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FontBase

A super-fast, beautiful and free font manager for designers.

11
posts
289
followers
528
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Fonts are one of the most essential tools we use as designers.

But with hundreds of typefaces on your system, things can get messy, fast.

That’s why I believe font management is a game-changer for any designer, whether you’re a pro or just starting out.

To organise and preview my Fonts, I use FontBase, and honestly, it might be the best font manager out there.

It’s clean, fast, and completely free to get started.

Want more power? You can even unlock more features.

As I always say:

👉 The more organised you are, the more creative you can be!

And FontBase is helping me stay in the creative zone.

Recently, I’ve been working with FontBase to create both an overview and an in-depth tutorial showing just how powerful this tool really is.

If you haven’t tried it yet, go check it out, seriously, you won’t regret it.

📁 GET FONTBASE HERE:
http://fontba.se?ref=gds

✨GET 3-MONTHS FREE TO ‘FONTBASE AWESOME’ TO TRY THE ADVANCED FEATURES!
http://fontba.se/awesome?ref=gds
Use Promocode Code: GDS

👀 SEE HOW I ORGANISE MY FONTS & USE FONTBASE:
http://youtu.be/LJQvy63nXYw

#FontBase
#fontmanagement
#FontManager
#fonts
#typography
#font
#graphicdesign
#GraphicDesignTools
#TypographyMatters 
#Typographytools
#DesignWorkflow
#CreativeEfficiency
#FontsOnPoint
#TypeLovers
#DesignTips
#OrganiseYourFonts
#DesignTools
#CreativeProcess
#typedesign
#typeface
#typefacetools
#typographydesign

@fontbaseapp


92
2
9 months ago


Font family page updates you may have missed.


20
9 months ago

Font family page updates you may have missed.


20
9 months ago

Font family page updates you may have missed.


20
9 months ago

Font combos from hell #font #metal


292
2
10 months ago

We have a new logo!


16
2
10 months ago

We have a new logo!


16
2
10 months ago

We have a new logo!


16
2
10 months ago


We have a new logo!


16
2
10 months ago

1. Roman letters started as inscriptions carved in stone in 8th century BC. Romans adapted the Greek alphabet, creating the foundation for all Western scripts. These early letters had thick/thin strokes & serifs - still influencing type today.

2. Medieval monks became scribes, evolving letters from rounded "uncial" shapes to sharp Carolingian minuscule under Charlemagne. Then came dense, angular Blackletter (Gothic script) - beautiful but hard to read.

3. 1440: Gutenberg's printing press changed everything! His Bible used Gothic typeface, but Roman letters inspired by classical inscriptions soon emerged. Nicolas Jenson created one of the first balanced Roman typefaces in Venice ~1470.

4. Renaissance brought vertical stems, circular bowls & crisp serifs. Aldus Manutius introduced italic type in 1495 to save space. Claude Garamond's famous typeface from the 1530s is still widely used today.

5. Evolution continued: Transitional types (17th century) added more contrast, Baskerville's sharp forms were "shocking" in the 1700s, then came Baroque variations mixing roman & italic on same lines.

6. 20th century: Sans-serif fonts emerged (no serifs, even thickness). Phototypesetting in the 1960s revolutionized production, leading to today's digital typography. From stone carvings to your screen - what a journey.

#typeface #type #font #fonts #typography #history


12
11 months ago

1. Roman letters started as inscriptions carved in stone in 8th century BC. Romans adapted the Greek alphabet, creating the foundation for all Western scripts. These early letters had thick/thin strokes & serifs - still influencing type today.

2. Medieval monks became scribes, evolving letters from rounded "uncial" shapes to sharp Carolingian minuscule under Charlemagne. Then came dense, angular Blackletter (Gothic script) - beautiful but hard to read.

3. 1440: Gutenberg's printing press changed everything! His Bible used Gothic typeface, but Roman letters inspired by classical inscriptions soon emerged. Nicolas Jenson created one of the first balanced Roman typefaces in Venice ~1470.

4. Renaissance brought vertical stems, circular bowls & crisp serifs. Aldus Manutius introduced italic type in 1495 to save space. Claude Garamond's famous typeface from the 1530s is still widely used today.

5. Evolution continued: Transitional types (17th century) added more contrast, Baskerville's sharp forms were "shocking" in the 1700s, then came Baroque variations mixing roman & italic on same lines.

6. 20th century: Sans-serif fonts emerged (no serifs, even thickness). Phototypesetting in the 1960s revolutionized production, leading to today's digital typography. From stone carvings to your screen - what a journey.

#typeface #type #font #fonts #typography #history


12
11 months ago

1. Roman letters started as inscriptions carved in stone in 8th century BC. Romans adapted the Greek alphabet, creating the foundation for all Western scripts. These early letters had thick/thin strokes & serifs - still influencing type today.

2. Medieval monks became scribes, evolving letters from rounded "uncial" shapes to sharp Carolingian minuscule under Charlemagne. Then came dense, angular Blackletter (Gothic script) - beautiful but hard to read.

3. 1440: Gutenberg's printing press changed everything! His Bible used Gothic typeface, but Roman letters inspired by classical inscriptions soon emerged. Nicolas Jenson created one of the first balanced Roman typefaces in Venice ~1470.

4. Renaissance brought vertical stems, circular bowls & crisp serifs. Aldus Manutius introduced italic type in 1495 to save space. Claude Garamond's famous typeface from the 1530s is still widely used today.

5. Evolution continued: Transitional types (17th century) added more contrast, Baskerville's sharp forms were "shocking" in the 1700s, then came Baroque variations mixing roman & italic on same lines.

6. 20th century: Sans-serif fonts emerged (no serifs, even thickness). Phototypesetting in the 1960s revolutionized production, leading to today's digital typography. From stone carvings to your screen - what a journey.

#typeface #type #font #fonts #typography #history


12
11 months ago

1. Roman letters started as inscriptions carved in stone in 8th century BC. Romans adapted the Greek alphabet, creating the foundation for all Western scripts. These early letters had thick/thin strokes & serifs - still influencing type today.

2. Medieval monks became scribes, evolving letters from rounded "uncial" shapes to sharp Carolingian minuscule under Charlemagne. Then came dense, angular Blackletter (Gothic script) - beautiful but hard to read.

3. 1440: Gutenberg's printing press changed everything! His Bible used Gothic typeface, but Roman letters inspired by classical inscriptions soon emerged. Nicolas Jenson created one of the first balanced Roman typefaces in Venice ~1470.

4. Renaissance brought vertical stems, circular bowls & crisp serifs. Aldus Manutius introduced italic type in 1495 to save space. Claude Garamond's famous typeface from the 1530s is still widely used today.

5. Evolution continued: Transitional types (17th century) added more contrast, Baskerville's sharp forms were "shocking" in the 1700s, then came Baroque variations mixing roman & italic on same lines.

6. 20th century: Sans-serif fonts emerged (no serifs, even thickness). Phototypesetting in the 1960s revolutionized production, leading to today's digital typography. From stone carvings to your screen - what a journey.

#typeface #type #font #fonts #typography #history


12
11 months ago

1. Roman letters started as inscriptions carved in stone in 8th century BC. Romans adapted the Greek alphabet, creating the foundation for all Western scripts. These early letters had thick/thin strokes & serifs - still influencing type today.

2. Medieval monks became scribes, evolving letters from rounded "uncial" shapes to sharp Carolingian minuscule under Charlemagne. Then came dense, angular Blackletter (Gothic script) - beautiful but hard to read.

3. 1440: Gutenberg's printing press changed everything! His Bible used Gothic typeface, but Roman letters inspired by classical inscriptions soon emerged. Nicolas Jenson created one of the first balanced Roman typefaces in Venice ~1470.

4. Renaissance brought vertical stems, circular bowls & crisp serifs. Aldus Manutius introduced italic type in 1495 to save space. Claude Garamond's famous typeface from the 1530s is still widely used today.

5. Evolution continued: Transitional types (17th century) added more contrast, Baskerville's sharp forms were "shocking" in the 1700s, then came Baroque variations mixing roman & italic on same lines.

6. 20th century: Sans-serif fonts emerged (no serifs, even thickness). Phototypesetting in the 1960s revolutionized production, leading to today's digital typography. From stone carvings to your screen - what a journey.

#typeface #type #font #fonts #typography #history


12
11 months ago

1. Roman letters started as inscriptions carved in stone in 8th century BC. Romans adapted the Greek alphabet, creating the foundation for all Western scripts. These early letters had thick/thin strokes & serifs - still influencing type today.

2. Medieval monks became scribes, evolving letters from rounded "uncial" shapes to sharp Carolingian minuscule under Charlemagne. Then came dense, angular Blackletter (Gothic script) - beautiful but hard to read.

3. 1440: Gutenberg's printing press changed everything! His Bible used Gothic typeface, but Roman letters inspired by classical inscriptions soon emerged. Nicolas Jenson created one of the first balanced Roman typefaces in Venice ~1470.

4. Renaissance brought vertical stems, circular bowls & crisp serifs. Aldus Manutius introduced italic type in 1495 to save space. Claude Garamond's famous typeface from the 1530s is still widely used today.

5. Evolution continued: Transitional types (17th century) added more contrast, Baskerville's sharp forms were "shocking" in the 1700s, then came Baroque variations mixing roman & italic on same lines.

6. 20th century: Sans-serif fonts emerged (no serifs, even thickness). Phototypesetting in the 1960s revolutionized production, leading to today's digital typography. From stone carvings to your screen - what a journey.

#typeface #type #font #fonts #typography #history


12
11 months ago


1. Roman letters started as inscriptions carved in stone in 8th century BC. Romans adapted the Greek alphabet, creating the foundation for all Western scripts. These early letters had thick/thin strokes & serifs - still influencing type today.

2. Medieval monks became scribes, evolving letters from rounded "uncial" shapes to sharp Carolingian minuscule under Charlemagne. Then came dense, angular Blackletter (Gothic script) - beautiful but hard to read.

3. 1440: Gutenberg's printing press changed everything! His Bible used Gothic typeface, but Roman letters inspired by classical inscriptions soon emerged. Nicolas Jenson created one of the first balanced Roman typefaces in Venice ~1470.

4. Renaissance brought vertical stems, circular bowls & crisp serifs. Aldus Manutius introduced italic type in 1495 to save space. Claude Garamond's famous typeface from the 1530s is still widely used today.

5. Evolution continued: Transitional types (17th century) added more contrast, Baskerville's sharp forms were "shocking" in the 1700s, then came Baroque variations mixing roman & italic on same lines.

6. 20th century: Sans-serif fonts emerged (no serifs, even thickness). Phototypesetting in the 1960s revolutionized production, leading to today's digital typography. From stone carvings to your screen - what a journey.

#typeface #type #font #fonts #typography #history


12
11 months ago

We're giving away the entire Murs Gothic font family by Maksym Kobuzan — 57 styles worth $399! Link to enter in bio!


15
11 months ago

Too many fonts? Try FontBase! #font #design #type


180
3
12 months ago

After trying Super Search, you'll never want to use other searches to search for your fonts.


93
1 years ago

FontBase Update 2.22.4

- Added sub-collections! Collections can now be put inside one another, with higher-level collections displaying all fonts inside themselves as well as those inside lower-level collections.

- Tag improvements. You can now disable crowd and system tags. SuperSearch now shows only available tags when looking for specific fonts.

- Improved font parsing. Font families should now be grouped more consistently.

More details: https://fontba.se/updates/2.22.4


5
1
1 years ago

💥 FontBase 2.16.2 — expanded and improved SuperSearch (with tags) now available!

bit.ly/2U81zCb

#fontbase #fonts #typography #app #awesome


12
2
4 years ago

💥 FontBase 2.15 is here! Including:

— A resizable sidebar!
— Drag and drop fonts directly into collections or folders!
— Collapsible sidebar sections!
— A much faster and improved scroll!
— A new tree-like folders view!
— Improved network folder watching!
— Up to 3x faster launch speed!
— Search without pressing Enter!

Download it here: https://fontba.se/


12
5 years ago


Story Save - Best free tool for saving Stories, Reels, Photos, Videos, Highlights, IGTV to your phone.

Story-save.com is an intuitive online tool that enables users to download and save a variety of content, including stories, photos, videos, and IGTV materials, directly from Instagram. With Story-Save, you can not only easily download diverse content from Instagram but also view it at your convenience, even without internet access. This tool is perfect for those moments when you come across something interesting on Instagram and want to save it for later viewing. Use Story-Save to ensure you don't miss the chance to take your favorite Instagram moments with you!

Our advantages:

No Need to Register

Avoid app downloads and sign-ups, store stories on the web.

Exclusive High-Quality

Stories Say goodbye to poor-quality content, preserve only high-resolution Stories.

Accessible on All

Devices Download Instagram Stories using any browser, iPhone, Android.

Completely Free to Use

Absolutely no fees. Download any Story at no cost.

Frequently Asked Questions

The Instagram Stories Download feature is designed to provide a secure and high-quality method for downloading Instagram stories. It's user-friendly and doesn't require users to register or sign up. Simply copy the link, paste it, and enjoy the content.
Downloading Instagram stories is a simple process that involves three steps:
  • 1. Go to the Instagram Story Downloader tool.
  • 2. Next, type the username of the Instagram profile into the provided field and click on the Download button.
  • 3. You'll then see all the Stories that are available for the current 24-hour period. Select the ones you want and hit Download.
The selected story will be swiftly saved to your device's local storage.
Unfortunately, it is not possible to download stories from private accounts due to privacy restrictions.
There is no limit to the number of times you can use the Instagram story download service. It's available for unlimited use and is completely free.
Yes, it is legal to download and save Instagram Stories from other users, provided they are not used for commercial purposes. If you intend to use them commercially, you must obtain permission from the original content owner and credit them each time the story is used.
All downloaded stories are typically saved in the Downloads folder on your computer, whether you're using Windows, Mac, or iOS. For mobile devices, the stories are saved in the phone's storage and should also appear in your Gallery app immediately after download.