Nikabrik Posted October 15, 2012 Posted October 15, 2012 This topic was imported from the Typophile platform I purchased a font the other day, and when I went to use it in one of the Adobe CS programs, there's no rhyme or reason to the order of the font weights. Typically for other large font families (including widths and weights) I see them listed like this: Light Condensed Light Condensed Italic ... etc ... Medium Medium Italic ... etc ... Black Extended Black Extended Italic But this font I bought is WAY off from this. It was from a pretty decent-sized foundry, so I was really surprised. It makes it really difficult to use. (Take a look at the attached file). So my question: Can I fix this somehow on my end and rearrange them? I've got Suitcase Fusion 3, but that's it for font-specific software.
Theunis de Jong Posted October 15, 2012 Posted October 15, 2012 Adobe software uses the internal data of a font to determine the best sorting order: width, weight, slant. Condensed fonts come before regular and extended, light fonts before regular and bold. Since this is data inside the font file itself, you cannot tinker with Suitcase settings, the font foundry has to set the correct values. In this case it seems the Pantone flags are probably wrong, or possibly all left as "default".
Karl Stange Posted October 16, 2012 Posted October 16, 2012 As I understand it, the combination of weight number (e.g., 250, 300, 700) and OpenType naming (nameID 17 and 18) are the primary settings that Adobe software uses to sort weight/style ordering in menus. However you would need to modify the font data in order to change this and thus permission from the foundry/copyright holder if permission is not explicitly given through their EULA.
Jens Kutilek Posted October 16, 2012 Posted October 16, 2012 permission from the foundry/copyright holder if permission is not explicitly given through their EULA. You could also consider these fonts broken and request a fixed version from the foundry. If they failed to provide such a version, I wouldn’t hesitate to fix them myself.
Karl Stange Posted October 16, 2012 Posted October 16, 2012 The listing does contain internal logic though, even if it does not conform to Adobe menu conventions. I would be intrigued to see what results you found when using the fonts in MS Word, Open Office Writer or a native Microsoft (WordPad) or Apple (TextEdit) application, for example.
hrant Posted October 16, 2012 Posted October 16, 2012 If they failed to provide such a version, I wouldn’t hesitate to fix them myself. Exactly a case where ignoring a EULA's no-mod clause is totally OK. hhp
Nikabrik Posted October 19, 2012 Author Posted October 19, 2012 I totally would, but I have no idea how to go in and edit that font data.
nikehile Posted January 30, 2013 Posted January 30, 2013 I had an online site search 1 year ago about Tumi bag I have bought bags from online site I was For this bag 1 year ago Tumi Alpha It is very strong bag i also use it you check this site i hope you really like this i am really like this Tumi is nice brands
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now