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Top : Free Fonts : Dingbats
- Animal Tracks (click for details)

Animal tracks are cool. They also reveal nice bits about the anatomy, habits, and behavior, of the animals that leave them. Animals that walk on their toes (digitigrade) such as horses, cats, dogs, deer, sheep, etc., rely on speed to overtake their prey, or to escape. Animals that live at a slower pace such as the skunk, porcupine, etc., generally have more elaborate movements-they place both their heels and toes on the ground.
AnimalTracks is a type 1, PostScript" font for the Macintosh" and IBM" (Also available in True Type and T3). Each upper and lower-case letter of the alphabet is a different animal track. I've tried to display a wide variety of animals from domestic to exotic, but most are common animal tracks that one would see on a pretty mild hike. For the most part, all of them are the left front foot of the animal. (Although, sometimes I have used another footprint when it was more clear print.) In the wild, tracks vary according to age, sex, gait, and the medium in which the track was preserved. These prints are, on the whole, pretty darn good examples.
- Animals (click for details)

Animal dingbats.
- Animals 2 (click for details)

None available.
- Arboris Folium (click for details)

Last Autumn, my friend Ruthi in upper New York, my friend Dave in Ontario, and I in Provo, UT, had an argument about fall leaves; the result was obvious -- Utah has the most spectacular leaves, mostly.
Just a couple of weeks ago, the deciduous trees near the timberline (or at least the ones pretty high up) began to change color, turning the mountain peaks a crimson orange. Then, slowly, the color began to move through the scrub oak down the mountains. Next week, the august Silver Maple in our neighbors yard will begin to drop its paper-like leaves, and the apple trees in our backyard will release its unpicked fruit, primed for apple pie.
ArborisFolium is a TrueType font, created by a couple who obviously spends too much time in the hills (or dreaming about being there). The font boasts 34 original drawings (68 total characters) by us (Lise and Andrew, though Lise drew most of them). We've tried to display a wide variety of leaves from both shrubs and trees; most of the foliage flourishes in the Rocky Mountain region. For the most part, we've stuck to single leaf examples from each type of tree (or bush), but there are exceptions: often, a single leaf would not do, since many are found only in clusters; we've also included some nuts.
- Art Supplies (click for details)

I am making this font freeware as part of my enjoyment of typography and the desire to "give back"
a little something to the World Wide Web. There are many font designers more prolific than I who have given the world hundreds of free fonts -- Ray Larabie, Nick Curtis, Rich Gast - to name but a few.
- Artsy Parts (click for details)

I am making this font freeware as part of my enjoyment of typography and the desire to "give back"
a little something to the World Wide Web. There are many font designers more prolific than I who have given the world hundreds of free fonts -- Ray Larabie, Nick Curtis, Rich Gast - to name but a few.
- Auntbats (click for details)

All fonts are original designs by me...you may use them in creating graphics, whatever, as long as i am given a tiny bit of credit and maybe a link back :)
*Kimberly*
- Aztec (click for details)

Dingbats made to look like the characters you see on aztec relics.
- Babe-Alicious (click for details)

This is a dingbats fonts of over 40 silhouettes of lovely lady-types. The upper and lower case A-Z (and numerals 0-9 as well as some punctuation) contain identical but flipped glyphs, plus solid and outline glyphs. Use of a character map program, such as Windows' Character Map, will be very helpful in exploring and using this font.
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