Are you struggling to find that particular typeface that matches your creative vision? Then you’ve come to the right place! We do know how difficult and time-consuming it can be to find good, high-quality fonts, so we’ve done the searching for you. With over 100 free fonts to choose from, we guarantee that you will find the one, if not the several, you need. These really are the fonts you’ve been looking for!
22,804 free fonts in 12,250 families Free licenses for commercial use Direct font downloads Mac Windows Linux. FontArk is an innovative browser-based font editor, font creator, featuring the most versatile real-time multiple glyphs editing system. Disclamer – Fontark is in advanced Open Beta version!
This collection focuses on those clean and distinctive fonts that will make a professional and highly legible impact on your designs, wether that be on the web or in print. So, there are no overly decorative styles, as we have covered hand-drawn fonts, brush fonts, sci-fi fonts, chunky fonts, gothic fonts, outline fonts, comic fonts, graffiti fonts, and all those other creative and quirky fonts we all love, before.
Without delving too much into typeface classification and to also help you find that perfect font you’ve been looking for much quicker, we’ve grouped the most popular categories for you: Free Serif Fonts, Free Sans Serif Fonts, Free Slab Serif Fonts, Free Geometric Fonts and Free Monospaced Fonts.
Free Serif Fonts
Serifs are defined by the small lines (or decorative features) that trail from the edges of each letter and number. As Serif fonts are considered to be easier to read, they’re typically used in print design as the characters are clearer and more distinctive, making it much easier for our brains to process.
Just like Slab Serifs (see further down), there are always exceptions to the rule. Most Serifs will work perfectly well as a title or headline on the web, and some, as you will see by the selection of free Serif fonts below, will even work beautifully as body text, but please do choose your web typography carefully.
Bitter HT Serif
Bitter HT includes Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic. Designed by Sol Matas.
Arkibal Serif (Envato Elements)
Arkibal Serif is a modern serif typeface that has been designed by Jan-Christian Bruun.
PT Serif
PT Serif includes Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic variants. Created by ParaType.
Magnifika (Envato Elements)
Magnifika has been inspired by vintage lettering with lowercases and also a hint of a victorian flair.
Ayres Serif
Ayres Serif includes ligatures and alternate glyphs. Created by Mariel Gornati.
Rhytmic Dances
Rhythmic Dances is based on handwriting with an added sense of caligraphic flair. Rough and elegant at the same time.
Calendas Plus Serif Font Family
Calendas Plus Regular includes both desktop and webfonts variants. Designed by Altipo Fonts.
Kula (Envato Elements)
Kula has an interesting, soft curvature. Subtle, but powerful. Well suited for titles and headers.
SilverLeaf Handwritten Serif
SilverLeaf is a handwritten Serif font that includes both desktop and webfont variants. Created by Nathan Brown.
Pratiwi Typeface (Envato Elements)
Pratiwi Typeface gives your designs an authentic handcrafted feel. Perfectly suited to stationery, logos and much more.
YoungSerif Medium Serif Typeface
YoungSerif Medium includes both webfont and desktop versions. Created by Uplaod.
Foundry (Envato Elements)
One of the most well-kerned handwritten fonts available. TTF, WOFF & OTF Formats are included.
Droid Serif
Droid Serif includes Regular, Bold, Bold Italic and Italic variants. Created by Steve Matteson.
Rumble Brave Vintage Fonts (Envato Elements)
Rumble Brave is a victorian classic that has all the swirls and curls you could want int a sassy display font.
Jura Serif Typeface
Jura Serif includes Regular, Italic, Bold and, Bold Italic variants. Created by Ten by Twenty.
Appareo Extras (Envato Elements)
Inspired by vintage books and the pages within, Appareo is an imperfect, worn serif font that comes in three weights.
Merriweather Serif
Merriweather includes Regular, Light, Bold, Itlalic and Black variants. Designed by Eben Sorkin.
Mon Cheri Typeface (Envato Elements)
The Mon Cheri typeface makes for the perfect thank you card. It’s made with love and comes out-of-the-box with two OTF fonts.
Vollkorn Serif
Vollkorn Serif includes Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Semibold, Semibold Italic, Medium, Medium Italic variants. Designed by Friedrich Althausen.
Stay Alive Sans (Envato Elements)
Stay Alive Typeface has been Inspired by victorian style, poster, sign painter. The 1800s comes alive with this retro masterpiece
The Crimson Text typeface
The Crimson Text typeface includes Bold, Bold Italic, Italic, Roman, Semibold and Semibold italic variants. Designed by Sebastian Kosch.
Himalaya Set Type (Envato Elements)
Himalaya Set Type is a vintage inspired font that includes both script and sans-serif versions.
Calluna
Calluna includes Light, Regular, Italic, Semibold Italic,Bold Italic and Black. Designed by exljbris Font Foundry.
Bignord (Envato Elements)
Bignord is a new vintage font with a look and style that has been inspired by vintage packaging and typographic cover lettering.
Bree Serif
Bree Serif only includes a Regular version of the Serif font. Designed by Veronika Burian and José Scaglione.
Afta Serif Font
Afta Serif includes both Regular and Italic versions. Created by Oriol Esparraguera.
Badhead Typeface
The unique Badhead Typeface includes both desktop and webfont variants. Created by ianmikraz studio.
Burnts Maker (Envato Elements)
Burnts Marker is a typeface that’s born for the hood. Gives that rough feel and would be great for any type of hip hop cover.
Sant’Elia Font Family
Sant’Elia includes Rough Line (3 weights), Script Bold & Rough Alt Bold variants. Created by Yellow Design Studio .
Osgard Pro (Envato Elements)
Osgard Pro is a powerful, luxurious typeface, adopting the fluid curvaceous elements of Romanesque typography and combining them with the Gothic style of Blackletter.
Exodus Free Typeface
Exodux includes Regular, Sharpen and Striped variants. Designed by Andrew Herndon.
Indulge Script (Envato Elements)
Indulge Script is a typeface adapted for both modern and traditional uses.
Butler Typeface
Butler includes both a regular and stencil style typeface, and comes in Black, Bold, Extra Bold, Light, Medium, Regular and Ultra Light variants. Designed by Fabian De Smet.
Tryst Regular Typeface
Tryst only includes a Regular version of the Serif font. Designed by Philatype.
Brayden Script Family (Envato Elements)
Brayden Family is a font that include three weights of script fonts and a complimentary sans-serif font.
Born Serif Typeface
Born Serif only includes a Regular version of the Serif font. Created by Carlos de Toro.
Fénix Regular Typeface
Fénix Serif only includes a Regular version of the Serif font. Created by Fernando Díaz.
Knubi Regular Serif
Knubi only includes a Regular version of the Serif font. Created by Matt Vergotis.
Abraham Lincoln Serif
Abraham Lincoln Serif has been designed by Frances MacLeod.
Free Sans Serif Fonts
The difference between a Serif and Sans Serif font, is that Sans Serifs do not have those small decorative lines that characterize Serifs.
The Sans Serifs, with their modern, cleaner and simpler appearance, are typically more accessible on the web as they’re much easier to read on screens, regardless of their font or device size. Understandably, Sans Serifs are the most commonly used Google Fonts.
Bebas Neue Sans Serif
Bebas Neue Sans Serif includes Thin, Light, Book and Regular variants. Designed by Dharma Type Foundry.
IBM Plex
IBM’s fantastic typeface is available for download, along with some useful advice.
Faune
Fira Sans Serif
Mozilla’s Fira Sans Serif includes Regular, Medium, Light, Bold, Bold Italic, Book, Book Italic, Extra Bold, Extra Bold Italic, Extra Light and Extra Light Italic variants. Created by Mozilla.
Homizio Nova
Homizio Nova Sans Serif includes Regular, Italic, Light and Light Italic variants. Designed by Álvaro Thomáz.
Alegreya Sans HT
Alegreya Sans Serif includes Regular, Italic, Bold and Italic variants. Designed by Huerta Tipografica.
Peace Sans
Peace Sans only includes a Regular version. Created by Sergey Ryadovoy and Ivan Gladkikh.
Sketchetik Fill Light
The free version of Sketchetik Sans Serif only includes a Light variant. Created by Ossi Gustafsson.
Mohave Sans Serif
Mohave Sans Serif includes Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Semi Bold and Semi Bold Italic. Designed by Gumpita Rahayu.
Neris Display
Neris Sans Serif includes Thin, Light, Semi Bold, Bold and Black variants. Designed by Eimantas Paškonis.
Dense Sans Serif
Dense Sans Serif includes Regular and Bold variants. Created by Charles Daoud.
Canter Sans Serif
Canter Sans Serif includes Bold 3D, Bold Shadow, Bold Stripes, Bold, Light and Outline variants. Created by Christopher J. Lee.
Sabado Sans Serif
Inspired by modern swiss typefaces, Sabado Sans Serif includes both Regular and Italic variants. Created by Frank Hemmekan.
Rhyder Sans Serif
Rhyder Sans Serif only includes a Regular version. Designed by Adrian Candela.
Langdon Sans Serif
Langdon Sans Serif only includes a Regular version. Designed by Steven Bonner.
Myra Sans Serif
Font Creator Instagram
Designed in an art-deco style, Myra Sans Serif includes Regular, Light and Bold variants. Designed by Sergiy Tkachenko.
Adam Pro Sans Serif
Adam Pro only includes a Regular version. Designed by Shrenik Ganatra.
Aileron Sans Serif
Aileron includes 16 weights. Designed by Sora Sagano.
Building Sans Serif
Building only includes a Regular version. Designed by Leonardo Gubbioni.
Pier Sans
Pier Sans includes Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic versions. Designed by Mathieu Desjardins.
Big John & Slim Joe Sans Serif
Both fonts only includes a Regular version. Designed by Ion Lucin.
Moon Rounded Sans
Moon Rounded Sans includes Light and Bold versions. Designed by Jack Harvatt.
Linotte Rounded Sans Serif
Linotte Rounded Sans Serif includes LIght, Bold, Semi Bold, Heavy and Regular versions. Designed by Joël Carrouché.
Nexa Sans Serif
Nexa Sans Serif includes Light and Bold versions. Created by FontFabric.
Source Sans Pro
Source Sans Pro includes Regular, Italic, Bold, Semi Bold, Light, Black and Roman variants. Created by Adobe.
FV Almelo Sans Serif
FV Almelo Sans Serif only includes a regular version. Created by Floris Voorveld.
Maven Modern
Maven Sans Serif includes Light 100, Light 200 and Light 300 variants. Designed by Joe Prince.
Intro Sans Serif
The free version of Intro Sans Serif includes Regular and Inline variants. Designed by Miroslav Bekyarov.
Ostrich Sans
Ostrich Sans includes Regular, Italic, Black, Bold, Heavy, Light and Medium variants. Designed by The League of Moveable Type.
Cabin Sans Serif
Inspired by Edward Johnston’s and Eric Gill’s typefaces, Cabin Sans Serif Regular, Medium, Semi Bold, Bold and Italic variants. Created by Pablo Impallari.
HK Grotesk Sans Serif
HK Grotesk Sans Serif includes Regular, Light, Bold and Medium variants. Designed by Hanken Design Co.
Qanelas Soft
Qanelas Soft Sans Serif has been designed by Radomir Tinkov.
Moderne Sans
Moderne Sans includes a Regular and Light variants. Created by Marius Kempken.
Blogger Sans
Blogger Sans includes Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic. Created by Sergiy Tkachenko.
Katahdin Round
Katahdin Round Sans Serif only includes a Regular version. Designed by Tyler Finck.
Rubik Sans Serif
Rubik Sans Serif includes Regular, Light, Medium, Bold, Ultra Bold and Italic variants. Designed by Sebastian Fischer and Philipp Hubert.
Cast Iron Sans Serif
Cast Iron only includes a Regular version. Designed by Jeremy Vessey.
Relancer Display Typeface
Relancer Display only includes a Regular version. Created by Ryan Molag.
Overpass Sans Serif
Inspired by Highway Gothic, Overpass Sans Serif is a Webfont that includes Light, Extra Light, Regular, Bold, Bold Italic and Italic variants. Created by Delve Fonts.
Coves Sans Serif
Coves Sans Serif includes Light and Bold variants. Designed by Jack Harvatt.
Raleway Sans Serif
Raleway Sans Serif only includes a Thin version. Designed by The League of Moveable Type.
Free Slab Serif Fonts
There are many different sub-categories to serifs, Slab just happens to be the most popular variant. Evolving from the Modern style and at times called square serifs or Egyptian, they’re defined by having a bolder serif and are primarily designed to be used as print headlines and are typically paired with a thinner and lighter font.
But there are many Slab Serifs that will work perfectly well – as you will see by the free font selection below – in a smaller font size and could be easily used as body text.
Corduroy Slab Regular
Only includes Regular. Created by Ryan Welch.
Munky Font (Envato Elements)
Munky is a simple beast with a slight retro twist. Some of the serifs are straight while others are more curvacious.
LUNA (Envato Elements)
Luna is a slab serif typeface that’s suitable for any promotion and graphic design purpose.
Bw Glenn Slab font Family (Envato Elements)
Bw Glenn Slab is a confident and robust font family with a sturdy feel offering no concessions for ambiguity.
Promesh Athletic Font
Promesh is a free slab font that has been designed with a distressed mesh appearnace, similiar to those used on school basketball jerseys from years gone by. It includes Regular and Stitch variants. Designed by Paul Reis.
Lunchbox Slab Regular (Envato Elements)
LunchBox Slab is a uniquely hand-drawn typeface that gives numerous customizable options and a fully authentic look.
Carton Slab Serif
Carton is a slab-serif that has been inspired by letterpress printing. Designed by Nick McCosker.
Zenzero Grotesk Typeface (Envato Elements)
A fresh, eccentric and stylish display font filled with a mixture of sans-serif and slab. Designed by Valerio Dell’Edera
Weston Rounded Slab Serif
Includes Regular & Light Uppercase variants. Designed by Pavel Pavlov.
Chunk Slab Serif
Chunk is an ultra-bold slab serif typeface that has been inspired by old American Western-style newspaper headlines. Created by The League of Moveable Type.
Choplin Slab Serif
Choplin Slab Serif includes Extra Light & Medium versions. Designed by René Bieder.
Klinic Slab Serif
Includes Bold, Bold Italic, Book, Light, Light Italic, Medium and Medium Italic. Created by Joe Prince.
Aleo Slab Serif
Aleo is a contemporary free font that has been created as the slab serif companion to the Lato font family. Includes Bold, Bold Italic, Regular, Regular Italic, Light and Light Italic. Created by Alessio Laiso.
Twentytwelve Slab
Includes Regular, Bold and Light variants. Designed by Dom Catapano.
Airbag Slab Serif
Airbag is a slab serif font with a modern appearance. Only includes Uppercase. Designed by Simon Stratford.
Lumberjack Free Font
Includes Regular, Rough, Inline and Shadow variants. Designed by Aleksei Kalinin.
Ansley Display
Ansley is Slab Serif typeface that has been inspired by retro design. Includes Bold, Inline, Light, Black, Outline and Regular variants. Created by Kady Jesko.
Korneuburg Slab
Korneuburg Slab includes Bold, Light and Regular variants. Created by Flö Rastbichler.
Free Geometric Fonts
Baron Sans Serif
Baron Sans Serif includes Regular, Bold and Black variants. Designed by Frank Hemmekan.
Exo Geometric
Exo Sans Serif includes Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Light, Light Italic, Black, Black Italic, Extra Bold, Extra Bold Italic, Extra Light, Extra Light Italic, Medium Medium Italic, Semi Bold, Semi Bold Italic, Thin and Thin Italic. Designed by Natanael Gama.
The Metropolis Typeface
The Metropolis Typeface is an open source modern, geometric typeface.
Norwester Sans Serif
Norwester Sans Serif includes only a Regular version. Created by Jamie Wilson.
Kelson Sans Serif
Kelson includes Regular, Light and Bold variants. Designed by Bruno Mello.
Charlevoix Sans Serif
Charlevoix Pro Sans Serif includes Regular, Thin, Light, Mediyum, Semi Bold, Bold, Extra Bold and Black variations. Designed by Mathieu Desjardins.
Free Mono Fonts
Inspired by typewriter-style fonts, Monospaced fonts use a single set width for all letters, numbers and glyphs, making them highly legible, and thus perfect for writing code.
As well as the selection of free monospaced fonts below, we have also published a specialized collection of free monospaced programming and coding fonts you may also like to explore.
Monoid
Monoid is a customizable monospaced font that has been optimized for coding. Packaged with Regular, Bold, Oblique and Retina variants. Created by Andreas Larsen.
Ahamono
Ahamono is a free Regular monospaced typeface. Designed by Alfredo Marco Pradil.
FiraCode
FiraCode is a beautiful monospaced font with programming ligatures. Packaged with Bold, Light, Medium, Regular and Retina variants. Designed by Nikita Prokopov.
Office Code Pro
Office Code Pro is a customized version of Source Code pro, with customizations specifically made for code editors. Designed by Nathan Rutzky.
Hack Mono
Hack is a font-family that has been designed for writing source code. Packaged with Bold, Italic and Regular variants. Created by Chris Simpkins.
Ubuntu Mono Font
This is the monospaced variant of the distinctive Ubuntu font-fmaily. Packaged with Bold, Bold Italic, Regular Italic and Regular variants. Created by Ubuntu.
DejaVu Mono
Based on the original design of Bitstream Vera font family, DejaVu Mono is a collaborative effort to maintain and add new characters to the popular typeface. Packaged with Bold, Bold Oblique, Oblique and Regular variants.
Droid Sans Mono
Droid Sans Mono is the fixed width version of of Android’s Droid Sans font family. Created by Steve Matteson.
BP Mono
BP Mono is monospaced font designed for coding. Packaged with Bold, Italic, Stencil, Round and Regular variants. Created by George Triantafyllakos.
Anonymous Pro
Anonymous Pro is a family of four fixed-width fonts designed for coding. Packaged with Bold, Bold Italic, Italic and Regular variants. Designed by Mark Simonson.
Fantasque Sans Mono
Fontcreator Torrent
Designed for programming, Fantasque Sans Mono Font includes Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic. Designed by Belluzj.
All 100 of the above fonts have been confirmed as being free at the time of publishing, if that ever changes, please let us know.
Also, most of the fonts can be used in both your personal and commercial works, others you can only use in personal projects, so please do check the chosen license of each font before you do use them.
Related Posts
Hi there! Ever wondered how people make text bold on their social media posts/bios when there aren't any formatting buttons? Well, this little web app allows you to convert normal text into bold text that you can copy and paste into your social media posts/bio/etc. The characters that are generated aren't actually a bold 'font', but rather a set of bold Unicode characters. That's why it's possible to copy and paste them (something that you can't do with normal 'fonts'). Think of these bold characters as separate 'glyphs', just like 'A' is different to 'a', and '%' is different to '$'. They're actually different characters/symbols - not just different 'styles' or 'fonts'.
Interested in how all this text font conversion stuff works? Let's take a dive into the origins of Unicode - the International not-for-profit organisation that creates the rules for how computers should convert binary (zeros and ones) into textual characters (like the ones you're reading now).
Unicode
In the early days of computing, there was no agreed-upon way of representing and rendering text in computer programs. Typography was a well-established field, but it hadn't yet made its way past the type-writer and into the digital realm. As computer usage increased, and as the early internet emerged, this became a problem. See, if you're a programmer, and you wanted your program to interface (connect to, or talk to) another program, then you need some sort of shared language. At the lowest level, computers transmit voltages (low/high, zero/one). These need to be somehow converted into something meaningful. So one programmer might say '001' means 'A', '002' means 'B', and so on. And then you can transmit messages by sending zeros and ones. Easy! Except that every programmer had their own 'codex'. So there'd be another programmer who's program interpretted '000' as 'A', and '001' as 'B', etc. And so it was as if everyone in a conversation was speaking a different language.
The solution to all this was to create 'translators' between the different formats, just like you would do in a conversation between people of different languages. But as you might imagine, this becomes cumbersome. Why couldn't everyone just speak the same language? That would make everything a lot easier.
Well, in the early 1980s, a group of employees from a bunch of large tech companies came together to try to create the 'universal' code for converting binary (zeros and ones) into text characters (like the ones you're reading right now). They called it Unicode.
Okay, so what does this all have to do with bold text? Well, we're getting there... You see, Unicode had quite a task on its hands. There were dozens of specifications out there in the wild already (public and private), and each of them had a lot of users, and many of the specifications were mainly for use in languages other than English. So how was Unicode going to cater to everyone's needs? They couldn't just put up a list of binary->ASCII codes and call it a day. They had a lot of work to do, and they didn't want it to take decades to get everyone using Unicode. The result? Mash all of the specifications together into one giant monstrosity that catered to everyone's needs. Okay, well that might be a bit of hyperbole, but there is some truth to it. Unicode needed to 'please' everyone if it was going to get fast adoption, so the most practical route was to try to make as many of the big players happy as possible.
The eventual result of this is a metaphorical explosion of of the spec, which now encodes over 100,000 different characters, including those of almost every language, all the emojis, and, importantly, a few different 'altered' Latin alphabets - which includes a few bold ones!
But why include bold characters in the spec? Why not just let developers use HTML, CSS, and separate font files to style the text in their applications? Two reasons: (1) HTML and CSS didn't come about until the late 80s, and (2) It was a bunch of extra effort if you just wanted a simple way to format text in a simple messaging application/protocol (like email!). So in other words, Unicode was focussed on being friendly to the people that it needed adoption from.
So there we have it! I hope that little bit of trivia was interesting to you, and that it's now at least a little bit more clear why the this isn't so much a 'bold font generator' as a 'bold unicode text generator'. You can copy and paste the bold characters because they're actually bold characters rather than just styled 'normal' characters. You can't copy and paste a bold font, but you can of course copy textual characters (like those produced by this generator) as you please.
Now, on to the specifics!
Bold Text
There are a few different bold alphabets within the Unicode standard. Many of the 'styled' Latin alphabets originated from the needs of mathematicians, chemists, and other academics who needed a way to express their equations in a digital format. Here are the non-italic bold Unicode alphabets, along with their Unicode names:
Math sans bold:
Math bold:
Math bold Fraktur
Math double-struck
You'll notice that the Fraktur alphabet doesn't include numbers. Unfortunately that's just because mathematicians did not use this script for numeric stuff, and instead only required bold letters for their purposes.
Bold Italic
There are two bold italic alphabets in Unicode, both of which can be generated using this website. Here they are:
Math sans bold italic
Math bold italic:
You'll notice that there are no numeric symbols in these sets. Again, this is because these characters were used in symbolic contexts (e.g. to represent algebraic variables).
Unicode Bold Characters
Here's a nice compact list of all the characters in the Unicode 'mathematical alphanumeric symbols' block. I've included the non-bold versions of the characters too, just for reference. Most of these characters should work on twitter, in instagram bios, and the like:
As you can see, Unicode has a bunch of different bold alphabets that can be used to construct your own bold words, sentences, paragraphs, ... novels? Basically, you can use them almost anywhere that you can use normal text. As you can see, there's even some bold Greek characters in there. If you click 'show more text fonts' at the top of the page (after generating some bold text), then you'll see a bunch of different 'pseudoalphabets' made using some of these weirder Unicode characters.
On Reddit
Reddit uses a particular flavor of 'Markdown' to convert the plain-text user comments into comments that can have bold, italics, and other formatting like monospace code-blocks. Here's how you add bold text to your reddit comment:
Font Creator 5
If you only put one asterisk on each side, then you get italic text. There's no built-in way to get bold-italic text on reddit, BUT you can use this bold text generator to get just that! Some social media platforms ban certain characters, but most (including reddit) still allow you to use all sorts of fancy Unicode characters like the bold ones you can generate here.
In HTML/CSS
In case you're trying to work out how to make text bold in HTML, here's how:
You can also use <strong>
instead of <b>
. If you'd like to make a whole paragraph's worth of text bold, you can do it like this:
You can also specify other font-weight values for even more boldness:
Font Creator Software
Interestingly, if you try to apply CSS boldness to the bold text generated by this website, it has no effect. So it seems that CSS only affects some subset of the Unicode characters. And I guess that makes sense, because emojis are part of Unicode, and it would be pretty weird to have 'bold' emojis 🤔
Instagram and Social Media
Font Creator
Some social media websites block certain characters in certain places. For example, Instagram doesn't allow special 'fancy' unicode characters in posts, but they're allowed in your Instagram bio. Other platforms may have their own restrictions that you'll have to work around. Some places may even allow you to include special characters in your username, but at least your displayed name. If you're not sure whether the generated bold text will work on your particular social media platform, there's no harm in just trying it out. If the characters are banned, you'll either get an error message that tells you that there's some invalid characters in the form you were trying to save, or they'll just strip out the characters, or convert them to normal characters. There's no harm in trying!
Anyway, we hope this bold text generator ('text bolder'?) was useful to you! If you have any ideas to help us improve the bold text, bold italic text or any of the other text fonts, then please post us some feedback here. 𝖍𝖆𝖛𝖊 𝖋𝖚𝖓 𝖒𝖆𝖐𝖎𝖓𝖌 𝖇𝖔𝖑𝖉 𝖑𝖊𝖙𝖙𝖊𝖗𝖘! ٩( ᐛ )و
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