Here is a small screen shot of what I have to work with. Can convert to suggestion. thanks for the time.
Best image for import - FontCreator 9.0
-
- Top Typographer
- Posts: 9878
- Joined: Tue Oct 29, 2002 5:28 am
- Location: Seven Kings, London UK
- Contact:
Re: Best image for import - FontCreator 9.0
I have no idea what you're trying to do, or what you're asking.
Re: Best image for import - FontCreator 9.0
blackletter fonts from the 1611 King James images.
-
- Top Typographer
- Posts: 9878
- Joined: Tue Oct 29, 2002 5:28 am
- Location: Seven Kings, London UK
- Contact:
Re: Best image for import - FontCreator 9.0
If all you want is a Black Letter font there are plenty of free fonts to choose from like my Cankama Font attached. Recreating a font from an image of the King James I bible would be a labour of love, but it is not one that needs doing again.
- Attachments
-
- Cankama Typeface.pdf
- (114.6 KiB) Downloaded 372 times
-
- Cankama.7z
- (466.82 KiB) Downloaded 369 times
Re: Best image for import - FontCreator 9.0
Have already made one set of fonts for the worke. from a low quality source and have typed out the first eight chapters from the first booke of Moses.
from the tutorials I have read from, png is the best at 600 dpi. I thinke this would be better in grayscale but am not sure. I do not have a cleare understanding of the language used yet, and was only looking to make what I am doing as best as possible.
the font in your attachment I would not attempt to use in this effort.
As you can see from the image, there is a neede for another set of three fonts.
thanke you for your time.
from the tutorials I have read from, png is the best at 600 dpi. I thinke this would be better in grayscale but am not sure. I do not have a cleare understanding of the language used yet, and was only looking to make what I am doing as best as possible.
the font in your attachment I would not attempt to use in this effort.
As you can see from the image, there is a neede for another set of three fonts.
thanke you for your time.
Re: Best image for import - FontCreator 9.0
thankes for the fine tutors. changed the images gray *.png at 600 dpi. Not sure the best size still. will need to fetch all the letters again and size them all to the same aspect ratio of the largest letter by importing into OpenOffice Draw and export an image of all at once. Alse attached is an *pdf of the first eight chapiters from the first booke of Moses.
I did the Q in the key board image at the bottome from the first runne of the King James found here:
http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:60611
This is only one of the three font sets needed to do the copy of scriptures with.
againe, thanks for your time.
I did the Q in the key board image at the bottome from the first runne of the King James found here:
http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:60611
This is only one of the three font sets needed to do the copy of scriptures with.
againe, thanks for your time.
- Attachments
-
- key. board.jpg (142.71 KiB) Viewed 9765 times
-
- Top Typographer
- Posts: 9878
- Joined: Tue Oct 29, 2002 5:28 am
- Location: Seven Kings, London UK
- Contact:
Re: Best image for import - FontCreator 9.0
The tutorial on Scanning An Entire Alphabet may be helpful to you.
It's a convenient way to import letters one by one from a high resolution image. PDF-XChange can be used to export each page of a PDF to a high resolution image.
The font in your First Eight PDF file looks like it has been produced from a distressed original font such as one would expect from a manual printing press on vellum, but the curves have been smoothed too much. This destroys the weathered effect at larger sizes, though it's OK at normal print sizes.
It's a convenient way to import letters one by one from a high resolution image. PDF-XChange can be used to export each page of a PDF to a high resolution image.
The font in your First Eight PDF file looks like it has been produced from a distressed original font such as one would expect from a manual printing press on vellum, but the curves have been smoothed too much. This destroys the weathered effect at larger sizes, though it's OK at normal print sizes.