Mademoiselle Font

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Valda Atkeson

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Aug 4, 2024, 7:08:59 PM8/4/24
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MademoiselleTypeface This delightful bounciness of a script font comes in both.otf and ttf files with international language support, complete with alternative lowercase characters, ligatures and as a special treat, an entirely swash font to mix-and-match! For further insight, view previews to view all characters, symbols, and languages supported.

Mademoiselle Script Free Typeface is a modern monoline script font coming from Aritra Das if Nautica Studios. This typeface is here to help you create and decorate your design. Its stunning curve and smooth line makes it perfect for wide range of design projects. Mademoiselle is ideal for logo, branding, greeting and invitation cards, vintage design and so much more!


Thanks to Aritra Das for providing this gorgeous modern typeface for free. Mademoiselle is free for personal use only. You can contact the author on the portfolio for further information about commercial license. Visit his portfolio page so you can find out more about him. There you may also appreciate his projects to send him some encouragement for creating beautiful work. So, make sure to hit the check out more button below to get there.


You can use this font to print it in 3D, either with your own printer or via a printing service provider. In order to download your text in STL format, you should log in with your account or create one now.


Image Generator is a captivating service that empowers you to unleash your creativityby fully customizing your texts and visualizing them in a wide range of formats.This impressive tool puts you in control, allowing you to fine-tune font styles,sizes, background and font colors, as well as the text content itself.


With Image Generator, you can create mesmerizing texts by customizing the backgroundand font colors to your heart's desire. Choose your favorite colors or explorediverse color palettes to achieve captivating color harmonies that truly reflect theessence of your projects or brand.


Image Generator provides outputs in SVG and PNG formats, tailored to yourpreferences. The SVG format preserves the quality of your texts as vector-basedgraphics, ensuring no loss of detail or sharpness when resizing. On the other hand,the PNG format delivers high-quality raster images, enabling you to showcase yourdesigns flawlessly on websites, social media platforms, or printed materials.


Mademoiselle is perfect for logos, branding, wedding invitations, greeting cards, prints, blog banners, apparel, quotes and so much more! Aaand as always, I included lots of lovely extras to play with! ?


MADEMOISELLE SWASHES A bonus, all swash font with 30 lovely swashes to mix & match with Mademoiselle. ? To access all the swashes use A-O and a-o & in case you need, you can preview them on the contact sheet included in the package. ?


PATTERNS 20 lovely patterns featuring spots, lines and various marks.. all seamless and available as both EPS and PNG files. ? In case you wondered, yes, the PNG files are 36003600 / 300dpi, but in case you need, you can rasterize the EPS files to any size or resolution withoult losing quality. ?


Image Generator is a service that allows you to fully customize your texts andvisualize them in various formats. This user-friendly tool enables you to adjustfont style, font size, background color, font color, and your text content.


Image Generator enables you to customize the background and font colors to makeyourtexts visually appealing. You can choose your preferred colors or utilize colorpalettes to achieve specific color harmonies. This allows you to adjust yourtextsto reflect the identity of your projects or brand.


Image Generator provides outputs in SVG and PNG formats based on userpreferences.The SVG format allows you to save your texts as vector-based graphics, ensuringnoloss of quality when resizing. The PNG format provides high-quality rasterimages.This allows you to obtain ideal outputs for using your designs on websites,socialmedia platforms, or printed materials.


An art nouveau pattern inspired by wild daisies in the French countryside. Some of the flowers display the text "Mademoiselle Daisy" in a pretty italic font. The floral motif is shown here in a rich green and gold colourway, to create a contemporary design with a vintage feel.





FondFont gathers the best fonts and web fonts that are free to download in one site and present it in a most original and graphical way. Fonts here are handpicked from sites like Behance, Dribbble, Google Fonts and more.


Marie Anglique de Scorailles was born in 1661 at the Chteau de Cropires in Upper Auvergne.[1] She came from a very old aristocratic family; her father was the Comte de Rousaille, and the King's Lieutenant.[2] Her family realized that her beauty was a great asset and raised enough money to send her to court, with the aim of restoring the family fortunes.[3] Marie arrived at the court of Louis XIV in 1678 and became maid of honor to the Duchess of Orlans.[4] At the time Louis XIV had appeared to be losing interest in his longtime established mistress Marquise de Montespan and turning to the governess of their children, Madame de Maintenon. Infatuated by the beauty of the young girl, the king suddenly abandoned both women,[3] and the stand-off between the two was suddenly eclipsed by a new passion which appeared to threaten them both equally.[3]


Despite her physical charms, Marie Anglique was said by the court to be "as stupid as a basket." The Duchess of Orleans wrote "[she is] a stupid little creature, but she [has] a very good heart"[5] but described her as "lovely as an angel, from head to foot".[6]


During a hunt in the forest of Fontainebleau, her hair clung to a branch and she appeared before the king with her hair loosely tied in a ribbon, tumbling in curls to her shoulders. The king found this rustic style delightful, and the next day many courtiers adopted the new "fontange" hairstyle,[3] except the Marquise de Montespan, who thought it was in "bad taste". Two pet bears belonging to Montespan escaped from their menagerie and managed to find, and destroy, Marie's apartment in Versailles. This event made both women comical at court.[3]


Soon it appeared she was pregnant, further angering Montespan, who had thought their affair was a passing fancy, easily controlled and easily disposed of. She said to the Marquise de Maintenon that the king had three mistresses: herself in name, this girl in bed and Maintenon in his heart.[3]


In January 1680,[7] Marie gave premature birth to a stillborn boy, and was said to have been "wounded in the service of the King." In April, Louis granted her the title Duchess of Fontanges and a pension of 80,000 livres,[3] as was his usual habit on ending love affairs.[8] Unwell after the birth, she retired to the Abbey of Chelles.


In 1681, Marie suffered a high fever and was sent to the Abbey of Port-Royal, where, according to some sources, she gave birth prematurely to a stillborn girl in March.[3] Realising she was going to die, she asked to see the king, who, touched by her suffering, wept while at her deathbed. Fontanges is reported to have said, "having seen tears in the eyes of my King, I can die happy".[1] This story was deemed untrue by many at Versailles because according to them, the king had, in fact, already forgotten her. The duchess died on the night of 28 June 1681. She was not yet 20 years old.[9]


Louis XIV expressed the wish that there be no autopsy, however, at the request of her family, one was performed. The doctors found that her lungs were in appalling condition (with the right one in particular being full of "purulent matter") while her chest was flooded with fluid.[10] All six doctors concurred that death was due to natural causes.[5]


As Marie Anglique died during the Affair of the Poisons in France, poisoning was suspected.[1] During interrogations, some of the accused had mentioned the name of Fontanges, and several other women of the court in connection to various schemes and plots. Marguerite Monvoisin, the daughter of sorceress La Voisin was the first to accuse accomplices of her late mother of poisoning the duchess. Monvoisin's lovers, Bertrand and Romani, were arrested in 1681 as suspects. Bertrand was accused of selling poisonous stuffs to Fontanges; while Romani was accused of delivering her gloves contaminated with poison.


Franoise Filastre, a servant in the household of Fontanges was arrested, and when asked about what she knew about the duchess's death, under torture claimed that Montespan had hired her to murder Fontanges,[1] so she could regain the love of the king. Before being executed, Filastre later recanted : "All I said is false. I did that for me to be free of pain and torment. I say all this because I do not want to kill the guilty conscience of a lie." Although rumours of poisoning abounded, dubious evidence from various unreliable witnesses who either recanted or contradicted each other meant no charges were ever laid.


Historian Antonia Fraser suggests that Marie Anglique died from pleuro-pneumonia induced by tuberculosis.[2] As she was known to have suffered from a persistent loss of blood after her miscarriage, another doctor[who?] suggested that when she lost her baby, a fragment of the placenta lodged in her uterus.[citation needed] An alternative suggestion is that she was killed by a rare form of cancer, which occasionally develops after a cyst on the placenta is expelled during pregnancy.[citation needed] The probability is that she died from complications arising from her earlier miscarriage.[10][neutrality is disputed]


At court, several courtiers wrote about the duchess's death. According to Ernest Lavisse and Bernard Nol, "Two miscarriages caused her to lose favor with the king."[citation needed] The Duchess of Orleans claimed that it was certain the duchess was poisoned by Madame de Montespan, and suspected that the poison was administered in her milk.[1] Despite the medical findings, rumours persisted that the Duchess of Fontanges died from poisoning.[10]

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