NaN Rage Quik is an unapologetic script font with roots in Sharpie pen lettering and graffiti. Not a true follower of any particular school, it’s a free spirit with irregularities. As a script font, it’s dynamic, showing broken and angular structures while keeping its flow, albeit with a very small slant angle. A distinctive feature of Quik is its closed counters for some key glyphs (/a, /e), replacing the bowls with a single straight stroke.
Rage Quik is available in 4 widths and 9 weights each, allowing precise fine-tuning of its girth for big narrow titles as well as perfectly-fitted columns of text.
Typeface: NaN Rage Soft Designed by NaN NaN Team: Hugues Gentile, Fanny Hamelin, Fadhl Haqq, Léon Hugues, Jean-Baptiste Morizot, Luke Prowse, Florian Runge, Jolana Sýkorová Additional Engineering: Igino Marini
Year: 2024 Languages: Supporting 305 latin based languages Formats: TTF, WOFF2 (Autohinted)
Devices like the ‘pilnie-winks’, which sounds quite cute and quaint but are actually thumb screws, & iron ‘caspie-claws’, which were big heated leg irons, usually extracted confessions from the supposed witches.
FARTHING
Silver coin
1/4 pence
George looked out onwards towards the apple trees, sat betwixt two tombs. One his fathers, the other, someone else’s, presumably. As he did every day, incessantly, he sat polishing his axe, although polishing is a kind word for smearing in this case. George was a very serious man. George was a very dull man. He was a Knight and jesus christ, didn’t you know it?! It’s all he talked about. It’s just turned 601 AD by the way, it’s January 1st. Christian, a fellow Knight – but significantly more chill – strolled over, as he did everyday to speak to George where he was everyday. It was not a routine Christian liked, due to George’s previously mentioned boring character. “How do you, Sir George?” Christian bellowed, before coughing. “You alright mate, you struggling?” He added. “Do you know which day it is, Sir Christian?” he spat in retort, “it is the day my Father passed, past,” he injected, cutting off Christian before he had the chance to speak. “A sad day, Sir George, but was it not in May that yo–” he was cut off again. “WITH MY AXE, IN THESE HALLOWED FIELDS, AMIDST THE JOHN’S JUDGEMENT, WITCHCRAFT MY EYE, 601 BE THE YEAR, DIONYSAIC I BE, AVENGE BECOMETH I.” There was a pause. “Huh?” Christian asked. “MALLEUS MALEFICARUM!” The half-groat dropped. The utter pointlessness of this daily endeavour appeared crystal clear before his eyes. He walked away from George and never spoke to him again. It was a new year, and a new Christian. No more mister nice Sir. George’s Dad wasn’t dead anyway. His name’s Colin and he works as a dab hand in the bakery.
“nAnotheR*!”
DIE LEIBEIGENSCHAFT WURDE DURCH DIE GEBURT BEGRÜNDET; AUSSCHLAGGEBEND WAR DER STAND DER MUTTER. HATTE EIN WITWER KINDER AUS MEHREREN EHEN, KONNTE DIES SOGAR ZUR WEGNAHME VON KINDERN FÜHREN. FREIE KONNTEN IN UNFREIHEIT GERATEN. DIE „VERJÄHRUNG“ DES FREIEN STANDES TRAT EIN, WENN SICH EIN FREIER IN EINER GEGEND NIEDERLIESS, WO DIE LÄNDLICHE BEVÖLKERUNG LEIBEIGEN WAR. SELBST FREI GEBORENE KINDER WURDEN LEIBEIGEN, WENN IHRE ELTERN NACH DER GEBURT LEIBEIGEN WURDEN.WER SICH ALS FREIER NICHT MEHR WIRTSCHAFTLICH HALTEN KONNTE, KONNTE SICH IN LEIBEIGENSCHAFT BEGEBEN. UM WIRKSAMKEIT ZU ERLANGEN, MUSSTE DIESE ERKLÄRUNG IN EINEM ERGEBEBRIEF SCHRIFTLICH ABGEGEBEN WERDEN.AUCH MASSENEIDE NACH VORGEFERTIGTEN MUSTERN KAMEN VOR, MIT DENEN UNTERTANEN SICH VERPFLICHTETEN, SICH DEM LEIBHERRN MIT LEIB UND GUT NICHT ZU ENTFREMDEN, IN WÜRTTEMBERG 1282/1283 UND 1296/1297, UND IN BASEL 1499. DIE AUFHEBUNG DER LEIBEIGENSCHAFT KONNTE DURCH FREILASSUNG GEGEN ENTGELT UND NACH BELIEBEN DES GUTSHERRN ERFOLGEN.[55] DIE ABWESENHEIT VOM GUT HATTE DIE VERJÄHRUNG DES LEIBEIGENTUMS ZUR FOLGE. BEI LEDIGEN BETRUG DIE FRIST 31 JAHRE, SECHS WOCHEN UND DREI TAGE; BEI VERHEIRATETEN ZEHN JAHRE. IN WÜRTTEMBERG KAM ES IN AUSNAHMEFÄLLEN ZUM AUSTAUSCH VON LEIBEIGENEN ZWISCHEN EINZELNEN LEIBHERREN, INSBESONDERE IN ANGRENZENDEN TERRITORIEN. EIN WECHSEL KAM AUCH AUF INITIATIVE VON LEIBEIGENEN VOR, MEIST WENN SIE HEIRATEN UND DESHALB WEGZIEHEN WOLLTEN, ABER KEIN GELD FÜR EINEN FREIKAUF HATTEN. LEIBEIGENE KONNTEN MIT GÜTERN UND AUCH EINZELN VERKAUFT WERDEN.
Rage Quik XCondensed
Witchcraft was not declared a capital offence in Britain until 1563, although it was considered heresy and denounced as such by Pope Innocent VIII in 1484. From 1484 until around 1750, approximately 200,000 witches were tortured, burned, or hanged in Western Europe. It was not a nice time to be alive really, especially if you were a witch. Most alleged witches were typically old women and invariably poor, so you can guess who were the people prosecuting them… Those unfortunate enough to appear ‘crone-like’, with snaggle teeth, sunken cheeks, and a hairy lip, were often believed to possess the ‘Evil Eye’. Having a cat was considered further proof of witchcraft, as witches were thought to have ‘familiars’, with cats being the most common. Many unfortunate women were condemned based on such evidence and hanged after enduring horrific torture. Devices like the ‘pilnie-winks’, which sounds quite cute and quaint but are actually thumb screws, and iron ‘caspie-claws’, which were big heated leg irons, usually extracted confessions from the supposed witches. Witch fever seized East Anglia for 14 dreadful months between 1645 and 1646. The residents of these eastern counties, staunchly Puritan and rabidly anti-Catholic, were easily swayed by bigoted preachers intent on rooting out heresy. Matthew Hopkins, a failed lawyer, arrived to assist and became known as the ‘Witchfinder General’. A made up and ridiculous job. He had 68 people executed in Bury St. Edmunds alone, and 19 hanged in Chelmsford in a single day. Following Chelmsford, he moved on to Norfolk and Suffolk.
Rage Quik Narrow
Witchcraft was not declared a capital offence in Britain until 1563, although it was considered heresy and denounced as such by Pope Innocent VIII in 1484. From 1484 until around 1750, approximately 200,000 witches were tortured, burned, or hanged in Western Europe. It was not a nice time to be alive really, especially if you were a witch. Most alleged witches were typically old women and invariably poor, so you can guess who were the people prosecuting them… Those unfortunate enough to appear ‘crone-like’, with snaggle teeth, sunken cheeks, and a hairy lip, were often believed to possess the ‘Evil Eye’. Having a cat was considered further proof of witchcraft, as witches were thought to have ‘familiars’, with cats being the most common. Many unfortunate women were condemned based on such evidence and hanged after enduring horrific torture. Devices like the ‘pilnie-winks’, which sounds quite cute and quaint but are actually thumb screws, and iron ‘caspie-claws’, which were big heated leg irons, usually extracted confessions from the supposed witches. Witch fever seized East Anglia for 14 dreadful months between 1645 and 1646. The residents of these eastern counties, staunchly Puritan and rabidly anti-Catholic, were easily swayed by bigoted preachers intent on rooting out heresy. Matthew Hopkins, a failed lawyer, arrived to assist and became known as the ‘Witchfinder General’. A made up and ridiculous job. He had 68 people executed in Bury St. Edmunds alone, and 19 hanged in Chelmsford in a single day. Following Chelmsford, he moved on to Norfolk and Suffolk.
Rage Quik Standard
Witchcraft was not declared a capital offence in Britain until 1563, although it was considered heresy and denounced as such by Pope Innocent VIII in 1484. From 1484 until around 1750, approximately 200,000 witches were tortured, burned, or hanged in Western Europe. It was not a nice time to be alive really, especially if you were a witch. Most alleged witches were typically old women and invariably poor, so you can guess who were the people prosecuting them… Those unfortunate enough to appear ‘crone-like’, with snaggle teeth, sunken cheeks, and a hairy lip, were often believed to possess the ‘Evil Eye’. Having a cat was considered further proof of witchcraft, as witches were thought to have ‘familiars’, with cats being the most common. Many unfortunate women were condemned based on such evidence and hanged after enduring horrific torture. Devices like the ‘pilnie-winks’, which sounds quite cute and quaint but are actually thumb screws, and iron ‘caspie-claws’, which were big heated leg irons, usually extracted confessions from the supposed witches. Witch fever seized East Anglia for 14 dreadful months between 1645 and 1646. The residents of these eastern counties, staunchly Puritan and rabidly anti-Catholic, were easily swayed by bigoted preachers intent on rooting out heresy. Matthew Hopkins, a failed lawyer, arrived to assist and became known as the ‘Witchfinder General’. A made up and ridiculous job. He had 68 people executed in Bury St. Edmunds alone, and 19 hanged in Chelmsford in a single day. Following Chelmsford, he moved on to Norfolk and Suffolk.
The Manorial System Exhibited A Degree Of Reciprocity.
In 1970, Peter Schmidt created “The Thoughts Behind the Thoughts”, a box containing 55 sentences letterpress printed onto disused prints that accumulated in his studio, which is still in Eno’s possession. Eno, who had known Schmidt since the late 1960s, had been pursuing a similar project himself, which he had handwritten onto a number of bamboo cards and given the name “Oblique Strategies” in 1974. There was a significant overlap between the two projects, and so, in late 1974, Schmidt and Eno combined them into a single pack of cards and offered them for general sale. The set went through three limited edition printings before Schmidt suddenly died in early 1980, after which the card decks became rather rare and expensive. Sixteen years later software pioneer Peter Norton convinced Eno to let him create a fourth edition as Christmas gifts for his friends (not for sale, although they occasionally come up at auction). Eno’s decision to revisit the cards and his collaboration with Norton in revising them is described in detail in his 1996 book A Year with Swollen Appendices. With public interest in the cards undiminished, in 2001 Eno once again produced a new set of Oblique Strategies cards. The number and content of the cards vary according to the edition. In May 2013 a limited edition of 500 boxes, in burgundy rather than black, was issued. In 1970, Peter Schmidt created “The Thoughts Behind the Thoughts” a box containing 55 sentences letterpress printed onto disused prints that accumulated in his studio, which is still in Eno’s possession. Eno, who had known Schmidt since the late 1960s, had been pursuing a similar project himself, which he had handwritten onto a number of bamboo cards and given the name “Oblique Strategies” in 1974. There was a significant overlap between the two projects, and so, in late 1974, Schmidt and Eno combined them into a single pack of cards and offered them for general sale.
In 1970, Peter Schmidt created “The Thoughts Behind the Thoughts”, a box containing 55 sentences letterpress printed onto disused prints that accumulated in his studio, which is still in Eno’s possession. Eno, who had known Schmidt since the late 1960s, had been pursuing a similar project himself, which he had handwritten onto a number of bamboo cards and given the name “Oblique Strategies” in 1974. There was a significant overlap between the two projects, and so, in late 1974, Schmidt and Eno combined them into a single pack of cards and offered them for general sale. The set went through three limited edition printings before Schmidt suddenly died in early 1980, after which the card decks became rather rare and expensive. Sixteen years later software pioneer Peter Norton convinced Eno to let him create a fourth edition as Christmas gifts for his friends (not for sale, although they occasionally come up at auction). Eno’s decision to revisit the cards and his collaboration with Norton in revising them is described in detail in his 1996 book A Year with Swollen Appendices. With public interest in the cards undiminished, in 2001 Eno once again produced a new set of Oblique Strategies cards. The number and content of the cards vary according to the edition. In May 2013 a limited edition of 500 boxes, in burgundy rather than black, was issued. In 1970, Peter Schmidt created “The Thoughts Behind the Thoughts” a box containing 55 sentences letterpress printed onto disused prints that accumulated in his studio, which is still in Eno’s possession. Eno, who had known Schmidt since the late 1960s, had been pursuing a similar project himself, which he had handwritten onto a number of bamboo cards and given the name “Oblique Strategies” in 1974. There was a significant overlap between the two projects, and so, in late 1974, Schmidt and Eno combined them into a single pack of cards and offered them for general sale.
In 1970, Peter Schmidt created “The Thoughts Behind the Thoughts”, a box containing 55 sentences letterpress printed onto disused prints that accumulated in his studio, which is still in Eno’s possession. Eno, who had known Schmidt since the late 1960s, had been pursuing a similar project himself, which he had handwritten onto a number of bamboo cards and given the name “Oblique Strategies” in 1974. There was a significant overlap between the two projects, and so, in late 1974, Schmidt and Eno combined them into a single pack of cards and offered them for general sale. The set went through three limited edition printings before Schmidt suddenly died in early 1980, after which the card decks became rather rare and expensive. Sixteen years later software pioneer Peter Norton convinced Eno to let him create a fourth edition as Christmas gifts for his friends (not for sale, although they occasionally come up at auction). Eno’s decision to revisit the cards and his collaboration with Norton in revising them is described in detail in his 1996 book A Year with Swollen Appendices. With public interest in the cards undiminished, in 2001 Eno once again produced a new set of Oblique Strategies cards. The number and content of the cards vary according to the edition. In May 2013 a limited edition of 500 boxes, in burgundy rather than black, was issued. In 1970, Peter Schmidt created “The Thoughts Behind the Thoughts” a box containing 55 sentences letterpress printed onto disused prints that accumulated in his studio, which is still in Eno’s possession. Eno, who had known Schmidt since the late 1960s, had been pursuing a similar project himself, which he had handwritten onto a number of bamboo cards and given the name “Oblique Strategies” in 1974. There was a significant overlap between the two projects, and so, in late 1974, Schmidt and Eno combined them into a single pack of cards and offered them for general sale.
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