Mermaid Font is the bold serif typeface designed by Scott Simpson. The flat and round curves of this typeface work well when combined with the wide audio font style and the amazing characters in this typeface will add to the value of your designs.
To add a beautiful and attractive look to designs, you can use this font without douth. This fishtail typeface is also considered a great font generator.
Mermaid is a high-contrast transitional serif face with smooth, round curves. It contains uppercase and lowercase letters and a basic set of diacritics and special characters. Mermaid is free for personal and student use, but donations are greatly appreciated!
Name | Mermaid Font |
Style | Serif, Mermaid Font |
Designer | Scott Simpson |
File Format | OTF, TTF |
Font Licence | Free For Personal use. |
Type | Free Font. |
This font is being used in a number of different places and this typeface also comes with a great online presence which makes this font an amazing choice for web designs and also provides a great readability feature.
This typeface can be easily applied to several different projects with the mystique marker font pair for designs, titles, titles, signs, and this use of fonts will add a great presence to the designs.
Details: Click on the "Download" button, save the zip somewhere on your hard disk, go to the place where it is saved, double-click on the zip to open it, then either click on "Extract all files" or drag and drop the files elsewhere from the zip window (hold down the CTRL key to select several files at once)
For the 20th century versions of Windows, you must install an unzip tool first.
Tip (for Windows XP/Vista, not Windows 7/8): if you occasionally need a font, you don't need to install it. Just double-click on the .ttf file, and while the preview window is opened you can use it in most of the programs you'll launch (apart from a few exceptions like OpenOffice).
Mac OS X recognizes TrueType and OpenType fonts (.ttf and .otf) but not the PC bitmap fonts (.fon).
Files are compressed, you may need a utility like Stuffit Expander.
Copy the font files (.ttf or .otf) to fonts:// in the File manager.
Or: Go into the /home folder, in the menu select View > Show Hidden Files, you will see the hidden folder .fonts (if not, create it) then copy the font files there.
Or: (under some Linux versions - Ubuntu for example) Double-click the font file > "Install font" button in the preview window.