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Anyone willing to share some good rhinestone fonts?

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54K views 40 replies 23 participants last post by  MrsOk  
#1 ·
Hi everyone! Can anyone suggest fonts that work well with the rhinestones? Also, please include where you can get them (dafont.com etc) Thanks so much! I appreciate it!
 
#2 ·
Misty...I thought ACS software would make single line fonts (like you need for rhinestones) from your existing fonts...you might want to check this with your ACS guru.

If not...do you have Corel X4? you can do a decent job (with some clean up) by using centerline trace function.

Single line fonts are usually quite expense and I am not aware of any free single line fonts...If anyone knows maybe they can post
 
#3 ·
There are a couple....I was looking for the fancier designs....I know there's uite a bit of clean up involved in most of them. I was just looking for everyone's favorites...maybe some double or tripple line fonts. I'm sure most people have 4 or 5 "go to" fonts they like to work with...hopefully they'll share. I don't have corel draw.
 
#6 ·
Hi MistyAnn.... some of our most popular "fancier" fonts requested for rhinestone replication are Curlz, Boyz are Gross, Santa's Sleigh, Ajile, Monotype Corsiva. Most of these you can replicate with several rows by bolding them and expanding the spacing between lettering when creating your template.
 
#16 · (Edited)
...The third font on this site is the Old English Text. The first one is close to the Monotype Corsiva, but not exactly.
Thanks!:)

....are you talking about the fonts in the little square pictures? or the 4 big alphabet pictures ?

I am going to print out that page and write all of the font names down beside each picture...so as to be able to identify when needed! lol
(I am so forgetful these days!)
 
#32 ·
One of my new favorites right now is akafrivolity. You can download it free here...
akaFrivolity Font | dafont.com

Some of the letters resemble the curlz font but the others don't look so "little girl-ish". It's almost like a mix between a script and the curlz. I do a centerline trace on it and I have very few stones that need to be moved.
 
#24 ·
Mistyann what a great idea...i believe I will start working on doing this as well b/c it's a real pain when trying to get something together on short notice...do mind letting me/us know what some of your favorite fonts are for rhinestones?

gerry...i am 27 and i would say that around my age group will be one biggest customers...i am always wearing bling...and really now that i think about so is my mom and she's in her 50s. Now you also have to remember i'm from Texas...gulf coast southern girls like their bling!
 
#27 ·
Kirsten, I think you're right about where the bling is. The majority of my sales are in TX, OK and MI. I have a smaller, but loyal following in my own city.

My new favorite fancy font is Aphrodite. It also comes with some flourishes. I haven't found it for free yet, but it's only $17 on www.myfonts.com. I'm going to be doing some names a little later and I'll post pics. Billboard is one of the wider fonts that I have been using for school/team names, etc. Pic attached (a little dark but you should be able to see it).

I've started keeping a FONT book. Everytime I find a font I like, I keep a sample page of it. Eventually, I want to uninstall ALL of the unnecessary fonts on my computer and only keep the ones I use most installed. I have font manager software, I just have'nt had the time to do that.
 

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#28 ·
Thanks for sharing and if you could post pics of Aphrodite in stones when you get a chance that'd be great.
I was playing around with some fonts and found a tip that seemed to work in Corel - using the centerline trace function - I typed the text in a font (I believe it was Angelina) then clicked Bitmaps - Convert to Bitmap then Bitmaps - Centerline Trace. I then copied the centerline trace text from corel and pasted into SmartCut Pro to place rhinestones on. The lines are a little jagged but it was a lot less manual stone moving then other ways I've tried.
I am not a graphic artist at all and have only used this type of drawing software for about 2 weeks so this is all so new to me...lucky for me though, my husband has been in the t-shirt business for all of his life as his parents own a screenprinting/sign shop and he works with them so he has been a huge help but I still want to learn to do this myself as well.
 
#33 ·
Ok, I will only share this if you all PROMISE to keep it a secret! LOL! If you go to
www.fonstruct.com you can design your own with dots and then download it as a true font file onto your computer to install. Just use the dots. I print out the alphabet of what I need to have as a reference in front of me and then make my own. As was said above, takes a bit of time but once done it's DONE! :)
 
#36 ·
Ok, I will only share this if you all PROMISE to keep it a secret! LOL! If you go to
fonstruct.com you can design your own with dots and then download it as a true font file onto your computer to install. Just use the dots. I print out the alphabet of what I need to have as a reference in front of me and then make my own. As was said above, takes a bit of time but once done it's DONE! :)
I clicked on your link and it took me to a crazy Facebook ad! I think you meant FontStruct | Build, Share, Download Fonts, right?