I want to make signs and storefronts and t-shirts and brochures with Chocolate Box. V. nice.
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Actually, I have to do a brochure for the nuns in June; maybe I should buy Chocolate Box for that. I think it would totally work for "Hi! We're the Ursulines!"
Chocolate Box looks like an excellent titling font. Very sturdy and authoritative.
Chocolate Box is glorious; I want to roll around in it. I'm not sure if that makes it more or less Ursuline, but hey.
This is the most geektastic conversation I've ever had. I've ascended to True Geek!
I just downloaded it, it's free.
I like it, just not professionally. It's not conservative enough for me. But, I could just be being a fuddy duddy.
I just downloaded it, it's free.
I didn't even notice that it was free. Keen!
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Hmm. I have issues with the question mark.
This is the most geektastic conversation I've ever had. I've ascended to True Geek!
Tell me more about your font-management software. Why are you using it in alpha as opposed to anything else more established?
I feel you, Tep. I've broken up with fonts over their unfortunate ampersands. (And the lack of a real lower case or accented characters is enough to make it a play font rather than a real font. Still, so pretty!)
Why are you using it in alpha as opposed to anything else more established?
Oooh, alpha. As in, before beta. I didn't realize there was an alpha. I've never seen alpha software before.
the lack of a real lower case or accented characters is enough to make it a play font rather than a real font.
I like fonts like that for titling purposes, like ita said. I hate to have too much of a good thing.