The phenomenon art observed all over the world is called graffiti, although it’s considered to be illegal in some parts of the country. People still enjoy seeing this kind of art. This street culture is known to be provocative, bold and appealing to the public. There is a flood of graffiti fonts that you can use in your typography projects, here are a few fonts that you can use.
Urban Decay:
If you want to give a touch of an urban feel to your project, then Urban Decay has all you need from a graffiti font. The creator Zofos made this handmade brush font to celebrate the rugged authenticity of inner-city living.
Philly Sans:
Philly Sans is made by Philatype. He used a lowercase font to give a unique and easy-going look to the project. He wanted to add some veracity to art. As much as it’s super clear to read, it also has a great typeface.
Hoodson Script:
This retro-style font with a bouncy baseline is what you’re looking for to make your project look great, the Hoodson Script comes with extras created by Hendra Dirtyline and is free for personal use.
The Graffiti Font:
This font created by Mike Karolos comes with a bubbly pack wrapped around the alphabets with a punch of vibrant colors. It also comes in a black and white option.
Knight Brush:
This font is inspired by the vintage-era and created by graphic designer Hendra Pratama. The purpose behind creating this font was to resemble the brush painting looks natural.
Fat Wandals:
This great looking script font is created by Mans Greback, it looks like it’s been drawn by a real chisel-tip marker with a full set of characters with loads of variants.
Don Graffiti:
Don Graffiti’s nicely urban but still big and friendly. Created by Don Marciano, this all-caps font with a clean touch is free for commercial use.
Scare Arms:
This graffiti font from Chequered Ink is a horror-inspired to give an eroded and scary look. The creators have really brought the creation to life. You can download it for personal and commercial use.
Grizzly Attack:
Grizzly Attack looks like the bears have just scratched their claws out on the wall. It’s a hand-drawn font that looks stylish, catchy, cool and easy to read. It’s in all-caps and could be easily downloaded for personal and commercial use.
Crevice Stencil:
A stencil font created by Chequered Ink is ornate and edgy. With the ideal aesthetic, this font can be eye-catchy and alluring for the audience. You can use this font for free in personal projects, but if you want to use it for commercial purposes you’ll need to purchase a license.
The graffiti world has given a whole new face to street art with a creative explosion. Though these fonts are guaranteed and successive to use for your project, you can always come up with your own font with a unique typeface.