 67
HEX: #C21794
RGB: 194 23 148
HEX: #BFB826
RGB: 191 184 38
HEX: #F2DEA0
RGB: 242 222 160
Woman's at best a contradiction still.
alexander pope
decorative subway retro london famous 1930s fancy vintage overlined 1920s undergroundnf nick curtis
typeface supports fourteen languages
English German Spanish French Portoguese Italian Swedish Norvegian Danish Finnish Estonian Albanian Javanese Faroese

INFO

A somewhat lesser-known British designer named Edward Johnston devised the original lettering and logotype for London’s subway, known officially as The Underground and informally as The Tube. The logotype is still in use today; the lettering was later adapted by Eric Gill, and most of us are familiar with the resulting fonts that bear his name. This incarnation simulates the lettering tiles used by the system during the late twenties and early thirties. For a lowercase space, use the underscore (_) key; for a bulleted space, use the equal (=) key. See the chart below for lowercase numbers. Windows users: make sure the “Num Lock” light is on, and enter the number on the keypad while holding down the “ALT” key. Mac users: sorry — no lowercase 8, unless you know some undocumented way to insert the S-caron character