Skip to content
Home / Fonts / Scoothtype / Single Ladies
Single Ladies

Single Ladies

by Scoothtype
Individual Styles from $9.00 USD
Complete family of 2 fonts: $10.00 USD
Single Ladies Font Family was designed by Muammar and published by Scoothtype. Single Ladies contains 2 styles and family package options.

More about this family
FREE 30-DAY TRIAL of Monotype Fonts to get over 150,000 fonts from more than 1,400 type foundries. Start free trial
Start free trial

Per Style:

$5.00 USD

Pack of 2 styles:

$10.00 USD

About Single Ladies Font Family


Single Ladies are sexy handwritten fonts with varied basic lines, designed to convey elegance and style, clean and lightweight. Perfect for logos, magazines, menus, books, invitations, wedding / greeting cards, packaging, labels, t-shirts, etc. All of your designs will have an amazing homemade touch with Single Ladies.


Single Ladies are coded with Unicode PUA, which allows full access to all additional characters without having special design software. Mac users can use Font Book, and Windows to attach your favorite text editor / application.


To activate the OpenType Stylistic alternative, you need a program that supports OpenType features such as Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe Indesign & CorelDraw X6-X7, Microsoft Word 2010 or newer versions. and there are additional ways to access alternatives / swashes, using Character Maps (Windows), Nexus Fonts (Windows), Font Books (Mac) or software programs such as PopChar (for Windows and Mac).

Designers: Muammar

Publisher: Scoothtype

Foundry: Scoothtype

Design Owner: Scoothtype

MyFonts debut: Apr 28, 2020

Single Ladies

About Scoothtype

I’m Scooth - a lover of all things creative - most especially type typography & graphic design.Since 2011, Scooth has designed script-based fonts guided by a non-trivial understanding that letters mean something. Besides the sounds letters designate, outside the semantics of letters assembled into words, and beyond the precise messages we communicate through sentences or paragraphs, there’s a bundle of extra-literate meaning in the way letters look.

Read more

Read less