Scout is a sharp, clean, and bold athletic font. And with a bonus set of 6 color swatches, this pack promises to work harder than others.ĭownload Sea Dog Athletic Display Font 10. Inspired by stencil lettering around shipyards, Doug Houvener presents this no-nonsense typeface that comes in 16 versions. With upper and lowercase letters, plus standard ligatures, it’s the best typeface to show off your sporty designs.ĭownload Houston Sports Font Family 9. brings you this pack with 3 different fonts you can play with for all your design needs. Houston Sports Font FamilyĬraft Supply Co. Sporter a is a baseball font with a sporty display typeface good for logotype, label, badge, headline, signature, packaging, and any more.ĭownload Sporter 8. Use it to make titles, cards, websites, or apparels pop!ĭownload Boardley Script Layered Font 4. comes in two different versions that are meant to be layered into one another for a totally cool, retro look. This contemporary hand-drawn typeface by Craft Supply Co. Features upper and lowercase, numbers, accents, punctuation, and 5 alternates.ĭownload Auckland 3. AucklandĪuckland is a bold, baseball font script that’s perfectly suited for logos, apparel, little league fundraisers, and much more. There are 4 styles to choose from, so you could easily go from trendy to classic in minutes.ĭownload Houston Italic Font Family 2. is solid enough to be used on almost any project. Inspired by American sports, this modern modular sans serif family by Craft Supply Co. shorts/QP4uUU1KauE Cool Baseball Fonts 1. So whether you want to re-create that vintage feel or you’re a fan of the game, these baseball fonts are sure to hit a home run with you. There’s just something nostalgic about those times. In fact, the mere thought of it calls to mind lazy Sunday afternoons, eating hotdogs at the benches, and catching the next baseball star at cereal boxes. So, with another dismal season for the Chicago Cubs underway in 2014, let's have a look at how the designers here at DesignCrowd did in giving the team a facelift.Attending games at Fenway Park, collectible cards, and little boys hoping to catch that foul ball – baseball definitely played an iconic role in the lives of many Americans. Not saying we don’t absolutely love the Cubs logo - it’s timeless - but we’re interested to see how graphic artists re-imagined the iconic emblem The team over at Sports Grid, who absolutely love the current Cubs logo, were curious of the results. To give the Chicago Cubs a little helping hand back onto the winning podium and to get some World Series pendants around those players necks, we invited our designers from across the globe to re-imagine the Cubs signature design with a logo design contest - with or without Clark. The club has had many logos over the years, but the current iteration has been in place since 1979 – the Cubs have both the oldest stadium and the oldest logo. Hey, it can’t be as bad as Clark the mascot, right? Of course, fielding a winning team could do the same. With the team struggling for another season, a new logo could inject some enthusiasm. Carlos Nazario from Da Windy City had some insights into a redesigned logo for the Cubs: Perhaps it is time to refresh it a bit. Clark may not have had the desired effect for the team, but a complete overhaul of the logo design might do the trick. There has been some new developments at the club though, with the introduction of a new mascot "Clark the Cub" in an effort to re-vitalize both the fans and the team. Unfortunately the wonder years for the mighty Chicago Cubs has been and gone and they are now sitting in last place in their division. Amazingly, it is one of the longest running and most beloved-alias' in baseball. The moniker became popular with fans over the next few years and was officially adopted by the club in 1907 - the same year they win their first World Series title against the Tigers 2-0. Skip forward a few years to 1902, and the Chicago Daily News pens the Nickname "Cubs" as the team moniker. For the Chicago Cubs this history extends way back to the 1876 when they play their first National League Baseball game as the Chicago White Stockings against Louisville, and win 4-0. There is an unfathomable amount of tradition, history and pride that accompanies Major League Baseball teams and their logos.
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