Nucleo is recommended for UI/UX designers, web and app developers, and graphic designers who require a dependable and flexible icon management solution to streamline their design processes.
Based on our record, Open Font Library should be more popular than Nucleo. It has been mentiond 6 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I use Nucleo to manage my own icon sets. From Google to fontawesome to my own custom made vectors. Then you create "projects" and put whatever icons you want in it, then export the iconfont set. Source: over 3 years ago
They come from Nucleo App (https://nucleoapp.com/). Source: about 4 years ago
I'm a big fan of Nucleo icons, some of which I already use in my WordPress theme Garrick, but I've thought for a while now that it would be nice to have access to more icons as inline elements -- not just outside the editor or as block-level elements. This plugin fills that gap nicely, but it comes with Font Awesome 4 out of the box. Fortunately, it also provides some filters that allow for overriding this default... - Source: dev.to / about 4 years ago
Except when they are : https://fontlibrary.org/. Source: about 2 years ago
Ttf fonts are kind of sucky on linux. Try more otf fonts. Go to https://fontlibrary.org/ they are all free and open. You can use them on windows as well. Al so make sire anti-aliasing is enabled. And Hinting should be on, mine is the "slight" setting with RGB as the rendering. (I'm using Kubuntu by the way). My system font Is Open Sans and the Monofonts are Hack. Sometimes you just have to play with settings to... Source: almost 3 years ago
I'm using https://www.1001fonts.com/ and https://fontlibrary.org/ - both have font licenses clearly specified, first one allows filtering by commercial use license, second one has all fonts free for commercial use. Source: about 3 years ago
I usually use this site: https://fontlibrary.org/ (fonts compatible with open-source licenses). Source: over 3 years ago
Uncopyrighted - I'm not sure. But if you're ok with Open Font License, try https://fontlibrary.org/. Source: almost 4 years ago
Flaticon - A database of free vector icons.
Google Fonts - Making the web more beautiful, fast, and open through great typography
Font Awesome - Font Awesome makes it easy to add vector icons and social logos to your website. And version 5 is redesigned and built from the ground up!
Dafont - Archive of freely downloadable fonts. Browse by alphabetical listing, by style, by author or by popularity.
Icons8 - Free app for Mac & Windows already containing 39,800 icons. Allows to search and import icons…
Font Squirrel - Font Squirrel scours the internet in search of FREE, highest-quality, designer-friendly, commercial-use fonts and presents them for easy downloading. We don't have the most, but we do have the best.