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Guitar Chords

Guitar Chords™

by Aah Yes
Licenses from $5.00
Complete family of 2 fonts: $5.00
Guitar Chords Font Family was designed by published by Aah Yes. Guitar Chords contains 2 styles and family package options.

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Guitar Chords

2 fonts

Best Value!

  • Guitar Chords Closed Guitar Chords Closed

  • Guitar Chords Open Guitar Chords Open

Per style:

$2.50

Pack of 2 styles:

$5.00

About Guitar Chords Font Family


Here's two easy-to-use fonts that allow you to quickly put in any chord shape you want, even ones you invent yourself. You can do this for anything from 2 to 8-stringed instruments, not just 6-string guitar chord boxes. You just type a letter for the kind of chord-box you want - based on which instrument you're displaying, and then the numbers of the finger positions, it's as easy as that. For Guitar chords, type in G for the empty Guitar chord box, then type the numbers for the finger positions from 6th string to first string. Try typing or copy/pasting these: E major type G022100 B7 use Fx21202 Fminor use g133111 Or try Gx02220 Fx00212 gxx3210 And also try m0212 B44554 Any chord works on the same principle, anything you can devise, (even reversed if you wish, or original shapes for non-standard tuning), and there's loads of examples to get you started in the EXAMPLES files you can download from these webpages - so you can copy/paste the main chords, including several inversions of the commonest chords. And if you want a 4 or 5 string chord box you type M or B. You'll find that Big G gives you a Big Chord Box (6 frets showing) and Little g gives you a Little Chord Box (4 frets showing) which might be useful in making things look tidier. And it's the same with the other 2 to 8 stringed boxes, Big letter = big box; little letter = little box. If you want a five-fret Guitar Chord Box, they're on F and f, both the same. And there's an Open version of the font for chords higher up the fretboard with a little number at the side to show which fret it starts on, using the same principle for the finger positions. You can even do the dots and fingerboard in different colours, as you can see in the graphics. Full details are in the INSTRUCTIONS file on these webpages which you should be able to download, along with the EXAMPLES, it's all really easy - read that first to see how easy it is.

Designers:

Publisher: Aah Yes

Foundry: Aah Yes

Design Owner: Aah Yes

MyFonts debut: Dec 21, 2016

Guitar Chords™ is a trademark of Aah Yes.

About Aah Yes

Aah Yes Fonts presents 10 brand-new and original font families, including Dascari, a funky and informal yet highly-readable font that would suit a large variety of modern graphics situations; and Cabragio which is a curvy font which flows attractively and dynamically, especially in its lower case letters, and is a quite distinct font. Deltarbo is a conventional medium-heavy sans-serif that has modern clean lines and a slightly "rounded-rectangle" feel for great legibility. There are two handwriting fonts in this new selection - Write is a fairly neat (perhaps even formal) handwriting font or print, useable for both display and text with clear and well-defined characters, and Dorkihand is genuinely left-handed writing, and veers more towards the grunge style of handwriting. Tuzonie, Crockstomp and Rappica fall into the "misprinted, degraded or distressed" category, and give varying degrees of degradation to different block types, with internal and external letter-distress being available. Smeethe manages to look almost out of focus while being both degraded and yet smooth, but not so degraded as to impair its legibility. Meltifex puts at the user's disposal a full set of melting letters, which drip away at the bottom. Dascari and Write have been created in an extensive variety of weights and styles. All Aah Yes's Fonts' font packages contain both TTF or OTF formats, (i.e. both formats are included in the same zip file) and all the fonts are - as you would expect - comprehensively kerned, and contain an extensive selection of accented and non-English characters. As far as the Font Authors are aware, the invented font names are all quite meaningless, none of them is something unspeakable in Etruscan or Hittite. (But if they are, please let us know.)

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