Cassel Posted September 7 Posted September 7 With back-to-school time of year, you might have a photo or a story related to school and you might be looking for a cursive font. Or you could use this easy-to-read font for your journaling. You can get this free font HERE. What will you write? 2
Anne Lamp Posted September 7 Posted September 7 I am not sure where I will use this, but it is much more legible than most cursive fonts. Thanks 3
Cassel Posted September 7 Author Posted September 7 2 minutes ago, Anne Lamp said: I am not sure where I will use this, but it is much more legible than most cursive fonts. Thanks Make sure to adjust the kerning. It looks like it might be negative. Set it to 0 to see if it is even more ligible. 1
Daniel Hess Posted September 7 Posted September 7 (edited) OK..this one was fun.... Note: the background is a combination of two papers from Merisa Lerin and the crayon border was from Janet Kemp. Got all three at digital scrapbook.com. Edited September 8 by Daniel Hess 5 9
Ann Seeber Posted September 8 Posted September 8 I revised the template from the Lab and used a mini kit from Marisa Lerin called Field Notes 9 4 6
Anne Lamp Posted September 9 Posted September 9 On 9/7/2024 at 9:49 AM, Cassel said: Make sure to adjust the kerning. It looks like it might be negative. Set it to 0 to see if it is even more ligible. Thanks, I will, I just thought it was supposed to look like that. LOL 2
Michele Posted September 9 Posted September 9 (edited) I love monoline fonts like this one. They look great with inner bevels. The elements are from my older stash so I can't give the proper credit. Edited September 10 by Michele 2 9
Julie Magerka Posted September 9 Posted September 9 6 hours ago, Michele said: I love monoline fonts like this one. They look great with inner bevels. The elements are from my stash so I can't give the proper credit. This is a fun one! 2 1
Sharla Posted September 9 Posted September 9 Didn’t go for the school theme but used the font for a quote layout. “If your dreams do not scare you, they are not big enough” is a quote from Ellen Johnson Sirleaf who was president of Liberia from 2006 to 2018. She was the first elected female head of state in Africa. The background is one of my photos of clouds. 5 6
Julie Magerka Posted September 10 Posted September 10 22 hours ago, Sharla said: Didn’t go for the school theme but used the font for a quote layout. “If your dreams do not scare you, they are not big enough” is a quote from Ellen Johnson Sirleaf who was president of Liberia from 2006 to 2018. She was the first elected female head of state in Africa. The background is one of my photos of clouds. Those are words to contemplate, for sure! 2
Corrie Kinkel Posted September 10 Posted September 10 I didn't go for a school theme as well. This font is so easy to read that I probably am going to use it often. Besides the frame by Carole I made the rest from scratch with a lot of different blend modes and reduced opacities. Both my photos are from the same wild carrot in the small meadow where I often pass by. When the plant dies down it makes a tight ball over the seeds in the flowerhead which give it its nickname "vogelnestje" (in Dutch) and that translates to birdnest. 2 8
Susan Ewart Posted September 11 Posted September 11 3 hours ago, Corrie Kinkel said: I didn't go for a school theme as well. This font is so easy to read that I probably am going to use it often. Besides the frame by Carole I made the rest from scratch with a lot of different blend modes and reduced opacities. Both my photos are from the same wild carrot in the small meadow where I often pass by. When the plant dies down it makes a tight ball over the seeds in the flowerhead which give it its nickname "vogelnestje" (in Dutch) and that translates to birdnest. I love the colors in this layout. Does this plant actually produce a carrot? It's amazing to see that it can go into such a tight ball. It's a pretty flower with the pink ring. 1
kasany Posted September 11 Posted September 11 Well, the fonts look very good with/on a right background. This background be one color /like Julie's, Sharla's, Carrie's ones/. The fonts didn't look fine on my recent work so I changed font to white Ariel.
Corrie Kinkel Posted September 11 Posted September 11 13 hours ago, Susan Ewart said: I love the colors in this layout. Does this plant actually produce a carrot? It's amazing to see that it can go into such a tight ball. It's a pretty flower with the pink ring. Thank you and somehow the photos just "asked" for that color. When I had them on a lighter background it didn't work. This way the photos blend in with the background and I had to reduce the opacity on Carole's frame because it was bright orange. I spend most of the time playing with the settings for the background; the photos with the masks were easy. The wild carrot actually produces a white carrot, but to us it isn't very tastefully. The seeds are mostly used in a meadow mix or sown on their own in a garden for ornamental purposes because the plant is very decorative and it is a sturdy plant, circa 60-70 cm high. 2
Corrie Kinkel Posted September 11 Posted September 11 4 hours ago, kasany said: Well, the fonts look very good with/on a right background. This background be one color /like Julie's, Sharla's, Carrie's ones/. The fonts didn't look fine on my recent work so I changed font to white Ariel. Kasany I agree this font won't look good on a layout with a busy background but on an almost one color background it is easy to read. For instance I'm thinking of journaling on a label etc. 2
kasany Posted September 11 Posted September 11 23 minutes ago, Corrie Kinkel said: Kasany I agree this font won't look good on a layout with a busy background but on an almost one color background it is easy to read. For instance I'm thinking of journaling on a label etc. I'm completely agree. You used a very good word to describe this not good for the fonts background. 2
Julie Magerka Posted September 11 Posted September 11 19 hours ago, Susan Ewart said: I love the colors in this layout. Does this plant actually produce a carrot? It's amazing to see that it can go into such a tight ball. It's a pretty flower with the pink ring. I think the plant resembles what we here call Queen Anne's Lace which tightens into a brownish ball when it's finished blooming. But the flowers of that are white only.
Julie Magerka Posted September 11 Posted September 11 Just a few words on notepaper using the font (not my notepaper b/c I don't have the ripped edge script yet!). I saw these words online and they rang true for me. 2 6
Corrie Kinkel Posted September 12 Posted September 12 21 hours ago, Julie Magerka said: I think the plant resembles what we here call Queen Anne's Lace which tightens into a brownish ball when it's finished blooming. But the flowers of that are white only. Yes Julie it is the same plant and it is mostly white but over here some can have a pink touch! 2
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