At the following URL is a very nice frreebie font family:
http://inde-graphics.deviantart.com/art ... t-57338302
The usage guidelines are toward the bottom of the page. They disallow the opening and alteration of the font(s) in an editor - so I'm going to have to talk theoretically here.
The family contains seven fonts - a Regular, three lighter and three heavier weights. As provided, they all share the same family name, 'advent'. The creator of the fonts has then given them each a different subfamily name and set the Classification/Weight to match that. Individually, then, the fonts are fine. The trouble, of course (at least in Windows), is that when several are opened at once, they appear as a single entry in a font menu.
So ... if I were theoretically going to have tried to have all seven fonts be accessible and usable from a font menu, I would have changed the naming such that each weight were part of the Family name and the Subfamily for all of them was Regular.
I have, indeed, done so with a remarkably similar font family and now all seven fonts are listed in the font menu of my apps, but, while the Regular and three bolder fonts display and print properly, the three lighter weights - named Light, Extra Light and Thin - do NOT display or print properly, no matter what I've tried.
It doesn't seem to make any difference whether the Regular flag is set or not for the six non-Regular fonts, but it's my understanding from FC's documentation that the Regular flag should not be set for any of those six.
Incidentally, I did try having the variant I named Bold named with the Subfamily as Bold and the Bold flag checked, but that, for some reason, screwed up the display of the three heavier weights. So I went back to having Bold as part of the Family name, the Subfamily as Regular and the Bold (and Regular) flags unchecked - which fixed the problem.
Any ideas on what one would do with a font family like this to get the three light weights to display and print properly when all seven fonts are open? I'm out of ideas.
Fonts naming, settings & flags.
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Re: Fonts naming, settings & flags.
Good question, I have the same one, but not an answer. I am working on a font with 8 different weights. the font editing software, whether Font Creator, or Fontlab allows a choice of regular or bold as weight. There is an option to allows for other weights in the subfamily field, which are not exactly the same as the Panose standard, with light and thin being transposed.
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Re: Fonts naming, settings & flags.
If you want to separate the font family, just use different family names, e.g.
Arial
Arial Light
Arial Semibold
Arial Bold
Arial Extra Bold
or Like Bitstream fonts:
Arial
Arial Light
Arial Semibold
Arial Bold
Arial Extra Bold
or Like Bitstream fonts:
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Re: Fonts naming, settings & flags.
Windows comes with several typefaces (font families) that are made up with more than 4 fonts. To name a few; Calibri contains 6 fonts, Segoe UI comes with 12 fonts and Sitka is king with 24 fonts.
The trick to make this work is fairly straightforward; however you need to be consistent.
For example a typeface named "GreatFace" with 8 fonts:
Mistakes are easy to make, if I'm correct even Segoe UI Light has a flaw, as the PANOSE Weight is set to "5- Book" while it is supposed to be set to "3 - Light"
The trick to make this work is fairly straightforward; however you need to be consistent.
For example a typeface named "GreatFace" with 8 fonts:
Mistakes are easy to make, if I'm correct even Segoe UI Light has a flaw, as the PANOSE Weight is set to "5- Book" while it is supposed to be set to "3 - Light"
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