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changing a regular font to italic

Posted: Thu Jul 01, 2004 3:46 pm
by rcmathen
I have followed the help but can not change the GulimChe.ttf to italic.

need ASAP.

Please help.

Robert

changing a regular font to italic

Posted: Thu Jul 01, 2004 8:12 pm
by Bhikkhu Pesala
I just tested with a Devanagari font.

First, make sure you have the latest version of Font Creator from the announcements forum.
  • Open your font. Don't select any glyphs unless you want to leave some glyphs without a slant.
  • From the tools menu, select Glyph Transformer
  • Remove all transformatons from the right panel
  • Add the Skew transformation
  • Click OK to skew all the glyphs in the font
If you're not quite happy with the result, you can try different values for the skew. Note that this poweful feature lacks any undo option. The only way is to close without saving and reopen the original font.

You will, of course, have to save your new font under a new TTF filename, change some values under Format, Settings to identify it as an italic variant, before using the autonaming feature to rename it.

You da man

Posted: Mon Jul 05, 2004 1:30 pm
by rcmathen
This is some of the best news I have had over this issue.

Thanks a million.

Posted: Sat Jul 10, 2004 7:27 am
by vanisaac
Just remember that slanting a roman does not make a true italic. An italic font has several distinguishing properties apart from the slant, including serifing distinct from a roman of the same family.

Posted: Sat Jul 10, 2004 2:48 pm
by Bhikkhu Pesala
I don't think that the Romans invaded Korea. :)

Posted: Mon Jul 12, 2004 12:37 pm
by Thapper
When I make an italic font out of my normal font using the skew option of the glyph-transformer, the "left side bearing" of my glyphs stays with the same. In this case this is not very useful for letters like T where the left-most point of the glyph is far above the baseline. To fix things I have to adjust the x-value (that is the x-value mentioned after "white space before character" in the properites window) to the same value for all glyphs by adjusting the left side bearing value. Since this is a rather boring procedure I only wonder if I missed some option to avoid this problem...

Glyph Transformer

Posted: Mon Jul 12, 2004 5:11 pm
by Bhikkhu Pesala
As well as skew, add the transformation under metrics "Left side-bearing point at x=0"

There are other transformations too, and they are all adjustable.

Posted: Wed Jul 14, 2004 3:28 am
by vanisaac
Bhikkhu Pesala wrote:I don't think that the Romans invaded Korea. :)
That's even better! A Korean font with an italic? That not only doesn't make sense (no offence rcmathen), but distinctly ignores Korean and east Asian typographic tradition and pragmatic usage.