OpenType fonts that include a name with name ID of 6 should include these two names with name ID 6, and characteristics as follows: Platform: 1 [Macintosh]; Platform-specific encoding: 0 [Roman]; Language: 0 [English]. Platform: 3 [Windows]; Platform-specific encoding: 1 [Unicode]; Lang...
OpenType fonts that include a name with name ID of 6 should include these two names with name ID 6, and characteristics as follows: Platform: 1 [Macintosh]; Platform-specific encoding: 0 [Roman]; Language: 0 [English]. Platform: 3 [Windows]; Platform-specific encoding: 1 [Unicode]; Lang...
OpenType fonts that include a name with name ID of 6 should include these two names with name ID 6, and characteristics as follows:Platform: 1 [Macintosh]; Platform-specific encoding: 0 [Roman]; Language: 0 [English]. Platform: 3 [Windows]; Platform-specific encoding: 1 [Unicode]; ...
The fifth font type has many names that include display, decorative, fantasy, and others, but we’ll go with display for the sake of brevity. Display fonts are the diverse fonts of the bunch. This is where you’ll find different styles like thick scripts, stencils, ultra-light, ultr...
Rustic with thick strokes and smooth curves, Dakota Motors is a demanding and clear retro font. Making it perfect for headlines or brand names that you want easily legible. Handcrafted by Mans Greback. Design a cursive logo for your brand!
Clicking any of the font names above (or image samples) will take you to a page that shows examples of that font in use in the wild. This is a great way to gather inspiration and see the combinations that other designers have used. I also wrote an article sharing some of my favorite...
ASCII Table Lookup HTML - Color Names HTML - Character Entities MIME Media Types HTML - URL Encoding Language ISO Codes HTML - Character Encodings HTML - Deprecated Tags HTML Resources HTML - Quick Guide HTML - Useful Resources HTML - Color Code Builder ...
'Add a table and set the table header Set FontTable = NewDoc.Tables.Add(Selection.Range, FontNames.Count + 1, 2) With FontTable .Borders.Enable = False .Cell(1, 1).Range.Font.Name = "Arial" .Cell(1, 1).Range.Font.Bold = 1 ...
illust(examples.customfont1, "Using a very non-standard font") The font's facename comes from the AFM file's $FontName$ field. In the example above we knew the name in advance, but quite often the names of font description files are pretty cryptic and then you might want to retrieve...
Device font substitution also occurs when the font on the printer has the same name as the font that the operating system provides. For example, both the Arial font and the Times New Roman font on the printer can have the same names as the fonts in the operating system. De...