Fonts for commercial use dafont1/13/2024 When you have a bad design, don't even make it at all.ĭK Lemon Yellow Sun is popular right now, but there are 1,000 fonts almost exactly the same, and with equally poor rendering. If you have a good design, spend extra time, trying to make it perfect, and worthy of purchase. You need to stop thinking about churning out a high volume of average to poor designs, with limited character maps. I have eight freeware dingbats with much higher numbers. The average number of downloads for each of your fonts is about 62,000. Probably 85% of your downloads are from 10% of your submissions. Many people have probably downloaded some of your fonts multiple times, because they couldn't remember if they already had downloaded yours, or not. A lot of people just like to collect free fonts. NEVER think of a Dafont download as being a 'potential sale'. If you charge a fixed amount, then a customer will have to compare your fonts to other fonts in the same price range. You're not going to get anywhere, hiring a lawyer to litigate against someone in another country, in the hope of receiving a $10 settlement. At best, they are 'semi-professional', and not worth paying more than a few dollars to use. Hanoded, in my opinion, you make too many fonts, and you don't spend enough time on each one. Some of the people who contributed $1 could have contributed much more, but they didn't have to. I know Pablo personally, and he's told me that some donations he receives are for $1, and some are for $1,000. I'm going to use the example of the Lobster font, by Pablo Impallari. It presupposes that the customer will fairly compensate the author. It works, if the author makes fonts very quickly, and hopes to earn some income from the charity of the commercial use client. ![]() ![]() ![]() I personally feel that donationware is a bad commercial licensing option.
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