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- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: General Info (1/5)
- Supersedes: <font-faq-1_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:30:52 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 1127
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16988 comp.answers:9896 news.answers:34558
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part1
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Frequently Asked Questions About Fonts
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- The comp.fonts FAQ
- Version 2.1.1.
- February 06, 1995
- Compiled by Norman Walsh
-
- Copyright (C) 1992, 93 by Norman Walsh <walsh@cs.umass.edu>. The
- previous version was 2.0.6.
-
- Portions of the OS/2 section are Copyright (C) 1993 by David J.
- Birnbaum. All rights reserved. Reproduced here by permission.
-
- Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
- document provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
- preserved on all copies.
-
- Subject: Table of Contents
-
- 1. General Information
- 1.1. Font Houses
- 1.2. What's the difference between all these font formats?
- 1.3. What about "Multiple Master" fonts?
- 1.4. Is there a methodology to describe and classify typefaces?
- 1.5. What is the "f" shaped "s" called?
- 1.6. What about "Colonial" Typefaces?
- 1.7. What is "Point Size"?
- 1.8. Where can I get ... fonts.
- 1.9. Where can I get fonts for non-Roman alphabets?
- 1.10. What about fonts with the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) s...
- 1.11. How can I convert my ... font to ... format?
- 1.12. Are fonts copyrightable?
- 1.13. Typeface Protection
- 1.14. File Formats
- 1.15. Ligatures
- 1.16. Built-in Fonts
- 1.17. Glossary
- 1.18. Bibliography
- 1.19. Font Encoding Standards
- 1.20. PostScript
- 1.21. TrueType
- 1.22. Unicode
- 1.23. Can I Print Checks with the MICR Font?
- 1.24. Rules of Thumb
- 1.25. Acknowledgements
- 1.26. A Brief Introduction to Typography
- 1.27. A Brief History of Type
- 1.28. The Role of National Orthography in Font Design
- 1.29. Interesting Fonts
- 1.30. Pronounciation of Font Names
- 1.31. What is it?
- 1.32. Equivalent Font Names
- 1.33. Digital Type Design Tools
- 1.34. Type Design Firms
- 1.35. What does `lorem ipsum dolor' mean?
- 2. Macintosh Information
- 2.1. Macintosh Font formats
- 2.2. Frequently Requested Mac Fonts
- 2.3. Commercial Font Sources
- 2.4. Mac Font Installation
- 2.5. Mac Font Utilities
- 2.6. Making Outline Fonts
- 2.7. Problems and Possible Solutions
- 2.8. Creating Mac screen fonts
- 3. MS-DOS Information
- 3.1. Frequently Requested MS-DOS fonts
- 3.2. MS-DOS Font Installation
- 3.3. What exactly are the encodings of the DOS code pages?
- 3.4. MS-DOS Font Utilities
- 3.5. Converting fonts under MS-DOS
- 3.5.1. Converting Mac Type 1 fonts to MS-DOS format
- 3.5.2. Converting PC Type 1 and TrueType fonts to Mac format
- 3.5.3. Converting PC Type 1 fonts into TeX PK bitmap fonts
- 3.5.4. Converting TeX PK bitmaps into HP LaserJet softfonts (and vice...
- 3.5.5. TrueType to HP LaserJet bitmap softfonts (HACK!)
- 3.6. MS-DOS Screen Fonts (EGA/VGA text-mode fonts)
- 4. OS/2 Information
- 4.1. Preliminaries
- 4.2. Fonts under DOS
- 4.3. Windows
- 4.4. Differences between Windows and OS/2
- 4.5. Installation under Windows and Win-OS/2
- 4.6. FontSpecific PostScript Encoding
- 4.7. AdobeStandardEncoding
- 4.8. AdobeStandardEncoding under Windows (and Win-OS/2)
- 4.9. AdobeStandardEncoding under OS/2
- 4.10. Consequences for OS/2 users
- 4.11. Advice to the user
- 4.12. OS/2 2.1 and beyond
- 5. Unix Information
- 6. Sun Information
- 6.1. Fonts Under Open Windows
- 6.1.1. Does OpenWindows support Type 1 PostScript fonts?
- 6.1.2. Improving font rendering time
- 6.1.3. Making bitmap fonts for faster startup
- 6.1.4. Converting between font formats (convertfont, etc.)
- 6.1.5. Xview/OLIT fonts at 100 dpi
- 6.2. Where can I order F3 fonts for NeWSprint and OpenWindows?
- 7. NeXT Information
- 7.1. Tell me about NeXTstep fonts
- 7.2. Tell me more about NeXTstep fonts
- 7.3. Porting fonts to the NeXT
- 7.4. Font availability
- 7.5. Why can I only install 256 fonts on my NeXT?
- 8. Amiga Information
- 9. Atari ST/TT/Falcon Information
- 9.1. SpeedoGDOS
- 9.2. Atari File Formats
- 9.3. Frequently Requested Atari Fonts
- 10. X11 Information
- 10.1. Getting X11
- 10.2. Historical Notes about X11
- 10.3. X11 Font Formats
- 10.4. X11 Font Server
- 10.5. Fonts and utilities for X11
- 11. Utilities Information
- 11.1. How do I convert AFM files to PFM files
- 11.2. PS2PK
- 11.3. TeX Utilities
- 11.4. MFPic
- 11.5. fig2MF
- 11.6. GNU Font Utilities
- 11.7. Font Editors
- 11.8. The T1 Utilities
- 11.9. Where to get bitmap versions of the fonts
- 11.10. Converting between font formats
- 11.11. Getting fonts by FTP and Mail
- 11.12. MetaFont to PostScript Conversion
- 11.13. How to use Metafont fonts with Troff
- 11.14. PKtoBDF / MFtoBDF
- 11.15. PKtoPS
- 11.16. PKtoSFP / SFPtoPK
- 11.17. PostScript to MetaFont
- 11.18. Mac Bitmaps to BDF Format
- 12. Vendor Information
-
- Subject: 1. General Information
-
- Many FAQs, including this one, are available by anonymous ftp from
- rtfm.mit.edu in the directory pub/usenet/news.answers. Each posted
- section of the FAQ is archived under the name that appears in the
- "Archive-name" header at the top of the article. If you are unable to
- access rtfm.mit.edu via ftp, you can get the FAQs via email. Send the
- message "help" to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu.
-
- This FAQ is a work in progress. If you have any suggestions, I would be
- delighted to hear them.
-
- This FAQ is maintained in TeXinfo format. A Perl script constructs the
- postable FAQ from the TeXinfo sources. TeX DVI, PostScript, Emacs Info,
- plain text, and HTML versions of this FAQ are available from
- jasper.ora.com in /pub/comp.fonts/FAQ. A "Gopher" server is also
- maintained at shsu.edu which can provide interactive access to the FAQ.
-
- The FAQ is also available from The comp.fonts Home Page on the World
- Wide Web:
-
- http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts.
-
- This is also the site for The Internet Font Archive.
-
- The posted version of the FAQ is organized in a quasi-digest format so
- that it is easy to find the questions you are interested in. All
- questions that appear in the table of contents can be found by searching
- for the word "Subject:" followed by the question number.
-
- The "TeXinfo" distribution from the Free Software Foundation contains a
- program called "Info" that can be used to read the Info version of the
- FAQ in a hypertext manner. The "TeXinfo" distribution can be obtained
- from prep.ai.mit.edu in the /pub/gnu directory. At the time of this
- writing, texinfo-2.16.tar.gz is the most recent version. Info files
- can also be read in hypertext form by GNU Emacs.
-
- Future versions of the FAQ will make more use of the hypertext
- capabilities provided by the Info format. At present, the FAQ is
- organized as a simple tree. A plain ASCII, postable version of the FAQ
- will always be maintained.
-
- All trademarks used in this document are the trademarks of their
- respective owners.
-
- Standard disclaimers apply.
-
- Subject: 1.1. Font Houses
-
- This section will be expanded on in the future. It contains notes about
- various commercial font houses.
-
- Adobe Systems, Inc.
- ===================
-
- Adobe Systems Incorporated develops, markets, and supports computer
- software products and technologies that enable users to create, display,
- print, and communicate electronic documents. Adobe licenses its
- technology to major computer and publishing suppliers, and markets a
- line of type and application software products.
-
- Compugraphic
- ============
-
- See "Miles, Agfa Division"
-
- designOnline(tm)
- ================
-
- Home of Alphabets, Inc., designOnline is the online resource for
- design. The majority of the interactivity is happening on [their]
- FirstClass server, currently available by dialup and across the
- Internet.
-
- Miles, Agfa Division
- ====================
-
- Compugraphic which was for a while the Compugraphic division of Agfa,
- is now calling itself "Miles, Agfa Division" (yes, the Miles drug
- company), since CG's off-shore parent Agfa has been absorbed by Miles.
- So typographically speaking, Compugraphic, CG, Agfa, A-G ag, and Miles
- all refer to the same company and font library. Their proprietary fonts
- are still CG Xyz, but the name is Miles Agfa.
-
- Quadrat Communications
- ======================
-
- Quadrat Communications is a digital type foundry based in Toronto,
- Ontario, Canada. [David Vereschagin] began creating and designing type
- a few years ago, intrigued by the new possibilities presented by
- Altsys's Fontographer software. [His] first project was the plain style
- of Clear Prairie Dawn, a sans serif text face, which took three years
- to complete. As well as designing [his] own faces, [he's] also
- available for the creation of custom faces.
-
- Subject: 1.2. What's the difference between all these font formats?
-
- This question is not trivial to answer. It's analogous to asking what
- the difference is between various graphics image file formats. The
- short, somewhat pragmatic answer, is simply that they are different
- ways of representing the same "information" and some of them will work
- with your software/printer and others won't.
-
- At one level, there are two major sorts of fonts: bitmapped and outline
- (scalable). Bitmapped fonts are falling out of fashion as various
- outline technologies grow in popularity and support.
-
- Bitmapped fonts represent each character as a rectangular grid of
- pixels. The bitmap for each character indicates precisely what pixels
- should be on and off. Printing a bitmapped character is simply a
- matter of blasting the right bits out to the printer. There are a
- number of disadvantages to this approach. The bitmap represents a
- particular instance of the character at a particular size and
- resolution. It is very difficult to change the size, shape, or
- resolution of a bitmapped character without significant loss of quality
- in the image. On the other hand, it's easy to do things like shading
- and filling with bitmapped characters.
-
- Outline fonts represent each character mathematically as a series of
- lines, curves, and 'hints'. When a character from an outline font is
- to be printed, it must be 'rasterized' into a bitmap "on the fly".
- PostScript printers, for example, do this in the print engine. If the
- "engine" in the output device cannot do the rasterizing, some front end
- has to do it first. Many of the disadvantages that are inherent in the
- bitmapped format are not present in outline fonts at all. Because an
- outline font is represented mathematically, it can be drawn at any
- reasonable size. At small sizes, the font renderer is guided by the
- 'hints' in the font; at very small sizes, particularly on
- low-resolution output devices such as screens, automatically scaled
- fonts become unreadable, and hand-tuned bitmaps are a better choice (if
- they are available). Additionally, because it is rasterized "on
- demand," the font can be adjusted for different resolutions and 'aspect
- ratios'.
-
- Werenfried Spit adds the following remark:
-
- Well designed fonts are not scalable. I.e. a well designed 5pt font is
- not simply its 10pt counterpart 50% scaled down. (One can verify this
- by blowing up some small print in a copier and compare it with large
- print; or see the example for computer modern in D.E. Knuth's TeXbook.)
- Although this fact has no direct implications for any of the two
- methods of font representation it has an indirect one: users and word
- processor designers tend to blow up their 10pt fonts to 20pt or scale
- them down to 5pt given this possibility. Subtle details, but well...
-
- LaserJet .SFP and .SFL files, TeX PK, PXL, and GF files, Macintosh
- Screen Fonts, and GEM .GFX files are all examples of bitmapped font
- formats.
-
- PostScript Type 1, Type 3, and Type 5 fonts, Nimbus Q fonts, TrueType
- fonts, Sun F3, MetaFont .mf files, and LaserJet .SFS files are all
- examples of outline font formats.
-
- Neither of these lists is even close to being exhaustive.
-
- To complicate the issue further, identical formats on different
- platforms are not necessarily the same. For example Type 1 fonts on
- the Macintosh are not directly usable under MS-DOS or Unix, and
- vice-versa.
-
- It has been pointed out that the following description shows signs of
- its age (for example, the eexec encryption has been thoroughly hacked).
- I don't dispute the observation and I encourage anyone with the
- knowledge and time to submit a more up to date description.
-
- It has further been suggested that this commentary is biased toward
- Kingsley/ATF. The omission of details about Bitstream (and possibly
- Bauer) may be considered serious since their software lies inside many
- 3rd-party PostScript interpreters.
-
- The moderators of this FAQ would gladly accept other descriptions/
- explanations/viewpoints on the issues discussed in this (and every
- other) section.
-
- [Ed Note: Liam R. E. Quin supplied many changes to the following
- section in an attempt to bring it up to date. Hopefully it is a better
- reflection of the state of the world today (12/07/92) than it was in
- earlier FAQs]
-
- Henry Schneiker <reachable electronically?> wrote the following
- description of the differences between several scalable font
- technologies:
-
- ((( semi-quote )))
-
- There has been a lot of confusion about font technologies in recent
- times, especially when it comes to Type 1 versus Type 3 fonts, "hints,"
- PostScript compatibility, encryption, character regularizing, kerning,
- and the like.
-
- * Encryption (eexec)
-
- All fonts produced with Adobe's font technology are protected
- through data encryption. The decryption is provided by the `eexec'
- (encrypted execute) PostScript operator and, until recently, was
- only present in Adobe's licensed PostScript.
-
- Adobe has published the details of the Type 1 font format in the
- `Black Book', Adobe Type 1 Font Format (version 1.1), Adobe
- Systems Inc., 1990. The encryption was mainly used because of
- font copyright problems; unencrypted fonts can also be used, but
- these tend to use an efficient binary encoding, also in documented
- the Type 1 book, and so are still not readable PostScript.
-
- * Type 1, Type 3, and Type 5 font formats
-
- There are generally three font formats used in Adobe PostScript
- printers: Type 1, Type 3, and Type 5. Type 1 fonts are Adobe's
- downloadable format. Type 3 fonts are third-party downloadable
- format. Type 5 fonts are the ROM-based fonts that are part of your
- printer.
-
- There is no functional difference between a Type 1, Type 3, or
- Type 5 font. A Type 3 font can do anything a Type 1 or Type 5 font
- can do. The only real difference between them is where the
- `BuildChar' routine comes from. For Type 1 and Type 5 fonts it's
- built into the printer. For Type 3 fonts it's built into the font.
- In other words, anything a Type 1 font can do a Type 3 font can
- also do.
-
- [Ed note: the reverse is not true. Type3 fonts can do things that
- Type1 fonts cannot. But they aren't hinted...]
-
- When PostScript is asked to generate a character, PostScript looks
- in the font's dictionary for FontType. If FontType is 1 or 5
- PostScript executes an internal routine that knows how to
- interpret the font data stored in CharStrings. If FontType is 3
- PostScript executes the routine BuildChar from the font's
- dictionary to interpret the font data (often stored in
- CharStrings).
-
- However, each BuildChar routine is written to read data formatted
- in a method convenient to the vendor. Adobe, Altsys, Bitstream, and
- Kingsley/ATF all format their font data differently and, hence,
- have different BuildChar routines.
-
- [Ed note: relative hard disk efficiency of Kingsley vs. Adobe fonts
- deleted on 12/07/92]
-
- Type 5 fonts are special in that they often include hand-tuned
- bitmaps for the commonly used sizes, such as 10- and 12-point.
- Other sizes are generated from the outlines in normal fashion.
-
- Don't confuse Type 1, Type 3, and Type 5 fonts with Bitstream's
- Type A, Type B, Type C, and Type F. They are not the same and
- serve only to confuse the issue.
-
- * Resolution `hints'
-
- When a character is described in outline format the outline has
- unlimited resolution. If you make it ten times as big, it is just
- as accurate as if it were ten times as small.
-
- However, to be of use, we must transfer the character outline to a
- sheet of paper through a device called a raster image processor
- (RIP). The RIP builds the image of the character out of lots of
- little squares called picture elements (pixels).
-
- The problem is, a pixel has physical size and can be printed only
- as either black or white. Look at a sheet of graph paper. Rows and
- columns of little squares (think: pixels). Draw a large `O' in the
- middle of the graph paper. Darken in all the squares touched by the
- O. Do the darkened squares form a letter that looks like the O you
- drew? This is the problem with low resolution (300 dpi). Which
- pixels do you turn on and which do you leave off to most accurately
- reproduce the character?
-
- All methods of hinting strive to fit (map) the outline of a
- character onto the pixel grid and produce the most
- pleasing/recognizable character no matter how coarse the grid is.
-
- [Ed note: deleted some paragraphs that are no longer true. Times
- change...]
-
- * Optical Scaling
-
- Optical Scaling modifies the relative shape of a character to
- compensate for the visual effects of changing a character's size.
- As a character gets smaller, the relative thickness of strokes,
- the size of serifs, the width of the character, the
- inter-character spacing, and inter-line spacing should increase.
- Conversely, as a character gets larger, the relative thickness,
- widths, and spacing should decrease.
-
- Contrast this with linear scaling, in which all parts of a
- character get larger or smaller at the same rate, making large
- characters look wide and heavy (strokes are too thick, serifs are
- too big) while small characters look thin and weak.
-
- * Kerning
-
- As applied to PostScript fonts, kerning refers to kern pairs. A
- kern pair specifies two characters (e.g., A and V) and the
- distance to move the second character relative to the first. The
- typical use of a kern pair is to remove excessive space between a
- pair of characters. However, it may also be used to add space.
-
- * PostScript clones
-
- There are currently several printer manufacturers on the market
- with PostScript clones. To be viable, a PostScript clone must
- comply with the `red book' (PS Language Reference Manual).
-
- In order to avoid paying royalties to Adobe, and because Adobe's
- Type 1 font format was originally proprietary, many PostScript
- interpreters use some other font format. Sun uses F3, and some
- other vendors use Bitstream's Speedo format, for example. The
- only real problem this causes is that the widths of characters
- (the `font metrics') may vary from Adobe's, so that programs that
- assume the Adobe character widths will produce poor quality
- output. Bitstream fonts used to be particularly bad in the early
- days, but they and most or all of the other vendors have solved
- those problems.
-
- * Apple TrueType [Ed note: formerly "Royal (`sfnt')"] format and
- System 7
-
- Apple's new System 7.0 supports a new format of outline font that
- will allow high-quality characters of any size to be displayed on
- the screen. TrueType stores font outlines as B-spline curves
- along with programmed resolution hints. B-spline curves are faster
- to compute and easier to manipulate than the Bezier curves used in
- PostScript.
-
- Adobe is not going to support Apple's new format by converting the
- Adobe/Linotype library to B-spline format. There are two reasons
- for this: First, there is no support for font encryption (yes, the
- hooks are there, but nothing is implemented). Second, Adobe does
- not want to dilute PostScript and its font library. However, the
- Macintosh is too big a market to simply turn away from. Therefore,
- Adobe will provide its Font Manager to display its own fonts on
- the Mac screen. Apple ships Adobe's ATM for this purpose.
-
- ((( unquote )))
-
- Subject: 1.3. What about "Multiple Master" fonts?
-
- Multiple Master Fonts are an extension to the Adobe font format.
- providing the ability to interpolate smoothly between several "design
- axes" from a single font. Design axes can include weight, size, and
- even some whacko notions like serif to sans serif. Adobes' first
- Multiple Master Font was Myriad - a two-axis font with WEIGHT (light to
- black) on one axis, and WIDTH (condensed to expanded) along the other
- axis. In the case of Myriad, there are four "polar" designs at the
- "corners" of the design space. The four designs are light condensed,
- black condensed, light expanded, and black expanded.
-
- Given polar designs, you can set up a "weight vector" which
- interpolates to any point within the design space to produce a unique
- font for a specific purpose. So you can get a "more or less condensed,
- somewhat black face".
-
- Multiple Master Fonts can be used on any PostScript printer. Multiple
- Master Fonts need a new PostScript operator known as makeblendedfont.
- The current crop of Multiple Master Fonts supply an emulation of this
- operator so the printer doesn't need this operator.
-
- A short tutorial on Multiple Master Fonts and makeblendedfont appears
- in PostScript by Example, by Henry McGilton and Mary Campione,
- published by Addison-Wesley.
-
- Danny Thomas contributes that there are a few PostScript interpreter
- (version)s which have bugs that appear with the emulation of the
- makeblendedfont operator used to support Multiple Master fonts. There
- weren't many exhibiting this problem, though it may have happened even
- with one Adobe interpreter.
-
- Subject: 1.4. Is there a methodology to describe and classify typefaces?
-
- There is a standard, Panose, but it is mostly ignored by typographers
- (not because it's bad, just because they don't need it). The Panose
- system is documented, among other places, in the Microsoft Windows 3.1
- Programmer's Reference from Microsoft Press.
-
- The ISO also has a scheme, but it is not Panose.
-
- At least one book by a respected authority, Alexander Lawson, Printing
- Types: An Introduction, describes another, less rigorous system [ed: of
- his own], which is exposited in "An Introduction" and used without
- exposition in his later "Anatomy of a Typeface".
-
- There is another book, Rookledges International Typefinder, which has a
- very complete system that uses tell-tales of individual glyphs as well
- as overall style to index most known faces right in the book.
-
- J. Ben Leiberman has another book on type face description.
-
- Terry O'Donnell adds the following comments:
-
- The current ISO system was initiated (I believe) by Archie Provan of
- RIT--a successor to Mr. Lawson. Whereas in typographic practice or
- teaching--only a high level classification is necessary - times have
- changed and the current ISO system aims to accomplish something beyond
- the high level. A major goal is to aid software to help users make
- selections. For example, a naive user might ask for all fonts on a font
- server which have a Roman old style appearance. Another goal would be
- to help users with multi-lingual text: a user creating a document in
- English using e.g. Baskerville wants to know what Arabic or Japanese
- language font on his system/file server would harmonize well with the
- Baskerville. It is not all in place yet--but the more detailed ISO
- classes--and the current addition of non-latin typefaces--are an
- attempt to address this issue.
-
- A second goal is to help with the font substitution problem. Neither
- ISO or Panose address the metrics issues in font substitution--but both
- might aid software in picking the nearest style of available available
- fonts.
-
- Subject: 1.5. What is the "f" shaped "s" called?
-
- Both the "f" with half a crosbar (roman) and the integral sign (italic)
- are called long-S.
-
- Subject: 1.6. What about "Colonial" Typefaces?
-
- Why does colonial printing have that "Colonial" feel?
- =====================================================
-
- Colonial type was either very roughly treated by moist salt air on the
- crossing and in colonial port cities, or was copied locally by tacky
- techniques (such as driving used foundry type into soft lead to make
- very soft deformable matrices), and the paper was very rough, which
- abrades both the serifs and the hairlines. So except for the best work
- done with new, european types, the serifs were much smaller, even
- broken off, than the original founder/punchcutter intended. Thins
- could be abraded by rough paper to nothingness, esp after humid salt
- air had leached the hardener out of the alloy.
-
- Peter Honig contributes the following alternative explanation of the
- roughness of colonial types:
-
- The roughness of early fonts was caused by several factors: Type was
- quite expensive and was used for many years (even if somewhat damaged).
- Also, printing presses would only be set up to print one side of one
- folio at a time, so you would not need to set more than a couple of
- pages at once. This meant that the printer did not need as many copies
- of each character, however, each character got used very frequently.
- The early casting techniques did not produce as perfect or consistant
- examples as we have today. That is, the face of a character might not
- be quite planar with the page, or its sides might not be quite
- parallel. Lastly, the inks of the past were not as advanced those of
- today.
-
- What fonts are good for mock-colonial uses?
- ===========================================
-
- For example, what fonts have the following features: old-style figures
- (non-lining numbers), the long s character, slightly irregular shapes
- (a la type produced by colonial printers), and a decent complement of
- ligatures. And what about free or cheap faces like this?
-
- I don't know if any exist with all of 1-5. As I believe you get what
- you pay for, especially in fonts, I haven't looked at free and
- cheap-copy fonts.
-
- Microsoft's expansion set for their Win3.1 optional fonts has Garamond
- Expert & Expert Extensions, which has a good complement of ligatures
- and I think I remember it having the long ess too. I forget about
- OSFigs; it should tho'. Monotype's metal faces "16th Century Roman"
- and "Poliphilus" may be available in digital; if so, they imitate early
- presswork with early and are very close to what one wants.
-
- "A commercial supplier [not yet sampled] is Image Club Graphics in
- Calgary (1-800-661-9410). It is called Caslon Antique. It is supplied
- as both roman and italic, together, for $25. They advertise in
- MacWorld/MacUser/MacBlah. I am unable to tell from abcDEF123 if the
- numerals are old-style, but I think not. Ligatures? long-S? Not yet
- known. Guillemots, though, are there. ... Letraset, circa 1977,
- showing a Caslon Antique with modern numerals, no ligatures, and only
- UKPounds and German ss extensions." [Ike Stoddard]
-
- NB: Caslon Antique is not a Caslon per se: "The last Caslon to mention
- is that ubiquitous but unrelated Caslon Antique, which possesses no
- similarity whatsoever to the original. This old reprobate was
- introduced by Barnhart Brothers of Chicago under the name Fifteenth
- Century. Its negative reception lasted until about 1918, when, with a
- simple name change to Caslon Antique, it became the most commonly
- selected type for reproductions of colonial American printing. It is
- now seen in everything from liquor advertisments to furniture
- commercials" [Lawson, 1990,Anatomy]
-
- Miles Agfa (Compugraphic) has always had a Caslon Antique; I don't know
- if it is available for TrueType or Type 1, but Agfa has been doing
- TrueType bundles at reasonable prices. [wdr]
-
- Peter Honig contributes the following suggestions:
-
- Name Year Irreg. Long S OSfig Comment ---
- --- ----- ----- ---- ------
-
- * Poliphilus A cleaned-up reproduction of type from 1499. It's only
- slightly irregular and does not contain the long S, but does have
- old style figures. From Italy, founded by Francesco Griffo.
-
- * Old Claude An exact reproduction of Garamond from 1532. It is
- irregular and does not contain the long S, but it does have old
- style figures. From France, founded by Claude Garamond.
-
- * Blado An exact reproduction of type from 1539. It is irregular
- and does not contain the long S, but it does have old style
- figures. From Italy, founded by Antinio Blado (designed by
- Ludovico delgi Arrighi).
-
- * Van Dijck An exact reproduction of type from the 1660s. It is
- irregular and does not contain the long S, but it does have old
- style figures. From Holland, founded by Van Dijck.
-
- * Adobe Caslon A cleaned-up reproduction of type from the 1720s. It
- isn't irregular but it does contain the long S, old style figures,
- and several ligatures. From England, founded by William Caslon.
-
- Blado, Poliphilus, and Van Dijck are available from Monotype. Adobe
- Caslon is available from Adobe. Old Claude is available from Letter
- Perfect. In my opinion, Old Claude is font that is worthy of close
- attention. Although it lacks the long S, it is VERY accurately
- reproduced. Although Adobe Caslon is not irregular, it has a great set
- of authentic ornaments from the Renaissance and Baroque. It is also the
- only set that I am aware of, that has the long S and its ligatures.
-
- What fonts could a colonial printer have had?
- =============================================
-
- According to D.B.Updike in the classic reference "Printing Types: Their
- History, Forms & Use", he indicates that most colonial work was with
- types of the Caslon Old Style fonts and cheap copies of same in the
- 18th C. Before that, it would have been the older Dutch & English
- faces, almost always lagging English tastes. If you can find the
- Oxford Fell types, they are classic Dutch-as-used-by-englishmen.
- Anything with a Dutch moniker and the Oldstyle adjective is probably
- ok; Van Dijck if you find it, say (died 1673).
-
- Ben Franklin recommended Caslon faces. But these were not available in
- England before 1720, first full broadside in 1734. Lawson declares that
- the first printing of the Declaration of Independance was in Caslon.
-
- Wilson's Scotch Modern was the "modern" font that surfaced in quantity
- in america. If the Scotch Roman your vendor has is sort-of like-Bodoni
- but nicer than his Bodoni, that's it. It wasn't available until late
- 1700s, though.
-
- Subject: 1.7. What is "Point Size"?
-
- This article was constructed from a posting by William D. Ricker from
- Sep 1992.
-
- In general terms, point size is a relative measure of the size of a
- font. It used to have a more concrete meaning in the "old days" of
- typeography.
-
- In the world of Photo-typesetters and digital fonts, the distance from
- the top of the tallest ascender to the bottom of the longest descender
- is only an approximate lower bound on the point size of a font; in the
- Old days, it was almost always a firm lower bound, and there was warning
- on the exception.
-
- Point-size is the measure of default or minimum inter-baseline
- distance; inter line distance in absense of leading, a/k/a "set solid".
- If you don't know if the text was set solid or leaded, you can't tell
- the point-size with a measuring glass unless you know if the type design
- includes built-in space betweed adjacent, set-solid lines.
-
- Exceptions to the points size equals ascender to descender size rule:
-
- * In metal, there was usually a little room between the highest and
- lowest corners of the face and the body size, so that the Matrix
- was completely molding the face and not relying on the mold-body
- to form a vertical side to the printing face--since a bevel or
- beard is desirable for impression and strength.
-
- * If the designer of a face thinks it should always be set leaded,
- s/he may choose to include the minimal leading in the design, in
- which case it is included in the base point size, and no capital,
- lowercase-ascender, or lowercase-descender will get very near the
- edges.
-
- * In some faces the capitals are taller than the ascenders, and
- others vice versa. (Vertical sticks on capitals are called stems,
- not ascenders.) A minimum point size estimate would normally be
- the height of the font's "envelope", to borrow from
- Avionics/Aeronautics.
-
- * The point size of a "Titling Face" may not include descenders; in
- which case the Q's tail hangs off the body as a vertical kern.
- Such a face in metal usually has "Titling" in the name, although
- sometimes the fact that only capitals are available is all the
- hint given.
-
- ([William D. Ricker's] metal font of Ray Shaded, cast on a Monotype
- Display caster, has "vertical kerns" if you will: the hanging
- shaded tail of the Q and some punctuation below the 24pt body,
- because it has no lower-case. It might be better described as
- being 36/24, thirty-six point type cast on a twenty-four point
- body, since the cap A is about the height and density of a
- Ultrabold 36pt A in many other fonts. It would be called 36/24
- Caps if a lowercase had been cast on a 36 point body, but since
- only UC was ever cut, as UC-only titling, it was standardly issued
- and refered to as a 24 point titling--much to the confusion of
- non-cognoscenti.)
-
- * The Continental Point, a/k/a the Didot point, (and its Pica Em
- equivalent, the Cicero) is just a hair longer. 15 Ciceros=16
- Picas, 15 Didots=16 Points. So type which is imported or cast
- from imported matrices has been, and still is, cast on the next
- size larger body in anglo-american points. So an 11D/12 or 12D/14
- type will look larger than a similar 12pt font but smaller than a
- simlar 14pt font, by about a point of fixed built-in leading that
- the designer didn't intend. What happened when these faces were
- converted to photo and digital composition, I don't know. (I
- could find out.) Probably some were scaled to American sizes
- proportionally from the european masters, some copied from the
- American castings with built-in leading to ease conversion, and
- some were probably done both ways at different conversion houses.
-
- Net result: unless you know it's Adobe Times Roman or whatever and just
- want to know what point size & leading options were, you can't measure
- the size with a definition and an optical micrometer. The defnition is
- embodied/manifested in the typesetting "hardware", even if it is
- software, not the product.
-
- Knuth's Assertion
- =================
-
- What about Knuth's assertion that point size is "a more-or-less
- arbitrary number that reflects the size of type [a font] is intended to
- blend with"?
-
- That statement is true only in the context of MetaFonts. MetaFonts
- (and this definition) are perfectly adequate for Knuth's purposes but
- not fully descriptive of all of typography. And definitely not
- conformant to established usage.
-
- This is not meant to condemn heterodoxy, but just to warn that while the
- ASCII markup notations in Knuth's "Second Great Work" [TeX and MetaFont]
- are even more widely disseminated than his wonderful coinage of
- mathematical notations in "The First Great Work" [The Art of Computer
- Programming, volumes I, II, and III], MetaFont has not been accepted as
- an encoding for all useful fonts for the future, and the defintions of
- font characteristics in MetaFont context must be taken with a large
- grain of salt when used with fonts outside the MetaFont font-generation
- paradigm.
-
- Knuth's quotation, when applied to a (non-MetaFont) font designer,
- overstates the arbitrariness of the design choice; the designer was
- stating in the old days that you'd need a saw, a file, or a caster with
- his matrices if you wanted to use negative leading to set his type
- closer than he wanted to see it set; and today, in Photo/digital
- composition, the designer is either indicating the opinion of the
- original metal-head or his own design advice as to what the minimum
- distance between adjacent baselines should be.
-
- Also, point size is very poor predictor of blending, except in a
- mechanical sense in terms of not-overflowing the same rectangles. Some
- faces to blend in the same line with 12 point type will need to be
- 10/12 or 14/12, due to differences in the way they fill the space.
- (The overall leading should fit the body type.) Harmony and contrast of
- overall color, shape, style, etc. are much more important considerations
- for blending than body-size. (For two types to work together, there
- must be sufficient harmonies between them to work together and
- sufficent contrasts to be easily distinguished. See Carl Dair's books.)
-
- If one wants to understand usage of typographical terms in the general
- milieu, the Chicago Manual of Style's appendix on Typesetting for
- Authors is a good capsule presentation of history and terminology; if
- one wants the nitty-gritty on how digital type does, or at least
- should, differ and be treated differently from just copies of metal,
- see Richard Rubinstein, Digital Typography, MIT Press. On type in
- general, consult D.B. Updike in a library (out of print), or
- A(lexander) S. Lawson (who covers electronic type in his latest
- revision!).
-
- Subject: 1.8. Where can I get ... fonts.
-
- Before I go any farther, let me extol the virtues of the Archie servers.
- If you need to find something on the net, and you have any idea what it
- might be called, Archie is the place to go. In North America, telnet to
- "archie.rutgers.edu" and login as "archie". There are many other
- servers around the world, any Archie server can give you a list of other
- servers. There are better documents than this to describe Archie and
- you should be able to find them from the above starting point. If you
- have trouble, feel free to ask norm (via Email please, no need to
- clutter comp.fonts with a query about Archie ;-).
-
- In addition to the telnet option, several archie clients exist including
- a very nice X11 implementation (Xarchie).
-
- * Adobe Type 1 Fonts in MS-DOS/Unix Format:
-
- ftp.cica.indiana.edu:/pub/pc/win3/fonts
-
- ftp.cica.indiana.edu:/pub/pc/win3/fonts/atm
-
- archive.umich.edu:/msdos/mswindows/fonts
-
- * Adobe Type 1 Fonts in Mac Format:
-
- mac.archive.umich.edu:/mac/system.extensions/font/type1
-
- sumex-aim.stanford.edu:/info-mac/font
-
- * Adobe Type 3 Fonts in Mac Format:
-
- mac.archive.umich.edu:/mac/system.extensions/font/type3
-
- * TrueType fonts in MS-DOS Format:
-
- ftp.cica.indiana.edu:/pub/pc/win3/fonts/truetype
-
- * TrueType fonts in Mac Format:
-
- mac.archive.umich.edu:/mac/system.extensions/font/truetype
-
- * TeX PK/PXL/GF fonts:
-
- The TeX community has its own support groups that can provide
- better answers to this question. The canonical list of MetaFont
- fonts is posted occasionally to comp.text.tex. The comp.text.tex
- newsgroup (or the Info-TeX mailing list, if you do not have access
- to news) are good places to start. Email norm if you need more
- specific information.
-
- * LaserJet bitmap fonts:
-
- wuarchive.wustl.edu:/mirrors/msdos/laser
-
- Also on other simtel20 mirrors...
-
- If you know of other archive sites (the above list is no where near
- complete) or other formats that are available on the net, please let us
- know.
-
- The sites above represent places where shareware and public domain fonts
- are available. Many, many typefaces are not available in shareware
- form. And many shareware faces are less than adequate for a variety of
- reasons, particularly at small sizes. It seems to be the consensus of
- the comp.fonts community that "you get what you pay for." If you need a
- professional quality font, you should probably buy it from a
- professional.
-
- The list of font vendors in Appendix A (annotated with information about
- non-Roman alphabets) was contributed by Masumi Abe. Masumi was Adobe's
- Manager of Typographic Marketing for Asia. He has since left Adobe.
-
- Many font CDs are now available which offer many fonts for a low
- cost/font.
-
- Subject: 1.9. Where can I get fonts for non-Roman alphabets?
-
- As mentioned above, the list of font vendors is annotated with
- information about non-Roman alphabets. Commercially, Masumi suggests
- that Linguists' Software is the current [ed: as of 7/92] leading
- supplier of non-Roman fonts.
-
- Ian Tresman contributes:
-
- The Multilingual PC Directory is a source guide to multilingual and
- foreign language software, including fonts, for PCs. Over a hundred
- different languages are included, from Arabic to Hieroglyphics to Zulu.
- A 1200 word description is available from the publishers, Knowledge
- Computing, email: 72240.3447@compuserve.com.
-
- Subject: 1.10. What about fonts with the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) symbols?
-
- I summarized Scott Brumage's recent post for the FAQ:
-
- Shareware or free (PostScript Type 1 and/or TrueType):
- ======================================================
-
- * TechPhon
-
- Seems to lack some characters and has no zero-offset characters
- (for accents).
-
- * PalPhon
-
- A phonetic font which you can get by anonymous ftp from
- mac.archive.umich.edu. It is called PalPhon. There are actually
- two fonts: the basic PalPhon and one with additional accents and
- symbols called PalPi. The package includes some documents on using
- the fonts as well.
-
- * SIL-IPA
-
- SIL-IPA is a set of scalable IPA fonts containing the full
- International Phonetic Alphabet with 1990 Kiel revisions. Three
- typefaces are included:
-
- * SIL Doulos (similar to Times)
-
- * SIL Sophia (similar to Helvetica)
-
- * SIL Manuscript (monowidth)
-
- Each font contains all the standard IPA discrete characters and
- non-spacing diacritics as well as some suprasegmental and
- puncuation marks. Each font comes in both PostScript Type 1 and
- TrueType formats. The fonts are also available for Microsoft
- Windows.
-
- These fonts were designed by the Printing Arts Department of the
- Summer Institute of Linguistics, Dallas, Texas.
-
- Shareware or free (TeX):
- ========================
-
- METAFONT sources of the phonetic symbols developed by
- Tokyo-Shoseki-Printing and Sanseido are available. The font contains
- all of IPA (Internatioanl Phonetic Alphabet) symbols.
-
- You can get phonetic symbols METAFONT (named TSIPA) from
-
- ftp.foretune.co.jp:/pub/tools/TeX/Fonts
-
- The IP address for ftp.foretune.co.jp is 133.123.1.2.
-
- Commercial:
- ===========
-
- Linguist's Software Adobe (ITC Stone Phonetic [#255], Times Phonetic
- [#278])
-
- Subject: 1.11. How can I convert my ... font to ... format?
-
- Conversion from one bitmapped format to another is not generally too
- difficult. Conversion from one scalable format to another is very
- difficult. Several commercial software packages claim to perform these
- tasks, but none has been favorably reviewed by the comp.fonts community.
-
- Converting Between TrueType and Adobe Type 1 Formats
- ====================================================
-
- This section was constructed from postings by Primoz Peterlin and Bert
- Medley in Sep 1993.
-
- There are several commercial tools that will convert between these
- formats. There are no shareware or free tools that will do the job.
- See also "Why do converted fonts look so bad?".
-
- FontMonger by Ares Software
- ---------------------------
-
- Performs conversion between Adobe Type 1, Adobe Type 3 and TrueType
- formats in both PC-DOS and Mac flavours, as well as simple glyph
- editing. Currently at version 1.0.7, patches available via CompuServe.
- Available for Mac and MS Windows. Commercial product, price \$60-80.
-
- Alltype by Atech Software
- -------------------------
-
- Performs font conversion. A stable product, being on a market for a
- while. Available for PC-DOS/MS Windows only. Commercial product.
- Atech is supposedly leaving the business.
-
- Fontographer by Altsys Co.
- --------------------------
-
- Comprehensive package, allowing creation of fonts as well as conversion
- between formats. Available for Mac and MS Windows. Commercial
- product, price cca. \$270 (PC version).
-
- Metamorphosis by Altsys Co.
- ---------------------------
-
- Available for Mac. Commercial product. More info needed.
-
- Converting Between Other Scalable Formats
- =========================================
-
- Many of the programs in the preceding section claim to be able to
- convert between other formats as well. And there are probably other
- commercial programs as well. However, as several people have noted,
- conversion from one scalable format to another is a bad idea. If the
- original font was well hinted, the converted font will not be. Of
- course, if the original was poorly hinted, maybe it won't matter much.
-
- In an effort to settle a long-running and oft-asked question, I'll be
- blunt: as of today [6/93], THERE ARE NO NON-COMMERCIAL PROGRAMS WHICH
- WILL CONVERT FROM ONE SCALABLE FORMAT TO ANOTHER. Not from TrueType to
- PostScript Type 1, Type 3, Type 5, or any other scalable PostScript
- format. Not from PostScript Type 1 to TrueType. Not to or from
- Intellifont. Not to or from Sun F3 format.
-
- For specific conversions, check the platform specific parts of the FAQ.
- Most of the conversions discussed require platform specific tools.
-
- Here is a summary of the conversions discussed (and the section in
- which they appear):
-
- Mac Type 1 PostScript
- To PC Type 1 PostScript (MS-DOS). To TrueType (commercial).
-
- PC Type 1 PostScript
- To Mac Type 1 PostScript (Mac, commercial). To TrueType
- (commercial). To TeX PK (MS-DOS).
-
- TrueType
- To Type 1 PostScript (Mac and MS-DOS, commercial). To HP LaserJet
- bitmaps (MS-DOS, hack!).
-
- TeX PK
- To HP LaserJet bitmap softfonts (MS-DOS).
-
- HP LaserJet bitmap softfonts
- To TeX PK (MS-DOS).
-
- In addition, Adobe ships a copy of Adobe Font Foundry with all of its
- fonts which can convert Type 1 fonts into HP LaserJet softfonts.
-
- Why Do Converted Fonts Look So Bad?
- ===================================
-
- This section was constructed from postings by Mark Hastings and David
- Glenn in Aug 1993.
-
- With all commercially available conversion tools, converting fonts
- between scalable formats almost always results in a font inferior to
- the original. (The rare case where a converted font is not inferior to
- the original occurs only when the original is a cheap knock-off, and
- the automatic hinting of the conversion program is better than
- automatic hinting used in the original!)
-
- David Glenn contributes the following analysis:
-
- There are a few probable [reasons why converted fonts, especially screen
- fonts, look inferior to the original]. First off, any font that's
- converted uses a converting algorithm which will make an exact copy at
- best. Because no currently available converter even comes close to
- copying faithfully the manual tweaks and hinting in a font file, you
- often end up with poor screen fonts and poor output. The only reason
- that printed output from the converted font looks markedly better than
- the screen font is that the printed output is at a higher resolution.
- The converter achieves better results on the higher resolutions because
- hinting is less important at higher resolutions. Screen fonts are
- incredibly complex to make well. You have very few pixels to represent
- a very aesthetic and distinct design. That's why at small sizes almost
- all typefaces look alike--how do you represent a graceful concave side
- on the letter "L" for Optima with only 12 pixels in height and one in
- width? You can't. And that's why most fonts look similar at 10pt,
- unless they're hand hinted by typograhers.
-
- One thing that may come into play when fonts are converted between
- platforms, for example between PC/Windows format and Mac format, is that
- fonts are hinted down to a certain number of pixels per em. On a Mac
- screen (72 dpi) there is a one-to-one correspondence between the ppem
- and the point size of a font. Under windows, the usual VGA screen is
- 96dpi and fonts that look good at 8 or 9 pt under windows might look
- like crap on a Mac 'cuz the fonts weren't hinted below 10 or 11ppem.
- Also, the conversion programs may have made the appearance worse at
- some sizes than others.
-
- Whenever you convert fonts from one platform to the other keep in mind
- that:
-
- * Your license with the type foundry may or may not allow this.
-
- * The font may or may not have the correct character sets in it.
-
- * The TT font file may or may not have all the tables necessary.
-
- * Your converter may make it so ugly that you don't want to use it...
-
- Smoothing Bitmaps
- =================
-
- This section was constructed from postings by Jason Lee Weiler and
- Piercarlo Antonio Grandi
-
- Enlarging bitmapped images is easy, but enlarging them without creating
- very jagged edges is much more demanding. There are several
- possibilities.
-
- * If you are interested in programming your own solution, the
- comp.graphics FAQ will provide pointers to a number of resources
- that can get you started.
-
- * If the bitmaps are in a standard format, the 'xv' tool (an X11
- picture viewing tool) includes magnify and smooth functions that
- may perform adequately.
-
- * Commercial tools like Adobe Illustrator, Corel Draw, and many
- others include tracing functions that can translate some bitmaps
- into acceptable outlines (which can be enlarged without
- jaggedness).
-
- * The GNU Font Utilities include a tracing tool that may be helpful.
-
- This is Info file comp.fonts.faq.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from
- the input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: General Info (2/5)
- Supersedes: <font-faq-2_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:30:55 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 1111
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-2_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16989 comp.answers:9897 news.answers:34559
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part2
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 1.12. Are fonts copyrightable?
-
- This topic is hotly debated at regular intervals on comp.fonts. Terry
- Carroll. provides the following analysis of current [ed: as of 6/92]
- legislation and regulation regarding fonts and copyrights in the United
- States. Terry is "Editor in Chief" of Volume 10 of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal. Members of the comp.fonts
- community are encouraged to submit other materials that add clarity to
- the issue.
-
- It has been pointed out that this section deals primarily font copyright
- issues relevant to the United States and that this situation is not
- universal. For example, in many parts of Europe typeface designs are
- protectable.
-
- "First, the short answer in the USA: Typefaces are not copyrightable;
- bitmapped fonts are not copyrightable, but scalable fonts are
- copyrightable. Authorities for these conclusions follow.
-
- Before we get started, let's get some terminology down:
-
- A typeface is a set of letters, numbers, or other symbolic characters,
- whose forms are related by repeating design elements consistently
- applied in a notational system and are intended to be embodied in
- articles whose intrinsic utilitarian function is for use in composing
- text or other cognizable combinations of characters.
-
- A font is the computer file or program that is used to represent or
- create the typeface.
-
- Now, on to the legal authorities:
-
- Volume 37 of the Code of Federal Regulations specifies this about the
- copyrightability of typefaces:
-
- "The following are examples of works not subject to copyright and
- applications for registration of such works cannot be entertained: . . .
- typeface as typeface" 37 CFR 202.1(e).
-
- The regulation is in accordance with the House of Representatives report
- that accompanied the new copyright law, when it was passed in 1976:
-
- "The Committee has considered, but chosen to defer, the possibility of
- protecting the design of typefaces. A 'typeface' can be defined as a
- set of letters, numbers, or other symbolic characters, whose forms are
- related by repeating design elements consistently applied in a
- notational system and are intended to be embodied in articles whose
- intrinsic utilitarian function is for use in composing text or other
- cognizable combinations of characters. The Committee does not regard
- the design of typeface, as thus defined, to be a copyrightable
- 'pictorial, graphic, or sculptural work' within the meaning of this bill
- and the application of the dividing line in section 101." H. R. Rep.
- No. 94-1476, 94th Congress, 2d Session at 55 (1976), reprinted in 1978
- U.S. Cong. and Admin. News 5659, 5668.
-
- It's also in accordance with the one court case I know of that has
- considered the matter: Eltra Corp. V. Ringer, 579 F.2d 294, 208 USPQ 1
- (1978, C.A. 4, Va.).
-
- The U.S. Copyright Office holds that a bitmapped font is nothing more
- than a computerized representation of a typeface, and as such is not
- copyrightable:
-
- "The [September 29, 1988] Policy Decision [published at 53 FR 38110]
- based on the [October 10,] 1986 Notice of Inquiry [published at 51 FR
- 36410] reiterated a number of previous registration decisions made by
- the [Copyright] Office. First, under existing law, typeface as such is
- not registerable. The Policy Decision then went on to state the
- Office's position that 'data that merely represents an electronic
- depiction of a particular typeface or individual letterform' [that is, a
- bitmapped font] is also not registerable." 57 FR 6201.
-
- However, scalable fonts are, in the opinion of the Copyright Office,
- computer programs, and as such are copyrightable:
-
- "... the Copyright Office is persuaded that creating scalable typefonts
- using already-digitized typeface represents a significant change in the
- industry since our previous [September 29, 1988] Policy Decision. We
- are also persuaded that computer programs designed for generating
- typeface in conjunction with low resolution and other printing devices
- may involve original computer instructions entitled protection under the
- Copyright Act. For example, the creation of scalable font output
- programs to produce harmonious fonts consisting of hundreds of
- characters typically involves many decisions in drafting the
- instructions that drive the printer. The expression of these decisions
- is neither limited by the unprotectable shape of the letters nor
- functionally mandated. This expression, assuming it meets the usual
- standard of authorship, is thus registerable as a computer program." 57
- FR 6202."
-
- Subject: 1.13. Typeface Protection
-
- [This article first appeared in TUGboat 7:3 (October 1986), pp. 146-151.
- Reproduced with permission.]
-
- Preamble
- ========
-
- The main question of typeface protection is: "Is there anything there
- worth protecting?" To that the answer must certainly be: "Yes." Typeface
- designs are a form of artistic and intellectual property." To
- understand this better, it is helpful to look at who designs type, and
- what the task requires.
-
- Who makes type designs?
- -----------------------
-
- Like other artistic forms, type is created by skilled artisans. They
- may be called type designers, lettering artists, punch-cutters,
- calligraphers, or related terms, depending on the milieu in which the
- designer works and the technology used for making the designs or for
- producing the type.
-
- ("Type designer" and "lettering artist" are self-explanatory terms.
- "Punch-cutter" refers to the traditional craft of cutting the master
- image of a typographic letter at the actual size on a blank of steel
- that is then used to make the matrix from which metal type is cast.
- Punch-cutting is an obsolete though not quite extinct craft. Seeking a
- link to the tradition, modern makers of digital type sometimes use the
- anachronistic term "digital punch-cutter". "Calligrapher" means
- literally "one who makes beautiful marks". The particular marks are
- usually hand-written letters, though calligraphers may design type, and
- type designers may do calligraphy.)
-
- It usually takes about seven years of study and practice to become a
- competent type designer. This seems to be true whether one has a Ph.D.
- in computer science, a high-school diploma, or no academic degree. The
- skill is acquired through study of the visual forms and practice in
- making them. As with geometry, there is no royal road.
-
- The designing of a typeface can require several months to several years.
- A family of typefaces of four different styles, say roman, italic, bold
- roman, and bold italic, is a major investment of time and effort. Most
- type designers work as individuals. A few work in partnership (Times
- Roman(R), Helvetica(R), and Lucida(R) were all, in different ways, the
- result of design collaboration). In Japan, the large character sets
- required for a typeface containing Kanji, Katakana, and Hiragana induce
- designers to work in teams of several people.
-
- Although comparisons with other media can only be approximate, a
- typeface family is an accomplishment on the order of a novel, a feature
- film screenplay, a computer language design and implementation, a major
- musical composition, a monumental sculpture, or other artistic or
- technical endeavors that consume a year or more of intensive creative
- effort. These other creative activities can be protected by copyright
- or other forms of intellectual property protection. It is reasonable
- to protect typefaces in the same way.
-
- The problem of plagiarism
- -------------------------
-
- A lack of protection for typeface designs leads to plagiarism, piracy,
- and related deplorable activities. They are deplorable because they
- harm a broad range of people beyond the original designers of the type.
- First, most type plagiarisms are badly done. The plagiarists do not
- understand the nature of the designs they are imitating, are unwilling
- to spend the necessary time and effort to do good work, and
- consequently botch the job. They then try to fob off their junk on
- unsuspecting users (authors, editors, and readers). Without copyright,
- the original designer cannot require the reproducer of a type to do a
- good job of reproduction. Hence, type quality is degraded by
- unauthorized copying.
-
- Secondly, without protection, designs may be freely imitated; the
- plagiarist robs the original designer of financial compensation for the
- work. This discourages creative designers from entering and working in
- the field. As the needs of typography change (on-line documents and
- laser printing are examples of technical and conceptual changes) new
- kinds of typefaces are required. Creative design in response to such
- needs cannot flourish without some kind of encouragement for the
- creators. In a capitalist society, the common method is property rights
- and profit. In a socialist (or, in the past, royalist) society, the
- state itself might employ type artists. France, as a monarchy and as a
- republic, has had occasional state sponsorship of typeface design over
- the past 400 years. The Soviet Union has sponsored the design of new
- typefaces, not only in the Cyrillic alphabet, but also in the other
- exotic scripts used by various national groups in the Soviet Union.
-
- Those who would justify plagiarism often claim that the type artists do
- not usually receive a fair share of royalties anyway, since they have
- usually sold their designs to some large, exploitive corporation. It
- is true that type designers, like many artists, are often exploited by
- their "publishers", but plagiarism exacerbates the problem. Plagiarism
- deprives the designer of decent revenues because it diverts profits to
- those who merely copied the designs. Plagiarism gives the manufacturer
- yet another excuse to reduce the basic royalty or other fee paid for
- typeface designs; the theme song is that the market determines the
- value of the design and cheap rip-offs debase the value of a face. For
- those interested in the economic effects of piracy, it is clear that
- plagiarism of type designs ultimately hurts individual artists far more
- than it hurts impersonal corporations.
-
- Kinds of protection for type
- ----------------------------
-
- There are five main forms of protection for typefaces:
- * Trademark
-
- * Copyright
-
- * Patent
-
- * Trade Secret
-
- * Ethics
-
- Trademark
- .........
-
- A trademark protects the name of a typeface. In the U.S., most
- trademarks are registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
- The R in a circle (R) after a trademark or tradename indicates U.S.
- registration. The similarly placed TM indicates that a trademark is
- claimed, even if not yet officially registered. However, a trademark may
- be achieved through use and practice, even without registration. Owners
- of trademarks maintain ownership by use of the trademark and by
- litigation to prevent infringement or unauthorized use of the trademark
- by others.
-
- As a few examples of registered typeface trademarks, there are Times
- Roman (U.S. registration 417,439, October 30, 1945 to Eltra
- Corporation, now part of Allied); Helvetica (U.S. registration 825,989,
- March 21, 1967, also to Eltra-Allied), and Lucida (U.S. reg. 1,314,574
- to Bigelow & Holmes). Most countries offer trademark registration and
- protection, and it is common for a typeface name to be registered in
- many countries. In some cases the registrant may be different than the
- originator. For example, The Times New Roman (Times Roman) was
- originally produced by the English Monotype Corporation. In England and
- Europe, most typographers consider the design to belong to Monotype,
- but the trademark was registered by Linotype (Eltra-Allied) in the
- U.S., as noted above.
-
- Trademark protection does not protect the design, only the name.
- Therefore, a plagiarism of a design is usually christened with a
- pseudonym which in some way resembles or suggests the original
- trademark, without actually infringing on it. Resemblance without
- infringement can be a fine distinction.
-
- Some pseudonyms for Times Roman are: "English Times", "London", Press
- Roman, "Tms Rmn". Some for Helvetica are "Helios", "Geneva",
- "Megaron", "Triumvirate". So far, there seem to be none for Lucida.
- There are generic typeface classifications used by typographers and type
- historians to discuss styles, trends, and categories of design.
- Occasionally these apparently innocuous classification systems are
- employed by plagiarists to devise generic pseudonyms, such as "Swiss
- 721" for Helvetica, and "Dutch 801" for Times Roman. It is not certain
- whether this usage of a generic classification is more for
- clarification or for obfuscation. In general, the proper tradename is a
- better indicator of identity, quality, and provenance in typefaces than
- a generic name. Some people believe that the same is true for other
- commodities such as wine, where taste is important.
-
- A trademark usually consists of both a proprietary and a generic part.
- For example, in the name "Lucida Bold Italic", "Lucida" is the
- proprietary trademark part and "Bold Italic" is the generic part. The
- generic word "type" is usually understood to be a part of the name,
- e.g. "Lucida Bold Italic type". Sometimes a firm will append its name
- or a trademarked abbreviation of it to the typeface name, to achieve a
- greater degree of proprietary content, e.g. "B&H Lucida Bold Italic".
-
- A related matter is the use of the name of a type's designer. A firm
- that ethically licenses a typeface will often cite the name of the
- designer-- e.g. Stanley Morison (with Victor Lardent) for Times Roman,
- Max Miedinger (with Edouard Hoffmann) for Helvetica, Charles Bigelow
- and Kris Holmes for Lucida. Although a person's name is not usually a
- registered trademark, there are common law restrictions on its use.
- The marketing of plagiarized type designs generally omits the names of
- the designers.
-
- Although Trademark is an incomplete kind of protection, it is used
- effectively (within its limitations) to prevent the theft of type names.
- Certain traditional typeface names, usually the surnames of illustrious
- designers like Garamond, Caslon, Baskerville, Bodoni, and others have
- become generic names in the public domain. Trademark protection of
- such names requires the addition of some proprietary word(s), as with
- these hypothetical creations, "Acme New Garamond", or "Typoluxe
- Meta-Baskerville".
-
- Copyright
- .........
-
- Copyright of typefaces can be divided into two parts: copyright of the
- design itself; and copyright of the font in which the design is
- implemented. In the U.S., typeface designs are currently not covered by
- copyright. This is a result of reluctance by the copyright office to
- deal with a complex field; by lobbying against copyright by certain
- manufacturers whose profits were based on typeface plagiarism; by a
- reluctance of Congress to deal with the complex issues in the recent
- revision of the copyright law.
-
- The reluctance of Americans to press for typeface copyright may have
- been influenced by a feeling that typeface plagiarism was good for U.S.
- high-tech businesses who were inventing new technologies for printing,
- and plagiarizing types of foreign origin (Europe and England). If the
- situation becomes reversed, and foreign competition (from Japan,
- Taiwan, and Korea) threatens to overcome American technological
- superiority in the laser printer industry, then American firms may do
- an about-face and seek the protection of typeface copyright to help
- protect the domestic printer industry. Such a trend may already be seen
- in the licensing of typeface trademarks by Adobe, Hewlett-Packard, IBM,
- Imagen, and Xerox in the U.S. laser printer industry.
-
- In Germany, where typeface design has always been a significant part of
- the cultural heritage, and where typefounding has remained an important
- business, there are more than one kind of copyright-like protections for
- typefaces. Certain long-standing industrial design protection laws have
- been used to protect typeface designs in litigation over royalties and
- plagiarisms. Further, there is a recent law, the so-called
- "Schriftzeichengesetz" enacted in 1981, that specifically protects
- typeface designs. New designs are registered, as is done with
- copyright in most countries. This law only protects new, original
- designs. It is available to non-German designers and firms. Therefore,
- some type firms and designers routinely copyright new designs in West
- Germany. This gives a degree of protection for products marketed in
- Germany. Since multinational corporations may find it cheaper to
- license a design for world-wide use rather than deal with a special case
- in one country, the German law does encourage licensing on a broader
- scale than would initially seem to be the case.
-
- France, like Germany, has ratified an international treaty for
- protection of typefaces. This 1973 Vienna treaty will become
- international law when four nations ratify it. So far, only France and
- West Germany have done so, and thus a design must be protected
- separately in each country. Even when the treaty becomes law, it will
- take effect only in those countries that have ratified it. The treaty
- was principally the work of the late Charles Peignot, a French
- typefounder, and John Dreyfus, an English typographer and typographic
- scholar. Presently, typefaces may be registered for protection in
- France under a 19th century industrial design protection law.
-
- In the U.S., there continues to be some movement for typeface design
- protection. A proposed bill that would protect the designs of useful
- articles, like type, has been in committee for a few years. It seems to
- be going nowhere.
-
- Digital (as opposed to analog) fonts may be protected by copyright of
- digital data and of computer programs. It has been established that
- computer software is copyrightable. Therefore, software that embodies a
- typeface, e.g. a digital font, is presumably also protected. There is
- some objection to this kind of copyright, on the grounds that the
- ultimate output of the program or the result of the data (i.e. a
- typeface design) is not copyrightable. However, the current belief
- expressed by the National Commission on New Technological Use of
- Copyrighted Works is that software is copyrightable even if its function
- is to produce ultimately a non-copyrightable work. Hence, typefaces
- produced by Metafont or PostScript(R), two computer languages which
- represent fonts as programs, are presumably copyrightable. Typefaces
- represented as bit-map data, run-length codes, spline outlines, and
- other digital data formats, may also be copyrightable. Some firms do
- copyright digital fonts as digital data. % The copyright office is
- currently reviewing %this practice to determine if it is acceptable.
-
- Note that the designs themselves are still not protected in the U.S. A
- plagiarist could print out large sized letters (say, one per page) on an
- Apple LaserWriter, using a copyrighted PostScript digital font, and then
- redigitize those letters by using a scanner or a font digitizing program
- and thus produce a new digital font without having copied the program or
- digital data, and thus without infringing the copyright on the font. The
- quality of the imitation font would usually be awful, but it wouldn't
- violate copyright. Of course, the plagiarist would usually need to
- rename the font to evade trademark infringement. [As I write these
- words, I have the guilty feeling that I have just provided a recipe for
- type rip-off, but others have obviously thought of just such a
- scheme--John Dvorak has even proposed something like it in one of his
- columns.]
-
- Design Patent
- .............
-
- The designs of typefaces may be patented in the U.S. under existing
- design patent law. Many designs are patented, but type designers
- generally don't like the patent process because it is slow, expensive,
- and uncertain. Nevertheless, some types do get patented, and it is a
- form of potential protection. Note that this is Design Patent--the
- typeface doesn't have to be a gizmo that does something, it merely has
- to be unlike any previous typeface. The drawback here is that most
- attorneys and judges are not aware that there are more than two or
- three typefaces: say, handwriting, printing, and maybe blackletter.
- Therefore, litigating against infringement is an educational as well as
- a legal process. It is easy to see that typeface theft is more subtle
- than knocking over a liquor store; it may not be illegal and the
- returns may be greater.
-
- Protections like design patent are available in many other countries,
- but there is not an international standard (to my knowledge) so the
- situation must be examined on a country by country basis.
-
- Invention Patent
- ................
-
- Methods of rendering typefaces can be patented as mechanical or
- electronic inventions. For example, the old hot-metal Linotype
- machinery was protected by various patents, as was the IBM Selectric
- typewriter and type ball. IBM neglected to trademark the typeface
- names like Courier and Prestige, so once the patents had lapsed, the
- names gradually fell into the public domain without IBM doing anything
- about it (at the time, and for a dozen years or so, IBM was distracted
- by a major U.S. anti-trust suit). Most students of the type protection
- field believe that those names are probably unprotectable by now,
- though IBM could still presumably make a try for it if sufficiently
- motivated.
-
- There is currently a noteworthy development regarding a patent for
- outline representation of digital type as arcs and vectors, with special
- hardware for decoding into rasters. This patent (U.S. 4,029,947, June
- 14, 1977; reissue 30,679, July 14, 1981) is usually called the Evans &
- Caswell patent, after its inventors. It was originally assigned to
- Rockwell, and in 1982, Rockwell sued Allied Linotype for infringement.
- Allied settled out of court, having paid an amount rumored to be in the
- millions. Rockwell sold the patent, along with other typographic
- technology, to Information International, Inc. (III), which then sued
- Compugraphic for infringement. According to the Seybold Report, a
- respected typographic industry journal, Compugraphic recently settled
- out of court for 5 million dollars. Although many experts believe the
- patent to be invalid because of several prior inventions similar in
- concept, it nevertheless seems to be a money-maker in corporate
- litigation. The Seybold Report has speculated on which firms III would
- litigate against next. Among the candidates suggested by the Seybolds
- was Apple for its LaserWriter, which uses outline fonts. Since the
- entire laser printer industry and the typesetting industry is moving
- toward outline font representation, Apple is certainly not alone. The
- Seybolds further speculate on whether the difference between
- character-by-character CRT typesetting and raster-scan laser typesetting
- and printing would be legally significant in such a case. Ultimately,
- some firm will hold out for a court judgement, and the matter will be
- decided. %Although the Evans & Caswell patent doesn't have much to do
- with %typeface copyright per se, it does make many font vendors nervous.
-
- Trade Secret
- ............
-
- Given that typeface designs have relatively little copyright protection
- in the U.S., they are often handled as trade secrets. The secret must
- apply to the digital data or programs only, because the images
- themselves are ultimately revealed to the public as printed forms. It
- is much more difficult to reconstruct the formula of Coca-Cola from its
- taste than it is to reconstruct the design of Helvetica from its look
- on the page. The exact bitmap or spline outline of a digital font is
- usually not reconstructable from the printed image, although CRT screen
- fonts at usual resolutions (60-120 dots per inch) may be reconstructed
- by patient counting and mapping of bits off a screen display. Typeface
- licenses often contain stipulations that the digital data will be
- encrypted and confidential. Just as a firm will protect the secret of
- a soft drink recipe, so a type firm will protect the exact nature of
- its digital data.
-
- Ethics
- ......
-
- Some typographers are motivated by higher principles than greed,
- profit, expediency, and personal interest. Idealists afflicted with
- concepts of ethical behavior and a vision of typography as a noble art
- may find it distasteful to use plagiarized types. Some graphic
- designers insist on using typefaces with bona-fide trademarks, both to
- ensure that the type will be of high quality, and to encourage
- creativity and ethics in the profession. A consequence of plagiarism
- that is sometimes overlooked is a general erosion of ethics in an
- industry. If it is okay to steal typeface designs, then it may be okay
- to purloin other kinds of data, to falsify one's resume, to
- misrepresent a product, and so forth. Most professional design
- organizations attempt to promote ethical standards of professional
- behavior, and personal standards may extend to avoidance of plagiarism.
-
- The Association Typographique Internationale (ATypI) is an international
- organization of type designers, type manufacturers, and letterform
- educators. Its purpose is to promote ethical behavior in the industry,
- advancement of typographic education, communication among designers, and
- other lofty aims. Members of ATypI agree to abide by a moral code that
- restricts plagiarism and other forms of depraved behavior (pertaining to
- typography). These are noble goals, but some members (especially
- corporate members) of ATypI, confronted with the pressures and
- opportunities of commercial reality, nevertheless plagiarize typefaces
- of fellow members, the moral code notwithstanding. Since ATypI is a
- voluntary organization, there is very little that can be done about
- most such plagiarism. Some years back, a world-famous type designer
- resigned %the noted type designer Hermann Zapf from the ATypI Board of
- Directors in protest over the organization's flaccid attitude toward
- plagiarists among its ranks. He has since agreed to sit on the board
- again, but criticism of the organization's inability to prevent type
- rip-offs by its own members, not to mention by non-members, continues
- to be heard. Moderates in ATypI believe that a few morals are better
- than none. It is not clear whether their philosophical stance derives
- from Plato, Hobbes, or Rousseau.
-
- Given the general attitude of users toward copyrighted video and
- software, it is doubtful that ethical considerations will hinder most
- end-users' attitude to plagiarized type fonts. A desire to have the
- fashionable "label" or trademark may be a greater motivation toward the
- use of bona-fide fonts than an ethical consideration.
-
- Further reading
- ---------------
-
- "The State of the Art in Typeface Design Protection", Edward Gottschall,
- Visible Language, Vol. XIX, No. 1, 1985 (a special issue on "The
- Computer and the Hand in Type Design"--proceedings of a conference held
- at Stanford University in August, 1983).
-
- Der Schutz Typographischer Schriftzeichen, by Guenter Kelbel. Carl
- Heymans Verlag KG, Cologne, 1984. (A learned account, in juridical
- German prose, of the significance of the Vienna Treaty of 1973 and the
- West German Schriftzeichengesetz of 1981.)
-
- Disclaimer
- ----------
-
- These notes were originally prepared at the request of Brian Reid, for
- informal distribution. They are based on the author's review of
- available literature on the subject of typeface protection, and on
- personal experience in registering types for trademark, copyright, and
- patent. However, they are %While they result from careful research, no
- claim is made for accuracy; not legal advice. If one is contemplating
- protecting or plagiarizing a typeface, and seeks legal opinion, it is
- advisable to consult an attorney. The term "plagiarize" (and words
- derived from it) is used here in its dictionary sense of "to take and
- use as one's own the ideas of another" and does not mean that the
- practice of typeface plagiarism is illegal, as that is determined by
- the laws of a particular country.
-
- The author is a professor of digital typography as well as a
- professional designer of original digital typefaces for electronic
- printers and computer workstations. He therefore has an obvious bias
- toward the inculcation of ethical standards and the legal protection of
- artistic property. Other commentators might have a different
- perspective.
-
- Subject: 1.14. File Formats
-
- Many different kinds of files are available on the net. These files
- contain many different kinds of data for many different architectures.
- Frequently, the extension (trailing end) of a filename gives a good
- clue as to the format of its contents and the architecture that it was
- created on.
-
- In order to save space, most files on the net are compressed in one way
- or another. Many compression/decompression programs exist on multiple
- architectures.
-
- Multiple files and directories are often combined into a single
- `archive' file. Many archive formats perform compression automatically.
-
- File Format Extensions
- ======================
-
- * .tar
-
- Unix `tape archive' format. Tar files can contain multiple files
- and directories. Unlike most archiving programs, tar files are
- held together in a wrapper but are not automatically compressed by
- tar.
-
- * .Z
-
- Unix `compress' format. Compression doesn't form a wrapper around
- multiple files, it simply compresses a single file. As a result,
- you will frequently see files with the extension .tar.Z. This
- implies that the files are compressed tar archives.
-
- * .z .gz
-
- GNU zip format. GNU zip doesn't form a wrapper around multiple
- files, it simply compresses a single file. As a result, you will
- frequently see files with the extension .tar.z or .tar.gz. This
- implies that the files are compressed tar archives. Do not confuse
- GNU Zip and PKZip or GNU Zip and Unix compress, those are three
- different programs!
-
- * .hqx
-
- Macintosh `BinHex' format. In order to reliably transfer Mac files
- from one architecture to another, they are BinHex encoded. This
- is actually an ascii file containing mostly hexadecimal digits.
- It is neither a compression program nor an archive format.
-
- * .sit
-
- Macintosh `Stuffit' archive.
-
- * .cpt
-
- Macintosh `Compactor' archive.
-
- Like the .tar.Z format that is common among Unix archives,
- Macintosh archives frequently have the extensions .sit.hqx or
- .cpt.hqx indicating a BinHex'ed archive.
-
- * .arc
-
- PC `arc' archive. This is an older standard (in PC terms, at
- least) and has gone out of fashion.
-
- * .zip
-
- PC `zip' archive. This is the most common PC archive format today.
-
- * .arj
-
- PC `arj' archive.
-
- * .zoo
-
- PC `zoo' archive
-
- * .lzh
-
- PC `lha/lharc' archive.
-
- * .uue
-
- `UUencoding' format. In order to reliably transfer binary data
- across architectures (or through email), they are frequently
- uuencoded. This is actually an ascii file. It is neither a
- compression program nor an archive format.
-
- Font Formats
- ============
-
- Just as the are many, many archive formats, there are many different
- font formats. The characteristics of some of these formats are
- discussed below. Once again, the file extension may help you to
- determine the font type. (On the Mac, the resource TYPE field is
- (probably) a better indicator).
-
- * PostScript Type 1 Fonts:
-
- Postscript Type 1 fonts (Also called ATM (Adobe Type Manager)
- fonts, Type 1, and outline fonts) contains information, in outline
- form, that allows a postscript printer, or ATM to generate fonts
- of any size. Most also contain hinting information which allows
- fonts to be rendered more readable at lower resolutions and small
- type sizes.
-
- * PostScript Type 3 Fonts:
-
- Postscript type 3 fonts are an old outline font format that is not
- compatible with ATM. Most developers have stopped using this
- format except in a few special cases, where special type 3
- characteristics (pattern fills inside outlines, for example) have
- been used.
-
- * TrueType Fonts:
-
- Truetype fonts are a new font format developed by Microsoft with
- Apple. The rendering engine for this font is built into system 7
- and an init, the Truetype init, is available for system 6 (freeware
- from Apple). It is also built into MS Windows v3.1. Like
- PostScript Type 1 and Type 3 fonts, it is also an outline font
- format that allows both the screen, and printers, to scale fonts to
- display them in any size.
-
- * Bitmap Fonts:
-
- Bitmap fonts contain bitmaps of fonts in them. This a picture of
- the font at a specific size that has been optimized to look good
- at that size. It cannot be scaled bigger without making it look
- horrendously ugly. On the Macintosh, bitmap fonts also contain
- the kerning information for a font and must be installed with both
- type 1 and type 3 fonts. Their presence also speeds the display
- of commonly used font sizes.
-
- Font Format Extensions
- ======================
-
- * .afm
-
- Adobe Type 1 metric information in `ascii' format (human parsable)
-
- * .bco
-
- Bitstream compressed outline
-
- * .bdf
-
- Adobe's Bitmap Distribution Format. This format can be converted
- to the platform specific binary files required by the local X
- Windows server. This is a bitmap font format distributed in ASCII.
-
- * .bez
-
- Bezier outline information
-
- * .cfn
-
- Calamus Font Notation. Vector font format, without hinting, but
- with greater accuracy when compared to Type 1 fonts. Used by a.o.
- Calamus (Atari, Windows NT), a DTP program with Soft RIP.
-
- * .chr
-
- Borland stroked font file
-
- * .ff, .f3b, .fb
-
- Sun formats. More info when I know more...
-
- * .fli
-
- Font libraries produced by emTeX fontlib program. Used by emTeX
- drivers and newer versions of dvips.
-
- * .fnt
-
- Bitmapped GEM font in either Motorola or Intel format.
-
- * .fot
-
- MS-Windows TrueType format fonts
-
- * .gf
-
- Generic font (the output of TeX's MetaFont program (possibly
- others?))
-
- * .mf
-
- TeX MetaFont font file (text file of MetaFont commands)
-
- * .pfa
-
- Adobe Type 1 Postscript font in ASCII format (PC/Unix) I believe
- that this format is suitable for directly downloading to your
- PostScript printer (someone correct me if I'm wrong ;-)
-
- * .pfb
-
- Adobe Type 1 PostScript font in "binary`' format (PC/Unix) Note:
- this format is not suitable for downloading directly to your
- PostScript printer. There are utilities for conversion between
- PFB and PFA (see the utilities section of the FAQ).
-
- * .pfm
-
- Printer font metric information in Windows format
-
- * .pk
-
- TeX packed bitmap font file (also seen as .###pk where ### is a
- number)
-
- * .pl
-
- TeX `property list' file (a human readable version of .tfm)
-
- * .ps
-
- Frequently, any PostScript file. With respect to fonts, probably
- a Type3 font. This designation is much less `standard' than the
- others. Other non-standard extensions are .pso, .fon, and .psf
- (they are a mixture of type 1 and type 3 fonts).
-
- * .pxl
-
- TeX pixel bitmap font file (obsolete, replaced by .pk)
-
- * .sfl
-
- LaserJet bitmapped softfont, landscape orientation
-
- * .sfp
-
- LaserJet bitmapped softfont, portrait orientation
-
- * .sfs
-
- LaserJet scalable softfont
-
- * .spd
-
- Vector font in Speedo format.
-
- * .tdf
-
- Vector font type definitions for Speedo fonts.
-
- * .tfm
-
- TeX font metric file. Also an HP Tagged Font Metric file.
-
- * .vf
-
- TeX virtual font which allows building of composite fonts (a
- character can be composed of any sequence of movements, characters
- (possibly from multiple fonts) rules and TeX specials)
-
- * .vpl
-
- TeX `property list' (human readable) format of a .vf
-
- Subject: 1.15. Ligatures
-
- A ligature occurs where two or more letterforms are written or printed
- as a unit. Generally, ligatures replace characters that occur next to
- each other when they share common components. Ligatures are a subset
- of a more general class of figures called "contextual forms."
- Contextual forms describe the case where the particular shape of a
- letter depends on its context (surrounding letters, whether or not it's
- at the end of a line, etc.).
-
- One of the most common ligatures is "fi". Since the dot above a
- lowercase 'I' interferes with the loop on the lowercase 'F', when 'f'
- and 'i' are printed next to each other, they are combined into a single
- figure with the dot absorbed into the 'f'.
-
- An example of a more general contextual form is the greek lowercase
- sigma. When typesetting greek, the selection of which 'sigma' to use
- is determined by whether or not the letter occurs at the end of the
- word (i.e., the final position in the word).
-
- * Amanda Walker provides the following discussion of ligatures:
-
- Ligatures were originally used by medieval scribes to conserve
- space and increase writing speed. A 14th century manuscript, for
- example, will include hundreds of ligatures (this is also where
- "accents" came from). Early typefaces used ligatures in order to
- emulate the appearance of hand-lettered manuscripts. As
- typesetting became more automated, most of these ligatures fell
- out of common use. It is only recently that computer based
- typesetting has encouraged people to start using them again
- (although 'fine art' printers have used them all along).
- Generally, ligatures work best in typefaces which are derived from
- calligraphic letterforms. Also useful are contextual forms, such
- as swash capitals, terminal characters, and so on.
-
- A good example of a computer typeface with a rich set of ligatures
- is Adobe Caslon (including Adobe Caslon Expert). It includes:
-
- Upper case, lower case, small caps, lining numerals, oldstyle
- numerals, vulgar fractions, superior and inferior numerals, swash
- italic caps, ornaments, long s, and the following ligatures:
-
- ff fi fl ffi ffl Rp ct st Sh Si Sl SS St (where S=long s)
-
- [Ed: Another common example is the Computer Modern Roman typeface
- that is provided with TeX. this family of fonts include the ff,
- fi, fl, ffi, and ffl ligatures which TeX automatically uses when
- it finds these letters juxtaposed in the text.]
-
- While there are a large number number of possible ligatures,
- generally only the most common ones are actually provided. In
- part, this is because the presence of too many alternate forms
- starts reducing legibility. A case in point is Luxeuil Miniscule,
- a highly-ligatured medieval document hand which is completely
- illegible to the untrained eye (and none too legible to the
- trained eye, either :)).
-
- * Don Hosek offers the following insight into ligatures:
-
- Ligatures were used in lead type, originally in imitation of
- calligraphic actions (particularly in Greek which retained an
- excessive number of ligatures in printed material as late as the
- 19th century), but as typefaces developed, ligatures were retained
- to improve the appearance of certain letter combinations. In some
- cases, it was used to allow certain letter combinations to be more
- closely spaced (e.g., "To" or "Vo") and were referred to as
- "logotypes". In other cases, the designs of two letters were merged
- to keep the overall spacing of words uniform. Ligatures are
- provided in most contemporary fonts for exactly this reason.
-
- * Liam Quin makes the following observations:
-
- The term ligature should only be used to describe joined letters in
- printing, not letters that overlap in manuscripts.
-
- Many (not all) accents came from the practice of using a tilde or
- other mark to represent an omitted letter, so that for example the
- Latin word `Dominus' would be written dns, with a tilde or bar over
- the n. This is an abbreviation, not a ligature.
-
- Most ligatures vanished during the 15th and 16th Centuries. It was
- simply too much work to use them, and it increased the price of
- book production too much.
-
- [Ed: there is no "complete" set of ligatures.]
-
- Subject: 1.16. Built-in Fonts
-
- * PostScript printers (and Adobe Type Manager) with 13 fonts have:
-
- Courier, Courier-Bold, Courier-BoldOblique, Courier-Oblique,
- Helvetica, Helvetica-Bold, Helvetica-BoldOblique,
- Helvetica-Oblique, Symbol, Times-Bold, Times-BoldItalic,
- Times-Italic, Times-Roman
-
- * Postscript printers with 17 fonts have:
-
- Courier, Courier-Bold, Courier-BoldOblique, Courier-Oblique,
- Helvetica, Helvetica-Bold, Helvetica-BoldOblique, Helvetica-Narrow,
- Helvetica-Narrow-Bold, Helvetica-Narrow-BoldOblique,
- Helvetica-Narrow-Oblique, Helvetica-Oblique, Symbol, Times-Bold,
- Times-BoldItalic, Times-Italic, Times-Roman
-
- * Postscript printers with 35 fonts have:
-
- All of the above, plus the following:
-
- ZapfChancery-MediumItalic, ZapfDingbats, AvantGarde-Book,
- AvantGarde-BookOblique, AvantGarde-Demi, AvantGarde-DemiOblique,
- Bookman-Demi, Bookman-DemiItalic, Bookman-Light,
- Bookman-LightItalic, NewCenturySchlbk-Bold,
- NewCenturySchlbk-BoldItalic, NewCenturySchlbk-Italic,
- NewCenturySchlbk-Roman, Palatino-Bold, Palatino-BoldItalic,
- Palatino-Italic, Palatino-Roman
-
- * HP LaserJet printers (II, IIP)
-
- Courier 10, Courier 12, LinePrinter 16.66, ...
-
- * HP LaserJet printers (III, IIIP)
-
- All of the above, plus the following:
-
- Scalable Times Roman and Scalable Univers using Compugraphic's
- Intellifont hinted font format.
-
- * HP LaserJet IV printers
-
- All of the above, plus the following scalable (Intellifont) faces:
-
- Courier, Courier Bold, Courier Italic, Courier Bold Italic, CG
- Times, CG Times Bold, CG Times Italic, CG Times Bold Italic CG
- Omega, CG Omega Bold, CG Omega Italic, CG Omega Bold Italic
- Coronet, Clarendon Condensed Univers Medium, Univers Bold, Univers
- Medium Italic, Univers Bold Italic Univers Medium Condensed,
- Univers Bold Condensed, Univers Medium Condensed Italic, Univers
- Bold Condensed Italic Antique Olive, Antique Olive Bold, Antique
- Olive Italic Garamond Antiqua, Garamond Halbfett, Garamond Kursiv,
- Garamond Kursiv Halbfett Marigold, Albertus Medium, Albertus Extra
- Bold Arial, Arial Bold, Arial Italic, Arial Bold Italic Times New,
- Times New Bold, Times New Italic, Times New Bold Italic Symbol,
- Wingdings, Letter Gothic, Letter Gothic Bold, Letter Gothic Italic
-
- * SPARCPrinters
-
- The basic 35 fonts plus four scaled faces of each of Bembo, Gill
- Sans, Rockwell, Lucida, Lucida Bright, Sans and Typewriter, giving
- a total of 57 fonts, all in the F3 format.
-
- This is Info file comp.fonts.faq.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from
- the input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Subject: 1.17. Glossary
-
- [ I ripped this right out of the manual I wrote for Sfware. If you have
- comments, improvements, suggestions, please tell me... ]
-
- anti-aliasing
- [ed: this is an 'off-the-cuff' definition, feel free to clarify it
- for me ;-) ]
-
- On low-resolution bitmap devices (where ragged, ugly characters
- are the norm) which support more than two colors, it is possible
- to provide the appearance of higher resolution with anti-aliasing.
- Anti-aliasing uses shaded pixels around the edges of the bitmap
- to give the appearance of partial-pixels which improves the
- apparent resolution.
-
- baseline
- The baseline is an imaginary line upon which each character rests.
- Characters that appear next to each other are (usually) lined up so
- that their baselines are on the same level. Some characters extend
- below the baseline ("g" and "j", for example) but most rest on it.
-
- bitmap
- A bitmap is an array of dots. If you imagine a sheet of graph paper
- with some squares colored in, a bitmap is a compact way of
- representing to the computer which squares are colored and which
- are not.
-
- In a bitmapped font, every character is represented as a pattern of
- dots in a bitmap. The dots are so small (300 or more dots-per-inch,
- usually) that they are indistinguishable on the printed page.
-
- character
- (1) The smallest component of written language that has semantic
- value. Character refers to the abstract idea, rather than a
- specific shape (see also glyph), though in code tables some form
- of visual representation is essential for the reader's
- understanding. (2) The basic unit of encoding for the Unicode
- character encoding, 16 bits of information. (3) Synonym for "code
- element". (4) The English name for the ideographic written
- elements of Chinese origin.
-
- download
- Downloading is the process of transferring information from one
- device to another. This transferral is called downloading when the
- transfer flows from a device of (relatively) more power to one of
- (relatively) less power. Sending new fonts to your printer so that
- it "learns" how to print characters in that font is called
- downloading.
-
- font
- A particular collection of characters of a typeface with unique
- parameters in the 'Variation vector', a particular instance of
- values for orientation, size, posture, weight, etc., values. The
- word font or fount is derived from the word foundry, where,
- originally, type was cast. It has come to mean the vehicle which
- holds the typeface character collection. A font can be metal,
- photographic film, or electronic media (cartridge, tape, disk).
-
- glyph
- (1) The actual shape (bit pattern, outline) of a character image.
- For example, an italic 'a' and a roman 'a' are two different glyphs
- representing the same underlying character. In this strict sense,
- any two images which differ in shape constitute different glyphs.
- In this usage, "glyph" is a synonym for "character image", or
- simply "image". (2) A kind of idealized surface form derived from
- some combination of underlying characters in some specific
- context, rather than an actual character image. In this broad
- usage, two images would constitute the same glyph whenever they
- have essentially the same topology (as in oblique 'a' and roman
- 'a'), but different glyphs when one is written with a hooked top
- and the other without (the way one prints an 'a' by hand). In
- this usage, "glyph" is a synonym for "glyph type," where glyph is
- defined as in sense 1.
-
- hints
- When a character is described in outline format the outline has
- unlimited resolution. If you make it ten times as big, it is just
- as accurate as if it were ten times as small.
-
- However, to be of use, we must transfer the character outline to a
- sheet of paper through a device called a raster image processor
- (RIP). The RIP builds the image of the character out of lots of
- little squares called picture elements (pixels).
-
- The problem is, a pixel has physical size and can be printed only
- as either black or white. Look at a sheet of graph paper. Rows and
- columns of little squares (think: pixels). Draw a large `O' in the
- middle of the graph paper. Darken in all the squares touched by the
- O. Do the darkened squares form a letter that looks like the O you
- drew? This is the problem with low resolution (300 dpi). Which
- pixels do you turn on and which do you leave off to most accurately
- reproduce the character?
-
- All methods of hinting strive to fit (map) the outline of a
- character onto the pixel grid and produce the most
- pleasing/recognizable character no matter how coarse the grid is.
-
- kerning
- (noun): That portion of a letter which extends beyond its width,
- that is, the letter shapes that overhang - the projection of a
- character beyond its sidebearings.
-
- (verb): To adjust the intercharacter spacing in character groups
- (words) to improve their appearance. Some letter combinations
- ("AV" and "To", for example) appear farther apart than others
- because of the shapes of the individual letters.
-
- Many sophisticated word processors move these letter combinations
- closer together automatically.
-
- outline font/format
- See 'scalable font'
-
- point
- The (more or less) original point system (Didot) did have exactly
- 72 points to the inch. The catch is that it was the French
- imperial inch, somewhat longer than the English inch, and it went
- away in the French revolution. What most people now think of as
- points were established by the United States Typefounders
- Association in 1886. This measure was a matter of convenience for
- the members of the Association, who didn't want to retool any more
- than they had to, so it had no relationship to the inch. By that
- date, people realized that the inch was an archaic measure anyway;
- the point was set to be 1/12 of a pica, and an 83-pica distance
- was made equal to 35 centimeters. (Talk about arbitrary!)
-
- Thus the measure of 72.27/in. is just an approximation. Of course,
- when PostScript was being written, it was necessary to fit into an
- inch-measured world. For the sake of simplicity PostScript defined
- a point as exactly 1/72". With the prevalance of DTP, the
- simplified point has replaced the older American point in many
- uses. Personally, I don't see that it matters one way or the
- other; all that counts is that there's a commonly-understood unit
- of measurement that allows you to get the size you think you want.
- That is, after all, the point ;)
-
- scalable font
- A scalable font, unlike a bitmapped font, is defined mathematically
- and can be rendered at any requested size (within reason).
-
- softfont
- A softfont is a bitmapped or scalable description of a typeface or
- font. They can be downloaded to your printer and used just like
- any other printer font. Unlike built-in and cartridge fonts,
- softfonts use memory inside your printer. Downloading a lot of
- softfonts may reduce the printers ability to construct complex
- pages.
-
- symbol set
- The symbol set of a font describes the relative positions of
- individual characters within the font. Since there can only be 256
- characters in most fonts, and there are well over 256 different
- characters used in professional document preparation, there needs
- to be some way to map characters into positions within the font.
- The symbol set serves this purpose. It identifies the "map" used
- to position characters within the font.
-
- typeface
- The features by which a character's design is recognized, hence
- the word face. Within the Latin language group of graphic shapes
- are the following forms: Uncial, Blackletter, Serif, Sans Serif,
- Scripts, and Decorative. Each form characterizes one or more
- designs. Example: Serif form contains four designs called Old
- Style, Transitional, Modern, and Slab Serif designs. The typeface
- called Bodoni is a Modern design, while Times Roman is a
- Transitional design.
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: General Info (3/5)
- Supersedes: <font-faq-3_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:30:59 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 1157
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-3_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16990 comp.answers:9898 news.answers:34560
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part3
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 1.18. Bibliography
-
- Editors note: the following books have been suggested by readers of
- comp.fonts. They are listed in no particular order. I have lost the
- citations for some of the submissions. If you wrote a review that
- appears below and you aren't credited, please let norm know.
-
- I have decided that this is the best section for pointers to other font
- resources (specs and other documents, for example). These appear after
- the traditional bibliographic entries. As usual I will happily accept
- entries for this section. As of 9/92, the only files listed are the
- TrueType font information files available from Microsoft.
-
- Bill Ricker contributed the following general notes:
-
- The Watson-Guptill, Godine, and Dover publishers all have many
- typography titles. Godine and Dover tend to be excellent; W-G tends
- toward 'how-to' books which are good for basics and juried Annuals of
- job work.
-
- Hermann Zapf and his Design Philosophy, Society of Typographic Arts,
- Chicago, 1987.
-
- On Stone -- The Art and Use of Typography on the Personal Computer,
- Sumner Stone, Bedford Arts, 1991.
-
- Of the Just Shaping of Letters, Albrecht Durer, isbn 0-486-21306-4.
-
- First published in 1525 as part of his theoretical treatise on applied
- geometry, "The Art of Measurment".
-
- Champ Flevry, Geofroy Troy.
-
- First published in 1529 Troy attempts, in this book, to design an ideal
- Roman alphabet upon geometrical and aesthetic principles.
-
- The Alphabet & Elements of Lettering, Frederic W. Goudy, isbn
- 0-486-20792-7. Revised 1942 edition.
-
- This very interesting book looks at the history of letter shapes as
- well font design.
-
- The Mac is Not a Typewriter, Robin Williams, Peachpit Press.
-
- A good, clear explanation of what typography is, and how to get it from
- your computer. Mac-specific, but full of excellent general advice. I
- think there's also a PC version. Available at most computer bookstores
-
- Rhyme and Reason: A Typographic Novel, Erik Spiekermann, H. Berthold AG,
- ISBN 3-9800722-5-8.
-
- Printing Types (2 vols), Daniel Berkely Updike, Dover Press.
-
- Affordable edition of the most readable history of type, lots of
- illustrations.
-
- Notes: Both the Dover and Harvard U. P. editions were 2 volumes. The
- Dover editions were paperback and the Harvard hardback. It appears
- that the Dover edition is out of print. Collectible HUP editions are
- not cheap although later HUP editions may be had. Most libraries have
- later HUP and Dover editions. If someone knows of a source, please
- pass it along.
-
- The Art of Hand Lettering, Helm Wotzkow, Dover Press, reprint from 1952.
-
- Looking Good In Print, Roger C. Parker, Ventana Press, ISBN:
- 0-940087-32-4.
-
- Well, as a beginner's book, [it] isn't bad. I can't say that I agree
- with the author's tastes all the time, but he at least gives some good
- examples. Also there are some nice _Publish_-style makeovers. Don
- Hosek <dhosek@ymir.claremont.edu>
-
- Book Design: A Practical Introduction, Douglas Martin, Van Nostrand
- Reinhold, New York: 1989. 206pp.
-
- Along with Jan White's book (see below), this provides a fairly
- complete guide to book design. Martin's book is somewhat more
- conservative in outlook and also reflects his UK background. Don Hosek
- <dhosek@ymir.claremont.edu>
-
- Digital Typography: An Introduction to Type and Composition for Computer
- System Design, Richard Rubinstein, Addison-Wesley, Reading,
- Massachusetts: 1988. 340pp.
-
- An interesting, technological approach to typography which is worth
- reading although not necessarily always worth believing. A not
- insubstantial portion of the text is dedicated to representing type on
- a CRT display and Rubinstein devotes some time to expressing
- characteristics of typography numerically. Don Hosek
- <dhosek@ymir.claremont.edu>
-
- Graphic Design for the Electronic Age, Jan V. White, Watson-Guptill
- Publications, New York: 1988. 212pp.
-
- A good handbook for document design. In a well-organized approach,
- White covers the principles for laying out most of the typographics
- features of a technical document. White is a bit overeager to embrace
- sans-serif types and in places his layout ideas seem a bit garish, but
- it's still a quite worthwhile book. Don Hosek
- <dhosek@ymir.claremont.edu>
-
- Xerox Publishing Standards: A Manual of Style and Design, Watson-Guptill
- Publications, New York: 1988. 400pp.
-
- Overall, a disappointing book. It is divided into four sections of
- widely varying intent: "Publishing Process," "Document Organization,"
- "Writing and Style" and "Visual Design." None of them is really
- adequate for the task and all are highly centered on the Xerox method
- for publishing. As a guide to Xerox' process, it succeeds, but as a
- manual for general use, it falls far short. In print. Don Hosek
- <dhosek@ymir.claremont.edu>
-
- Methods of Book Design (3rd edition), Hugh Williamson, Yale University
- Press, New Haven: 1983. 408pp.
-
- It is a bit out-of-date as regards technology, but on issues relating
- purely to design it is comprehensive and definitive. Well, I suppose
- it could be argued that printing technology influences design - e.g.
- some types look fine in metal but lousy in digital imagesetting - and
- therefore a book that is out-of-date in technology can't really be
- "definitive" in matters of design either. In any event, _Methods_ is
- more than adequate for a beginner's needs. My paper-bound copy (ISBN
- 0-300-03035-5) was \$13.95; cheap at twice the price! Cameron Smith
- <cameron@symcom.math.uiuc.edu>
-
- The Thames & Hudson Manual of typography, Rauri McLean, Thames & Hudson
-
- An excellent book if you start getting more interested in type. Look
- for Rauri McLean's other books after this one... Liam R.E. Quin
- <lee@sq.com>
-
- Typography and Why it matters, Fernand Baudin.
-
- There is no better introduction than [it]. It's not a primer on
- subjects such as "what does Avant Garde look like," or "This is a good
- font for books." It is a good primer on the things you need to know
- before the rest should be considered. He's a lovely writer, to boot.
-
- [My copy is at work, so I may have munged the title-look up Baudin in
- "Books in Print" and improvise :-)]
-
- Ari Davidow <ari@netcom.com>
-
- Better Type, Betty Binns
-
- It's definitely not a lightweight beginner's introduction, but I've
- found [it] to be indispensable. It's a large-format hardcover, but you
- can find it remaindered for cheap if you look around. The book goes
- into great detail about how factors like line spacing, line length,
- point size, and design of typeface (evenness of stroke weight,
- x-height, etc.) affect readability. When you've gotten the basics out
- of the way and want to learn more about the fine nuances of type color,
- this book is an absolute must. David Mandl <dmandl@bilbo.shearson.com>
-
- Printing Types: An Introduction..., S. Lawson, (revised) 1990
-
- I'd also recommend Alexander S. Lawson's books especially /Printing
- Types: An Intro.../ (revised), 1990, which includes electronic types
- now. Bill Ricker <wdr@world.std.com>
-
- Twentieth Century Type Designers, Sebastian Carter, 1987.
-
- Discusses adaptaters of old faces to machine caster and film/laser, as
- well as new works. Bill Ricker <wdr@world.std.com>
-
- Tally of Types, Stanley Morrison, Cambridge University Press.
-
- A keepsake for CUP on the Monotype fonts he'd acquired for them when he
- was Type Advisor to both Brit.Monotype & CUP (Cambridge University
- Press, Cambs.UK), which discusses his hindsight on some of the great
- revival fonts and some of the better new fonts. Bill Ricker
- <wdr@world.std.com>
-
- Chicago Manual of Style, University of Chicago Press, 1982;
- ISBN 0-226-10390-0.
-
- The chapter on Design and Typography is most directly relevant, but
- there are a lot of hints scattered all through the Chicago Manual on
- making your words more readable and your pages more attractive. Stan
- Brown <brown@ncoast.org>
-
- X Window System Administrator's Guide (O'Reilly X Window System Guides,
- volume 8), O'Reilly
-
- It gives advice about setting up fonts, etc. Liam Quin <lee@sq.com>
-
- How Bodoni intended his types to look Bodoni, Giambattista. Fregi e
- Majuscole Incise e Fuse de ... Bodoni, Harvard University Library
- (repr).
-
- Inexpensive collectible, reproduced as a keepsake by the Houghton
- Library at Harvard. [wdr]
-
- The Elements of Typographic Style, Robert Bringhurst, Hartley & Marks
- 0-88179-033-8 pbk \$15, Z246.B74 1992 0-88179-110-5 cloth, \$25.
-
- A typography for desktop publishers who want to absorb some style.
- Informed by the historical european tradition and the desktop
- advertising, tempered by oriental yin-yang and examples. A page-turner
- with repeat-read depth.
-
- The only book I've seen that discusses page proportions that admits
- there are more than three ways that describes how to find one that
- feels good for your page. [wdr]
-
- Hermann Zapf on the cover-blurb: "All desktop typographers should study
- this book. ... I wish to see this book become the Typographers' Bible."
-
- Printing It, Clifford Burke, Ballantine, 0-345-02694-2.
-
- Manual for the hobby letterpress printer. [wdr]
-
- Twentieth Century Type Designers, Sebastian Carter, Taplinger, 1987.
-
- Discusses the talented adaptators of old faces to machine caster and
- film/laser, as well as the designers of new works. Indexed? [wdr]
-
- Design with Type, Carl Dair, University of Toronto Press, 0-8020-1426-7.
-
- In print again (or still?); the ISBN above may be stale.
-
- A great introduction to the issues of practicality and taste that
- confront the users of type. A prized possession. I only regret that the
- book does not include among the excerpts from his Westvaco pamphlets
- the Seven Don'ts of Typography. [wdr]
-
- Typography 6: The Annual of the Type Directors Club, Susan Davis, ed.,
- Watson-Guptill, 0-8230-5540-x.
-
- Specimens of Type Faces in the U.S. G.P.O., John J. Deviny, director.,
- US G.P.O.
-
- Practice of Typography: Plain Printing Types, Theodore Low De Vinne,
- Century Co./DeVinne Press.
-
- One of the earlier critical studies, in four volumes of which this is
- my personal favorite, and still a classic reference. If one wants to
- understand 18th and 19th century typography in context, this writer
- lived the transition from eclectic to standard sizes, and comments
- with taste. [wdr]
-
- An Essay on Typography, Eric Gill, Godine, 0-87923-762-7.
-
- The Alphabet and Elements of Lettering, Frederic W. Goudy, Dorset Press
- (Marboro Books), 0-88029-330-6
-
- Lovely. A wonderful way to learn Goudy's taste.
-
- Stanley Morison Displayed, Herbert Jones, Frederick Muller Ltd / W,
- 0-584-10352-2.
-
- Lovely. A wonderful way to learn Morrison's taste.
-
- Printing Types: An Introduction..., Alexander S. Lawson et. al., Beacon
- 1971,?Godine? 1990; (2nd Ed includes electronic types now)
-
- "Good introduction to comparisons of typefaces, with a detailed history
- and a key family or face of each general category. Denounces rigid
- indexes of type faces." [wdr]
-
- Anatomy of a Typeface, Alexander Lawson, Godine, 0-87923-333-8,
- Z250.L34 1990
-
- Deep description of the authors' favorite exemplar and its influences
- and relatives in each type category. It follows, without explicating,
- the category system developed in the prior book. [wdr]
-
- Types of Typefacs and how to recognize them, J. Ben Lieberman,
- Sterling, 1968
-
- "This isn't very good really, but it does give lots of examples of the
- main categories." [Liam] [Old bibliographies praised this one, but I
- haven't seen it so I can't comment.- wdr]
-
- Tally of Types (& other titles), Stanley Morrison, Cambridge U. Press.
-
- A keepsake for CUP on the Monotype fonts he'd acquired for them when he
- was Type Advisor to both Brit. Monotype & CUP (Cambridge University
- Press, Cambs.UK), which discusses his hindsight on some of the great
- revival fonts and some of the better new fonts. [wdr]
-
- Rookledge's International Type Finder 2nd, Perfect, Christopher and
- Gordon Rookledge, Ed Moyer Bell Ltd / Rizzoli, 1-55921-052-4,
- Z250.P42 [1st Ed was NY: Beil 1983]
-
- "Lg. trade pb. Indexed by stylistic & characteristic features. Shows
- A-Z, a-z, 0-9 in primary figures, whether lining or ranging.
- Particularly distinctive sorts are marked for ease of comparison.
- Separate tables collect the distinctive characters for assistance in
- identifying a sample." [wdr]
-
- English Printers' Ornaments, Henry R. Plomer, Burt Franklin
-
- Paragraphs on Printing, Bruce Rogers, [Rudge] Dover, 0-486-23817-2
-
- Digital Typography: An Introduction to Type and Composition for
- Computer System Design, Richard Rubinstein, Addison-Wesley, Reading,
- Massachusetts: 1988. 340pp.
-
- For people who are disappointed with how the type looks on the laser,
- this book explains the subleties of that medium and of the screen that
- others miss. This is a study of the Human Factors of computer
- typographic systems. [wdr]
-
- The Case for Legibility, John Ryder, The Bodley Head, 0-370-30158-7,
- Z250.A4
-
- The Solotype Catalog of 4,147 Display typefaces, Dan X. Solo, Dover,
- 0-486-27169-2, Z250.5.D57S654 19
-
- "Working catalog of a specialty Graphics Arts shop. They use
- proprietary optical special effects techniques to get Desktop
- Publishing effects, and more, without the laser-printer grain. Great
- listing of 19th Century Decorated Types - probably the largest
- collection in the world. Prices to order headlines from them are NOT
- cheap however. Their services are for professional or serious hobby
- use only. Solo's previous Dover books show some number of complete
- alphabets of a general peculiar style; this one shows small fragments
- of his entire usable collection, important as an index. (According to
- private correspondence, they have more faces that have not yet been
- restored to usable condition.) Not well indexed, but indexed." [wdr]
-
- Stop Stealing Sheep & find out how type works, Erik Spiekermann & E.M.
- Ginger., Adobe Press, 1993
-
- Introductory, motivational. If you wonder why there are so many type
- faces in the world, this is the book for you! [Liam] [The title refers
- to the old joke: "A man who would letterspace lowercase would also
- steal sheep." [wdr]]
-
- The Art & Craft of Handmade Paper, Vance Studley, Dover, 0-486-26421-1,
- TS1109.S83 1990
-
- Letters of Credit, Walter Tracey, Godine Press
-
- "I can't recommend this too highly. It's not as introductory as the
- Sheep Book, but conveys a feeling of love and respect for the letter
- forms, and covers a lot of ground very, very well." [Liam]
-
- Printing Types: Their History, Forms & Use, Daniel Berkely Updike,
- Harvard University Press, reprint by Dover.
-
- The standard reference. Tour-de-force history of type and type-styles.
- A trifle conservative in its biases, but typography is conservative for
- good reason: readability. Check the addenda for his final words on
- newer faces. [wdr]
-
- 1. I believe the Dover edition to be 3 vols Pbk; both the collectable
- and later Harvard U.P. editions were two vols hbk.
-
- 2. I am informed by my bookseller & Books In Print that the Dover
- edition is out of print. *sigh* If a source be known, let me know.
- Collectible HUP eds are not cheap, although later HUP eds may be had.
- Most libararies have later HUP or Dover eds. [wdr]
-
- Modern Encyclopedia of Typefaces, 1960-90, Lawrence W. Wallis, Van
- Nostrand Reinhold, 0-442-30809-4, Z250.W238 1990
-
- "Gives examples of most typefaces, almost all digital, designed &
- distributed in the last 30 years. Cross indexed by foundry and
- designer, and sources and looks-likes. Some historical bits. Shows
- full a-z,A-Z,0-9, a few points (punctuation); and 0-9 again if both
- lining and oldstyle supplied. Only complaint is that it omits small
- caps even from what few fonts have 'em and the accented characters, of
- which most have some but too few. List \$25." [wdr]
-
- About Alphabets: Some Marginal Notes on Type Design, Hermann Zapf, MIT
- Press, 0-262-74003-6
-
- Hermann Zapf & His Design Philosophy, Hermann Zapf, Society of
- Typographic Arts, Chicago
-
- "Anything about, by, or vaguely connected with Hermann Zapf is probably
- worth reading several times :-)" [Liam]
-
- Manuale Typographicum, Hermann Zapf, MIT Press, 0-262-74004-4
-
- There are two books of this title (portrait and landscape); this is
- the only mass-market edition of either. Both are Zapf's selections of
- interesting typographical quotations in his inimitable display
- typography. [wdr]
-
- Microsoft Windows 3.1 Programmer's Reference, Microsoft Press.
-
- Documents the Panose system of typeface classification. Probably
- contains a general discussion of TrueType under MS Windows 3.1.
-
- Introduction to Typography, 3rd ed, Faber, London, 1962.
-
- A very good introduction for any beginner. Also discusses things like
- illustrations and cover design, although not in great detail.
-
- Simon was a purist, as the editor of the 3rd edition remarks. He did
- not mention phototypesetting in his original edition, but some
- observations on its uses and abuses have since been added. Anders
- Thulin <ath@linkoping.trab.se>
-
- [ed: additional bibliographic information appears in the file
- "Additional-bibliography" on jasper.ora.com:/comp.fonts. I have not
- yet had time to integrate this bibliographic information into the FAQ]
-
- Subject: 1.19. Font Encoding Standards
-
- What is a character set?
- ========================
-
- A character set is a collection of symbols in a specific order. Some
- common character sets are ASCII and ISO Latin 1.
-
- What is an encoding vector?
- ===========================
-
- The term "encoding vector" is most frequently heard in the context of
- PostScript fonts. An encoding vector embodies a particular character
- set, it is simply the list of all the characters in the character set
- in the order in which they occur.
-
- Most font technologies limit a particular encoding to 256 characters;
- an Adobe Type 1 font, for example, may contain an arbitrary number of
- characters, but no single encoding vector can contain more than 256.
-
- Some common encodings are:
-
- * Adobe Standard Encoding - the default encoding of many PS Type1
- fonts
-
- * Apple Standard Encoding - the default encoding on a Mac
-
- * US ASCII - seven bit ASCII
-
- * ISO Latin-1 - an eight bit multi-national character
- set encoding
-
- * Cork Encoding - the TeX community's eight bit standard
-
- * FC - an eight bit encoding for African
- languages
-
- * TeX text - the TeX community's seven bit defacto
- standard (CMR)
-
- Where can I get them?
- =====================
-
- You can get tables showing the layout of many standard character sets
- from the Kermit distribution (via anonymous ftp from
- watsun.cc.columbia.edu in /kermit/charsets.
-
- Subject: 1.20. PostScript
-
- What About PostScript UNIQUEIDs?
- ================================
-
- This section was constructed from a posting by Johannes Schmidt-Fischer
- in Jun 1993.
-
- All PostScript Type 1 fonts should contain a UniqueId. This is a
- number which should be, as the name suggests, unique (at least among
- the fonts that you download to the printer at any given time).
-
- There are many PostScript fonts on the 'Net which have identical
- UniqeIds. If two of these fonts are downloaded to the same printer at
- the same time, attempts to use either font may cause the wrong
- characters to be printed.
-
- In a nutshell, the reason that the wrong characters may be printed is
- that the printer may be storing the rendered glyphs in its font cache,
- addressed by UniqueID. So, if two fonts, /Foo and /Bar, both have
- UniqueID=5 and /Foo's 10pt "A" is currently in the cache, a request for
- /Bar's 10pt "A" will cause the wrong character to be printed. Rather
- than rendering /Bar's "A" from its (correct and unambiguous) outline,
- the printer will note that the cache contains a 10pt "A" for font 5 and
- will copy it from the cache (resulting in /Foo's "A" printing for /Bar).
-
- Adobe's "Red Book" contains a detailed discussion of this topic.
-
- Subject: 1.21. TrueType
-
- George Moore announces the following information regarding TrueType
- fonts:
-
- "I am pleased to announce that there is now one central location for all
- official Microsoft TrueType information available on the Internet. The
- 9 files listed below are available for anonymous ftp access on
- ftp.microsoft.com in the /developr/drg/TrueType-Info directory. The
- most important of those files is the TrueType Font Files
- Specifications, a 400 page book which describes in excruciating detail
- how to build a TrueType font. Other information is also available in
- the same directory and other files will be added from time to time.
-
- For those people who do not have ftp access to the Internet can find the
- same information available for downloading on Compuserve in the
- Microsoft developer relations forum (GO MSDR) in the TrueType library.
-
- Please be aware that the TrueType specifications is a copyrighted work
- of Microsoft and Apple and can not be resold for profit.
-
- TrueType developer information files on ftp.microsoft.com:
-
- 1. ttspec1.zip, ttspec2.zip, and ttspec3.zip
-
- The TrueType Specification:
-
- These three compressed files contain the "TrueType Font Files
- Specifications", a 400 page book complete with illustrations which
- details how to construct a TrueType font from scratch (or build
- a tool to do so), the TrueType programming language, and the
- complete format of each sub-table contained in the .TTF file.
- These documents are stored in Word for Windows 2.0 format and
- require Windows 3.1 for printing. See the "readme.doc" (in
- ttspec1.zip) for printing instructions. Requires 2.5MB of disk
- space after uncompression.
-
- This manual is a superset of the similar specifications from Apple
- and has added information specific to Windows that is not
- present in the Apple version.
-
- 2. ttfdump.zip
-
- An MS-DOS executable which will dump the contents of a TrueType
- font out in a human-readable fashion. It allows you to dump the
- entire font, or just specific sub-tables. This tool, combined
- with the specifications above, allows very effective debugging
- or exploration of any TrueType font. For example, to dump the
- contents of the 'cmap' (character code to glyph index mapping)
- table, enter:
-
- ttfdump fontname.ttf -tcmap -nx
-
- Entering "ttfdump" with no options will give you a help message.
-
- 3. ttfname.zip
-
- Example C source code on how to parse the contents of a TrueType
- font. Although this particular example will open up the file
- and locate the font name contained within the 'name' table, it
- could be readily adapted to parse any other structure in the
- file. This compressed zip file also contains many useful
- include files which have pre-defined structures set up for the
- internal tables of a TrueType font file. This code may be
- useful for developers who wish to parse the TrueType data stream
- returned by the GetFontData() API in Windows 3.1.
-
- 4. tt-win.zip
-
- A 31 page Word for Windows 2.0 document which is targeted for the
- Windows developer who is interested in learning about some of the
- capabilities TrueType adds to Windows 3.1. Contains many
- illustrations.
-
- 5. embeddin.zip
-
- A text file which describes all of the information necessary for a
- Windows developer to add TrueType font embedding capabilities to
- their application. Font embedding allows the application to
- bundle the TrueType fonts that were used in that document and
- transport it to another platform where the document can be
- viewed or printed correctly.
-
- 6. tt-talk.zip
-
- The TrueType Technical Talks 1 and 2. These text files describe
- some of the things that are happening with TrueType behind the
- scenes in Windows 3.1. The first document walks the reader
- through all of the steps that occur from when the user first
- presses the key on the keyboard until that character appears on
- the screen (scaling, hinting, drop out control, caching and
- blitting). The second talk describes one of the unique features
- of TrueType called non-linear scaling which allows the font
- vendor to overcome some of the physical limitations of low
- resolution output devices.
-
- 7. lucida.zip
-
- This text file contains useful typographic information on the 22
- Lucida fonts which are contained in the Microsoft TrueType Font
- Pack for Windows. It gives pointers on line-layout, mixing and
- matching fonts in the family and a little history on each
- typeface. This information was written by the font's designers,
- Chuck Bigelow & Kris Holmes."
-
- Subject: 1.22. Unicode
-
- [ed: This is a summary of the Unicode info I've gleaned from the net
- recently, the whole Unicode issue needs to be addressed better by the
- FAQ...someday... someday...I'll get to reorganize the whole thing]
-
- What Is Unicode?
- ================
-
- Charles A. Bigelow notes:
-
- The authors of the Unicode standard emphasize the fact that Unicode is a
- character encoding, not a glyph encoding. This might seem like a
- metaphysical distinction, in which characters have some "semantic"
- content (that is, they signify something to literates) and and glyphs
- are particular instantiations or renderings of characters--Plato talked
- about this kind of stuff--but in practice it means that most ligatures
- are not represented in Unicode, nor swash variants, nor figure variants
- (except for superior and inferior, which are semantically distinct from
- baseline figures), and so on.
-
- For further information, consult The Unicode Standard: Worldwide
- Character Encoding Version 1.0, Vol. 1 (alphabets & symbols) and Vol 2.
- (Chinese, Japanese, Korean characters), by The Unicode Consortium,
- Addison Wesley Publishing Co, 1991, ISBN 0-201-56788-1, 0-201-60845-6.
-
- What is the Unicode Consortium?
- ===============================
-
- The Unicode Consortium is an international body responsible for
- maintaining the Unicode standard. Their email address is
- <unicode-inc@unicode.org>
-
- To obtain more information on Unicode or to order their printed material
- and/or diskettes contact:
-
- Steven A. Greenfield
-
- Unicode Office Manager
-
- 1965 Charleston Road
-
- Mountain View, CA 94043
-
- Tel. 415-966-4189
-
- Fax. 415-966-1637
-
- Unicode Editing
- ===============
-
- James Matthew Farrow contributes:
-
- I use `sam' for all by text editing. It is X editor based on an editor
- for the blit called jim. Papers describing sam as well as a
- distribution of sam itself are available for ftp from research.att.com.
- The sam there is a Unix port of the Plan 9 version. Plan 9 is a full
- unicode operating system, even around before NT! The libraries sam is
- built upon therefore support 16 bit wide characters. The graphics
- library, supplied with it at present does not. However they may be
- planning to distribute a new version which does soon. The library just
- plugs in replacing the library that comes with sam. No modification is
- necessary. Character are stored using the utf-2 encoding.
-
- All of the files I had before I started working with sam were 7 bit
- ascii so no conversion was needed. Now I have ditched xterm in favour
- of 9term: a terminal emulator in the style of 81/2 (the Plan 9
- interface). This lets me type Unicode characters on the command line,
- as part of filenames, in mail, wherever and most Unix utilities cope
- without modification. This is about to be released. I'm looking for
- beta testers. ;-)
-
- Is a special keyboard required?
- -------------------------------
-
- No. ASCII Characters are typed as normal. Common characters above
- 0x7f are typed using two letter abbreviations. The table is similar to
- the troff special character codes, e.g, Alt-12 gives you a 1/2, Alt-'e
- gives you e acute, Alt-bu a bullet and so on. This table is hardwired
- into the library at present but is trivial to change. Other codes are
- accessed by typing their hex value, for instance the smiley is
- Alt-X263a (0x263a being a smiley character in the Unicode character
- set).
-
- Is roman-to-Unicode conversion available?
- -----------------------------------------
-
- All normal 7 bit ascii characters are encoded as themselves so no
- translation is needed. There are conversion routines in the library
- (runetochar and chartorune) which will do the conversion and it should
- be pretty simple to convert files already in another format. You would
- have to write something to do the transliteration yourself. A small
- patch to the system would let you enter different language `modes' for
- text entry.
-
- Are there PostScript or TrueType fonts available?
- =================================================
-
- Apparently there is a version of the Lucida fonts by Bigelow and Holmes
- which support Unicode. This is the information I have on them.
-
- [ed: quoting another source]
-
- [Windows NT] will ship with a Unicode TrueType font containing
- approximately 1,500 characters. The font is called "Lucida Sans
- Unicode" and was specifically designed by Bigelow and Holmes for
- Microsoft to contain the following Unicode sets:
-
- ASCII
- Latin 1
- European Latin
- Extended Latin
- Standard Phonetic
- Modifier Letters
- Generic Diacritical
- Greek
- Cyrillic
- Extended Cyrillic
- Hebrew
- Currency Symbols
- Letterlike Symbols
- Arrows
- Mathematical Operators
- Super & Subscript
- Form & Chart Components
- Blocks
- Geometric Shapes
- Miscellaneous Technical
- Miscellaneous Dingbats
-
- The bitmap fonts which comes with the utf version of the libXg graphics
- library (the library upon which sam is built) support a sparse subset
- of the full character set. That is, only a few of them have glyphs at
- present. A font editor such as xfedor would let you add more. The list
- of those currently available is pretty much as the above list.
-
- I use 9term and sam as a matter of course now and have for several
- months. I enjoy the convenience of putting special characters and
- accented characters in my mail as well as being able to do some
- phonetic work all in the one terminal/editor suite.
-
- Subject: 1.23. Can I Print Checks with the MICR Font?
-
- This comes up all the time: standard ordinary laser toner is magnetic
- and will be read by the banks. The gotcha is that standard laser toner
- rubs off in the *very* high-speed sorting equipment that are used, and
- this makes read rates drop low and the banks will hate you.
-
- I researched check printers for a customer, and was surprised to find
- this. The Troy(tm) printers he bought are basically stock Ricoh
- engines that have slightly tighter paper handling (for registration),
- plus they add a proprietary Teflon-type powder coating on the output
- path to coat the checks.
-
- I saw some examples of checks printed with and without this special
- coating after running through something like 40 passes through check
- processing equipment, and the one without the coating was a mess. These
- require special handling that the banks do *not* like. Apparently,
- they go after companies that issue these kinds of checks with special
- processing fees.
-
- Subject: 1.24. Rules of Thumb
-
- It is difficult to set out guidelines for font usage, because almost
- any rule can be brilliantly broken under the right circumstances.
-
- * General guidelines:
-
- * Never lose track of the kind of work you're doing. An effect
- that would ruin a newsletter might be just the thing for a
- record cover. Know when you can safely sacrifice legibility
- for artistic effect.
-
- * Keep in mind the final reproduction process you'll be using.
- Some effects (like reversed type, white on black) can be hard
- to read off an ordinary 300-dpi laser, but will work if
- finals are done on a high-resolution printer, such as a
- Linotronic. Will the pages be photocopied? Offset? Onto rough
- paper, shiny paper? All these factors can and should
- influence your choice of fonts and how you use them.
-
- * Running some comparative tests is a good idea. Better to blow
- off a few sheets of laser paper now than to see a problem
- after thousands of copies are made.
-
- * No one can teach you font aesthetics; it must be learned by
- example. Look at beautiful magazines, posters, books with
- wide eyes, so that you can see how it's done. Examine ugly
- printed matter critically and consider why it's hard to read.
-
- * Good rules of thumb:
-
- * If you need a condensed font, find one that was designed that
- way, rather than scaling an existing font down to a
- percentage. Any scaling distorts a font's design; excessive
- scaling interferes with legibility - this goes for widening
- as well as narrowing. Extended faces do exist, although they
- aren't as common as condensed ones.
-
- * Many people feel that bold or italic type, or type in ALL
- CAPS, is more legible: "This is the most important part of
- the newsletter, let's put it in bold." In fact, legibility
- studies show that such type is actually harder to read in
- bulk. Keep the text in a normal style and weight, and find
- another way to emphasize it - box it, illustrate it, run it
- in color, position it focally.
-
- * Too much reverse type - white on black - is hard on the eyes.
- It can be a nice effect if used sparingly. Don't reverse a
- serif font, though - its details will tend to fill in. Stick
- to reversing bold sans-serifs, and remember to space them out
- a bit more than usual.
-
- * It is always safest to use a plain serif font for large
- amounts of text. Because Times is widely used, it doesn't
- mean it should be avoided. Fonts like Palatino, Times,
- Century Old Style are deservedly popular because people can
- read a lot of text set in such faces without strain.
-
- Don't expect anyone to read extensive text set in a condensed
- font.
-
- * As point size gets bigger, track tighter, and (if the
- software allows) reduce the spacebands as well. A spaceband
- in a headline size (anything over 14 point) should be about
- as wide as a letter "i".
-
- * If you only have a few large headlines, hand-kerning the
- type, pair by pair, can make the end result much more
- pleasing. Besides, working with fonts this closely makes
- them familiar.
-
- * Column width and justification are major elements in design.
- The narrower the column, the smaller the type can be; wide
- rows of small type are very hard to read. Often it's a better
- idea to set narrow columns flush left rather than justified,
- otherwise large gaps can fall where hyphenation isn't
- possible.
-
- * Use curly quotes.
-
- * Don't put two spaces at the end of a line (. ) instead of (.
- ) when using a proportionally spaced font.
-
- Subject: 1.25. Acknowledgements
-
- The moderators would like to express their gratitude to the whole
- community for providing insightful answers to innumerable questions. In
- particular, the following people (listed alphabetically) have
- contributed directly to this FAQ (apologies, in advance, if anyone has
- been forgotten):
-
- Masumi Abe <abe@keleida.com>
-
- Glenn Adams <glenn@metis.COM>
-
- Daniel Amor <daniel.amor@student.uni-tuebingen.de>
-
- Borris Balzer <borris@boba.rhein-main.DE>
-
- Charles A. Bigelow <bigelow@cs.stanford.edu>
-
- David J. Birnbaum <djbpitt@pitt.edu>
-
- Tim Bradshaw <tim.bradshaw@edinburgh.ac.UK>
-
- Morgan S. Brilliant <???>
-
- Arlen Britton <arlenb@mcad.edu>
-
- Stan Brown <brown@ncoast.org>
-
- Scott Brumage <brumage@mailer.acns.fsu.edu>
-
- Lee Cambell <elwin@media.mit.edu>
-
- Terry Carroll <tjc50@juts.ccc.amdahl.com>
-
- Ari Davidow <ari@netcom.com>
-
- Pat Farrell <pfarrell@cs.gmu.edu>
-
- James Matthew Farrow <matty@cs.su.oz.au>
-
- Stephen Friedl <friedl@mtndew.Tustin.CA.US>
-
- Peter J. Gentry <peter@utas.artsci.utoronto.ca>
-
- Yossi Gil <yogi@techunix.technion.ac.IL>
-
- Timothy Golobic <an314@cleveland.Freenet.EDU>
-
- Kesh Govinder <govinder@ph.und.ac.za>
-
- Piercarlo Antonio Grandi <pcg@decb.aber.ac.uk>
-
- Robert Green <rag5@cornell.edu>
-
- Rick Heli <Rick.Heli@Eng.Sun.COM>
-
- Jeremy Henderson <jeremy@castle.ed.ac.uk>
-
- Henry ??? <henry@trilithon.COM>
-
- Gary <Gocek.Henr801C@Xerox.COM>
-
- Berthold K.P. Horn <bkph@ai.mit.edu>
-
- Peter Honig <peterh@macsch.com>
-
- Don Hosek <dhosek@ymir.claremont.edu>
-
- Bharathi Jagadeesh <bjag@nwu.edu>
-
- Chang Jin-woong <jwjang@krissol.kriss.re.kr>
-
- Darrell Leland <dleland@nmsu.edu>
-
- David Lemon <lemon@adobe.com>
-
- Jon <jgm@cs.brown.EDU>
-
- ??? <vkautto@snakemail.hut.FI>
-
- ??? <robertk@lotatg.lotus.COM>
-
- Otto Makela <otto@jybox.jyu.fi>
-
- David Mandl <dmandl@bilbo.shearson.com>
-
- Kate McDonnell <C_MCDON@pavo.concordia.ca>
-
- George Moore <georgem@microsoft.com>
-
- Robert Morris <ram@claude.cs.umb.EDU>
-
- Stephen Moye <SMOYE@BROWNVM.brown.edu>
-
- Erlend Nagel <error@stack.urc.tue.nl>
-
- Terry O'Donnell <odonnell@mv.us.adobe.COM>
-
- Jon Pastor <pastor@VFL.Paramax.COM>
-
- PenDragon <REGY116@cantva.canterbury.ac.nz>
-
- Stephen Peters <speters@us.oracle.COM>
-
- Bill Phillips <wfp@world.std.com>
-
- Thomas W. Phinney <75671.2441@compuserve.com>
-
- Jim Reese <Jim.Rees@umich.edu>
-
- Bill Ricker <wdr@world.std.com>
-
- Liam Quin <lee@sq.com>
-
- Henry Schneiker <?>
-
- Bill Shirley <bshirley@gleap.jpunix.COM>
-
- Cameron Smith <cameron@symcom.math.uiuc.edu>
-
- Frank F. Smith <ffs1@cornell.edu>
-
- Werenfried Spit <SPIT@vm.ci.uv.ES>
-
- Anthony Starks <ajs@merck.com>
-
- Ike Stoddard <stoddard@draper.com>
-
- Danny Thomas <vthrc@mailbox.uq.oz.au>
-
- Anders Thulin <ath@linkoping.trab.se>
-
- Ian Tresman <72240.3447@compuserve.com>
-
- Erik-Jan Vens <E.J.Vens@icce.rug.nl>
-
- Amanda Walker <amanda@visix.com>
-
- Jason Lee Weiler <weilej@nuge110.its.rpi.edu>
-
- This is Info file comp.fonts.faq.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from
- the input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Subject: 1.26. A Brief Introduction to Typography
-
- Space, time, and bandwidth are too limiting to provide a complete
- introduction to typography in this space. I'd be very willing to make
- one available for anonymous ftp, if you want to write one, but I'm not
- going to write it-I have neither the time nor the expertise. However,
- the following description of Times, Helvetica, and Courier will suffice
- for a start. For more information, several books on typography are
- listed in the bibliography.
-
- Comments by Laurence Penney:
- ============================
-
- Laurence Penney offers the following description of Times, Helvetica,
- and Courier:
-
- Times is a typeface designed in the 1930s for the Times newspaper in
- London and is now used widely in books, magazines and DTP. Its design
- is based on the typographical principles evolved since Roman times
- (upper case) and the 16th century (lower case). It is called a
- TRANSITIONAL typeface, after the typefaces of the 17th century which it
- resembles. Like all typefaces designed for typesetting large
- quantities of text, it is proportionally spaced: the i takes about a
- third the width of an M. Personally I don't like Times too much and
- prefer the more elegant Garamond and Baskerville, but these will
- probably cost you money... Note: The Transitionals came after the Old
- Styles (like Garamond) and before the Moderns (like Bodoni).
-
- Helvetica is an example of a SANS-SERIF typeface. These first appeared
- in the late 19th century in Germany and flourished in the 1920s and
- 30s, when they were regarded as the future of typography. It's more a
- geometric design than the humanist design of Gill Sans, but less
- geometric than Avant Garde and Futura. To my mind it lacks elegance,
- and Adrian Frutiger's Univers shows how this kind of typeface should be
- done. (Just compare the B, R, Q, a, g of Univers and Helvetica to see
- what I mean - and don't you just love Univers's superbly interpreted
- ampersand ?!) Helvetica is one of the few fonts that is improved by its
- BOLD version.
-
- Another interesting approach to sans-serif is Optima, by Hermann Zapf,
- which keeps the stroke-weight variations which sans-serifs usually
- reject. Use sans-serif fonts for the same applications as Times, above,
- but where you're less concerned with elegance, and more with a
- functional appearance - they're generally reckoned to be slightly less
- legible than good serifed fonts. They're also very suitable for display
- work.
-
- Courier is a typeface derived from typewriter styles. It should ONLY be
- used when you want to simulate this effect (e.g. when writing letters
- Courier usually appears "friendlier" than Times). Like all typewriter
- fonts, it is MONOSPACED (characters all have the same width) and is
- thus suitable for typesetting computer programs. However there are
- nicer looking monospace fonts than Courier (which has oversize serifs),
- that still remain distinct from the text fonts like Times and
- Helvetica. A good one is OCR-B, designed by Frutiger. Note that
- monospaced fonts are less economical on space than proportional fonts.
-
- [ed: Following the original posting of this message, Laurence Penny and
- Jason Kim discussed the issue privately. The following summary of
- their discussion may serve to clarify some of the more subtle points.
- My thanks to Laurence and Jason for allowing me to include this in the
- FAQ.]
-
- -----------------------------
-
- LP-1> The Transitionals came after the Old Styles (like Garamond) and
- before the Moderns (like Bodoni).
-
- JK> Not necessarily true! Ideologically, yes, but not chronologically.
- I believe, for example, that Bodoni predates New Century Schoolbook or
- some such typeface.
-
- LP-2> What I meant by "X came after Y" was "the first examples of X
- appeared after the first examples of Y" - it's called precis. Some
- people still make steam trains, but you can still say "Steam engines
- came before diesels." This is chronological, not ideological in my book.
-
- -----------------------------
-
- LP-1> Another interesting approach to sans-serif is Optima, by Hermann
- Zapf, which keeps the stroke-weight variations which sans-serifs
- usually reject. Use sans-serif fonts for the same applications as
- Times, above, but where you're less concerned with elegance, and more
- with a functional appearance - they're generally reckoned to be
- slightly less legible than good seriffed fonts. They're also very
- suitable for display work.
-
- JK> Slightly? I have several textbooks typeset by utter fools and they
- are a pain in the ass (and eyes) to read! Please don't encourage anyone
- to use Optima (or any sans serif fonts for that matter) "for the same
- applications as Times," which, need I remind you, was designed for
- *newspaper* work!!
-
- LP-2> OK, maybe I was a little over-generous to Univers, Helvetica,
- etc., but I think variation is extremely important in typography. Have
- you ever read the British magazine "CAR" ? That uses Helvetica light (I
- think) in a very legible and attractive way, IMO. I agree, though,
- Optima is crappy for text, but it's a very valuable experiment and
- looks beautiful when printed in high quality for titling, etc. And yes,
- *books* in Helvetica are generally awful.
-
- -----------------------------
-
- JK> Serifs have been scientifically shown to be a *lot* easier on the
- reader, as they guide the eyes along the lines.
-
- LP-2> In all tests I've seen the serifs have always won the day, but
- only with certain seriffed fonts, and fonts like Univers aren't far
- behind. The "tracking" advantage for serif fonts is reduced when you're
- talking about narrow newspaper/magazine columns.
-
- -----------------------------
-
- JK> You wrote a pretty short and partial history of type. Why ignore
- the roots of type (blackletter) as well as the climax (moderns-give an
- explanation) and subsequent 'post-modern' revivals?
-
- LP-2> I was just talking about the place the 3 most common DTP types
- hold in the history of typography, and a few associated pitfalls. It
- wasn't meant as a "history of typography" at all. Please feel free to
- provide such a history yourself.
-
- JK> I think any short list of specific faces is incomplete without
- mention of Palatino, the most popular Old Style revival in existence.
-
- LP-2> Do you? To my mind Palatino is grossly over used. You must agree
- it looks bad for dense text. It isn't a proper "oldstyle revival" at
- all, more of a "calligraphic interpretation" of it. Zapf designed it as
- a display face, and wasn't too concerned about lining up the serifs
- (check out the "t"). And it just *has* to be printed on 1200dpi devices
- (at least) to look good in small sizes. OK then, maybe a short list is
- incomplete without a caution NOT to use Palatino...
-
- JK> Also, if this is meant to be a "quick history/user guide for those
- fairly new to using fonts on desktop publishing systems," then I would
- recommend more directions about the proper uses of certain faces (e.g.,
- Goudy for shaped text, Peignot for display *only*) and styles (e.g.,
- italics for editorial comments, all-caps for basically nothing).
-
- LP-2> Okay, okay. I was only sharing a few ideas, not trying to write a
- book. Surely you agree that the 3 typefaces I chose are by far the most
- commonly used and abused these days? I don't think a discussion of
- Goudy or Peignot fits in very well here, unless we're hoping to make a
- very wide-ranging FAQL. Regarding styles: first, italics are used
- principally for *emphasis* (rather than bold in running text); second,
- all good books have a few small caps here and there, don't they? - all
- mine do...
-
- JK> Sorry if I come across as critical. I think the idea of making a
- FAQL is a good one, as is your effort. We just have to make sure it
- doesn't give any newbies the wrong impressions and further perpetuate
- the typographical morass we're facing today.
-
- LP-2> Sorry if I come across as defensive, but I stand by what I said
- and object to the suggestion that I am "perpetuating the typographical
- morass". (I don't know if you really intended this - apologies if you
- didn't.)
-
- Comments by Don Hosek:
- ======================
-
- Don Hosek offers the following additional notes:
-
- The "Times" in most printers is actually a newer version of the font
- than Monotype's "Times New Roman" which it is originally based on.
- Walter Tracy's _Letters of Credit_ gives an excellent history of the
- face which was based on Plantin and in the original cutting has metrics
- matching the original face almost exactly. Another interesting note
- about the face is that it is almost a completely different design in
- the bold: this is due to the fact that old-styles are difficult to
- design as a bold. Incidentally, the classification of Times as a
- transitional is not firm. It likely is placed there by some type
- taxonomists (most notably Alexander Lawson) because of the bold and a
- few minor features. Others, myself included, think of it as a old
- style. The typeface listed in the Adobe catalog as Times Europa was a
- new face commissioned in 1974 to replace the old Times (whose 50th
- birthday was this past October 3rd).
-
- Hermann Zapf is not particularly pleased with any of the
- phototypesetting versions of Optima. As a lead face, Optima is very
- beautiful. His typeface "World", used in the World Book Encyclopedia is
- one recutting for photocomp which improves the font somewhat. He is on
- record as saying that if he had been asked, he would have designed a
- new font for the technology.
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: General Info (4/5)
- Supersedes: <font-faq-4_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:03 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 2157
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-4_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16991 comp.answers:9899 news.answers:34561
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part4
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 1.27. A Brief History of Type
-
- Thomas W. Phinney contributes the following discussion of the history
- of type(1):
-
- Foreword
- ========
-
- It is difficult to cover all the developments and movements of
- typography in a short space. My separation of evolving technologies
- from the development of typefaces is an artificial one--designs and the
- technology used to create them are not truly separable--but perhaps it
- is conceptually useful.
-
- Where names of typefaces are used, I attempt to use the original name:
- there are often clones with very similar names.
-
- I shall update, clarify and correct this essay periodically, and will be
- happy to credit contributors. I can be e-mailed on CompuServe at
- 75671,2441 (Internet: 75671.2441@compuserve.com).
-
- Type Technology--The Four Revolutions
- =====================================
-
- Gutenberg (ca. 1450-1480) & The Impact of Printing
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Before the printing press, books were produced by scribes. The process
- of writing out an entire book by hand was as labor-intensive as it
- sounds (try it some time): so much so that a few volumes constituted a
- library, and a hundred books was an awe-inspiring collection.
-
- This remained true until the invention of movable type, the perfection
- of which is attributed to Johannes Gutenberg (although the Chinese had
- it several centuries earlier, and a Dutch fellow named Coster may have
- had some crude form a decade earlier). Gutenberg, although a man of
- vision, did not personally profit from his invention. He worked for
- over a decade with borrowed capital, and his business was repossessed
- by his investors before the first mass-produced book was successfully
- printed - the Gutenberg Bible of 1454.
-
- Gutenberg's basic process remained unchanged for centuries. A punch with
- a mirror image of the letter is struck into a piece of softer metal.
- Molten metal is poured into this, and you get type. Type is put into a
- matrix to form the page of text, inked, then pressed into paper.
-
- Within several decades typesetting technology spread across Europe. Some
- of these first printers were artisans, while others were just people
- who saw an opportunity for a quick lira/franc/pound. The modern view of
- a classical era in which craftsmanship predominated appears unjustified
- to scholars: there has always been fine craft, crass commercialism, and
- work that combines both.
-
- To those who have grown up with television, radio, magazines, books,
- movies, faxes and networked computer communications it is difficult to
- describe just how much of a revolution printing was. It was the first
- mass medium, and allowed for the free spread of ideas in a completely
- unprecedented fashion. The Protestant Reformation might not have
- occurred, or might have been crushed, without the ability to quickly
- create thousands of copies of Luther's Theses for distribution.
-
- Many groups sought to control this new technology. Scribes fought
- against the introduction of printing, because it could cost them their
- livelihoods, and religious (and sometimes secular) authorities sought to
- control what was printed. Sometimes this was successful: for centuries
- in some European countries, books could only be printed by government
- authorized printers, and nothing could be printed without the approval
- of the Church. Printers would be held responsible rather than authors
- for the spread of unwanted ideas, and some were even executed. But this
- was a largely futile struggle, and most such restraints eventually
- crumbled in the western world.
-
- Industrial Revolution: Steam, Line-casting & Automated Punch-cutting (start 1870-95; end 1950-65)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Amazingly, the printing press and the science of typecutting had only
- minor refinements from the late 1500s to the late 1800s. Towards the
- end of this period, the industrial revolution brought major innovations
- in printing technology. Rotary steam presses (steam 1814, rotary 1868)
- replaced hand- operated ones, doing the same job in 16 per cent of the
- time; photo-engraving took over from handmade printing plates.
-
- Typesetting itself was transformed by the introduction of line-casting
- machines, first Ottmar Mergenthaler's Linotype (1889), and then the
- Monotype machine. Essentially, line-casting allowed type be chosen,
- used, then recirculate back into the machine automatically. This not
- only introduced a huge labor savings in typesetting, (again, on the
- order of the 85% reduction in printing time), but also rendered
- obsolete the huge masses of metal type created by the previously
- existing type foundries.
-
- While typesetting and printing speeds increased phenomenally, so did the
- speed of punchcutting. In 1885, Linn Boyd Benton (then of Benton, Waldo
- & Company, Milwaukee) invented a device that automated the previously
- painstaking process of creating punches. His machine could scale a
- drawing to the required size, as well as compressing or expanding the
- characters, and varying the weight slightly to compensate for the
- larger or smaller size - this last being a crude form of the "optical
- scaling" done by skilled typographers making versions of the same font
- for different sizes. In optical scaling, the thickest strokes retain
- the same relative thickness at any size, but the thinnest strokes are
- not simply scaled up or down with the rest of the type, but made
- thicker at small sizes and thinner at large display sizes, so as to
- provide the best compromise between art and readability.
-
- The economic impact of all these advances on the type industry cannot be
- overstated. For example, in the United States, the majority of type
- foundries escaped a bankruptcy bloodbath in 1892 by merging into a
- single company, called American Type Founders (ATF). Ultimately
- twenty-three companies merged into ATF, making it far and away the
- dominant American type foundry.
-
- Also around this time, the "point" measurement system finally reached
- ascendancy. In the earlier days of printing, different sizes of type had
- simply been called by different names. Thus, "Brevier" was simply the
- British name for 8-point type of any style. Unfortunately, these names
- were not standardized internationally; 8-point type was called "Petit
- Texte" by the French and "Testino" by the Italians. Such a naming
- system also allowed wonderful confusion, such as "English" referring
- both to blackletter type, and a 14-point size; "English English" was
- thus a 14-point blackletter!
-
- Pierre Simon Fournier had first proposed a comprehensive point system in
- 1737, with later refinements, but what was ultimately adopted was the
- later version developed by Francois Ambroise Didot. This put
- approximately 72 points to the inch (and now exactly 72 points to the
- inch on most computer- based typesetting systems).
-
- Photocomposition (Intertype et. al., start 1950-60, end 1975-85)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The first photocomposition devices (the French "Photon" and Intertypes
- Fotosetter) made their debuts as early as 1944, but didn't really catch
- on until the early 1950s. Typeface masters for photocomposition are on
- film; the characters are projected onto photo-sensitive paper. Lenses
- are used to adjust the size of the image, scaling the type to the
- desired size. In some senses this technology was an "improvement,"
- allowing new freedoms, such as overlapping characters. However, it
- also pretty much eliminated optical scaling (see 2.2, above), because
- in the rush to convert fonts to the new format, usually only one design
- was used, which was directly scaled to the desired size.
-
- Digital (start 1973-83)
- -----------------------
-
- The earliest computer-based typesetters were a hybrid between the above-
- mentioned photocomposition machines and later pure digital output. They
- each had their own command language for communicating with output
- devices. Although these machines had advantages, they also had
- problems. None of these early command languages handled graphics well,
- and they all had their own formats for fonts. However, some of these
- devices are still in service as of 1995, for use in production
- environments which require more speed and less flexibility (phone books,
- newspapers, flight schedules, etc.).
-
- In the late 1980s PostScript gradually emerged as the de facto standard
- for digital typesetting. This was due to a variety of reasons,
- including its inclusion in the Apple Laserwriter printer and its
- powerful graphics handling. When combined with the Macintosh (the first
- widely used computer with a what-you-see-is-what-you-get display) and
- PageMaker (the first desktop publishing program), the seeds were all
- sown for the current dominance of completely computer-based typesetting.
-
- Today, although PostScript predominates, there are a variety of
- competing page description languages (PostScript, HP PCL, etc.), font
- formats (Postscript Type One and Multiple Master, Truetype and Truetype
- GX) computer hardware platforms (Mac, Windows, etc.) and desktop
- publishing and graphics programs. Digital typesetting is commonplace,
- and photocomposition is at least dying, if not all but dead. Digital
- typefaces on computer, whether Postscript or some other format, are
- generally outline typefaces, which may be scaled to any desired size
- (although optical scaling is still an issue).
-
- There has been considerable economic fallout from all this in
- typography. Although some digital type design tools are beyond the
- price range of the "average" user, many are in the same price range as
- the mid- to high-end graphics and desktop publishing programs. This,
- combined with the introduction of CD-ROM typeface collections, has moved
- digital type away from being an expensive, specialized tool, towards
- becoming a commodity. As a result of both this and the brief
- photocomposition interregnum, the previously established companies have
- undergone major shakeups, and even some major vendors, such as American
- Type Founders, have failed to successfully make the digital transition,
- and gone bankrupt instead.
-
- Although there is a new accessibility of type design tools, the
- decreasing value of individual typefaces has resulted in a decrease in
- the number of working type designers (both independents and
- company-employed).
-
- Type Forms Through the Centuries
- ================================
-
- One must keep in mind that although typefaces may have come into use at
- a particular point in time, they often continued in general use far
- beyond that time. Even after the rise of old style typefaces in the
- late 1500s, the blackletter type was commonly used for setting text for
- several centuries (well into the 1800s in Germany). With later
- interpretations of earlier forms being relatively common, the *style*
- of a given typeface may belong to a quite different period from that of
- the typeface itself! Further, many typefaces have very complex
- histories: a type could have been originally designed in metal at one
- time, reworked by someone else later, made into a phototypesetting face
- by another person, and then later created in digital form by yet
- another designer - who might have been working off of any of the above
- as the basis of their work.
-
- The classification system used here (old style, transitional, modern,
- sans serif, slab serif, etc.) has the virtues of being both simple and
- widely used. However, the precision and artistic accuracy of this
- system is perhaps dubious: see Robert Bringhurst's Elements of
- Typographic Style or his article in the first issue of Serif magazine
- for a more thorough system.
-
- In discussing the differences between type, one must refer to a number
- of technical terms. For illustrations of these terms, see also the
- downloadable graphics file PGTEXT.GIF. For an illustration of display
- fonts, see PGDPLA.GIF. With any luck, both should be available for FTP
- or download from the same site as this file. If so, you would be well
- advised to refer to these pictures for illustrations of both these
- terms and the differences between different categories of typefaces. If
- you are a newcomer to typography, some sort of visual reference is
- essential to understand the differences between fonts explained here.
- Your options include: the aforementioned graphics files; type samples
- from a book, manual or font vendor's catalog; or simply viewing or
- printing out the fonts you have available on your computer system.
-
- Definitions
- -----------
-
- Contrast: The degree of difference between the thick and thin strokes
- in a font (if any).
-
- Stress (axis): The angle at which contrast occurs, usually ranging from
- vertical to a somewhat back-slanted diagonal. This can best be noted by
- looking at, for example, the letter "O" and noting if the bottom left is
- thicker than the top left, and the top right is thicker than the bottom
- right. If this difference exists, the letter has diagonal stress. If
- the two halves of the "O" are a mirror image of each other, with the
- sides thicker than the top/bottom, then the letter has vertical stress.
- If the top and bottom of the "O" are the same thickness as the sides,
- there is neither contrast nor stress.
-
- Serifs: Those "finishing strokes" or "fillips" going off the ending
- lines of a letter. For example, when the number "1" or the letter "i"
- are drawn with a bar across the bottom, the two halves of the bar are
- serifs. If the serif is joined to the letter by a slight flaring out,
- it is said to be "bracketed."
-
- Letters Before Gutenberg
- ------------------------
-
- Although writing itself can be traced back to several millennia B.C., to
- Egyptian hieroglyphics and Sumerian cuneiform inscriptions, modern
- letter forms have their most immediate heritage in Roman inscriptions
- from around 50- 120 AD, such as the one on the base of Trajan's Column
- in the Roman Forum (114 AD, digital version by Twombly for Adobe, 1989).
-
- Although early Latin writing was heavily influenced by these chiseled-
- in-stone letterforms, over the centuries it evolved into a variety of
- other shapes, including uncials and the related Carolingian script. It
- is through this period of the sixth to tenth centuries that we see the
- development of the lower case (minuscule) letter as a different shape
- from the upper case (capital).
-
- Type forms similar to what we now think of as "normal" letter shapes
- evolved from the Carolingian (or Caroline) minuscule. The Carolingian
- letters are so-called because of their adoption by Charlemagne (late
- 10th century) as a standard for education. Digital revivals of these
- exist, such as Carol Twombly's Charlemagne (1989).
-
- By the fifteenth century, italics also existed, in the form of a cursive
- script which had developed in Rome and Florence. However, italics at
- this time were a completely separate entity from the upright
- letterforms, as they remained in the early days of printing.
-
- Blackletter
- -----------
-
- The first printed types exemplify what most people think of as medieval
- or "old English" lettering, with ornate capitals, roughly diamond-shaped
- serifs, and thick lines. As a group, these typefaces are called
- "blackletter." They evolved from the Carolingian by a gradual movement
- towards narrowing and thickening of lines.
-
- The general sort of blackletter used by Gutenberg in his first Bible is
- called textura (a shareware digital version of Gutenberg's bible face is
- available, called "Good City Modern"). The other sorts of blackletter
- are fraktur, bastarda and rotunda. Probably the most common blackletter
- revival typefaces in use today are Cloister Black (M.F. Benton, 1904,
- from J.W. Phinney) and Fette Fraktur.
-
- It is worth noting that although these typefaces seem very hard to read
- to us today, this is due as much to familiarity as to any objective
- lesser clarity. R. Hemenway writes: "Fraktur was in use in Germany well
- into the 1900s, though it was gradually being superseded by Roman
- typefaces. The Nazis at first fostered a return to Fraktur, then
- outlawed it as a "Jewish typeface" in 1940.
-
- Studies from mid-century found that people can read blackletter with a
- speed loss of no more than 15%. However, there is subjectively more
- effort involved. Blackletter is today most appropriate for display or
- headline purposes, when one wants to invoke the feeling of a particular
- era.
-
- Old Style Typefaces: Aldus, Jenson, Garamond, Caslon
- ----------------------------------------------------
-
- E.P. Goldschmidt, as explained by Stanley Morison, claimed that "the
- supersession of black-letter was not due to any 'technical advance,' it
- was the visible expression of a changed attitude of mind." The
- Renaissance was typified by an obsession with things "classical," in
- the Greco-Roman sense, which had major implications for typography. The
- neo-classical letterforms were somewhat more condensed than the
- Carolingian shapes, but much rounder and more expanded than the
- blackletter.
-
- Old style type is generally considered "warm" or friendly, thanks to its
- origins in Renaissance humanism. The main characteristics of old style
- typefaces are low contrast with diagonal stress, and cove or "bracketed"
- serifs (serifs with a rounded join to the stem of the letter). The
- earliest, or Venetian, old style typefaces (originally 15th-16th
- Century) have very minimal contrast, and a sloped cross-bar on the
- lower-case "e." One such is Bruce Rogers' Centaur (1916), a "Venetian"
- old style based on Jenson. Similarly, Monotype's Bembo (1929) is based
- on the work of Francesco Griffo, circa 1499.
-
- Italics at this point were still independent designs, and were generally
- used completely separately; a whole book could be set in italics.
- Probably the most famous italic of the period is Arrighi's (1524),
- which may be seen today as the italic form of Centaur. Likewise, the
- italic form of Bembo is based on the italic of Tagliente (also 1524).
-
- Later old style type (17th Century) generally has more contrast, with a
- somewhat variable axis, and more slope of italic. The most common
- examples are the types of Garamond and Caslon, many revivals of which
- exist in digital form.
-
- Transitional Type: Baskerville, Fournier
- ----------------------------------------
-
- "Transitional" type is so-called because of its intermediate position
- between old style and modern. The distinguishing features of
- transitional typefaces include vertical stress and slightly higher
- contrast than old style typefaces, combined with horizontal serifs. The
- most influential examples are Philippe Grandjean's "Romain du Roi" for
- the French Crown around 1702, Pierre Simon Fournier's work circa 1750,
- and John Baskerville's work from 1757 onwards. Although today we
- remember Baskerville primarily for his typeface designs, in his own
- time people were much more impressed by his printing, which used an
- innovative glossy paper and wide margins.
-
- Later transitional types begin to move towards "modern" designs.
- Contrast is accentuated, and serifs are more flattened. Current
- examples of such are based on originals from approximately 1788-1810,
- and are dominated by British isles designers, such as Richard Austin
- (Bell, 1788), William Martin (Bulmer) and Miller & Richard (Scotch
- Roman).
-
- For currently available examples of transitional type, there are many
- types which bear Baskerville's name, descending from one or another of
- his designs. Less common today is P.S. Fournier's work, although
- several versions of it are available in digital or metal form. Although
- Scotch Roman has been a very common face in metal type usage since
- Monotype's 1920 revival, it is not a common digital face. Bell, on the
- other hand, is included in a Microsoft Font Pack, and Bulmer has
- received more attention since its revival by Monotype in late 1994.
-
- Modern Type: Didot, Bodoni, Walbaum
- -----------------------------------
-
- "Modern" typefaces are distinguishable by their sudden-onset vertical
- stress and strong contrast. Modern serifs and horizontals are very thin,
- almost hairlines. Although they are very striking, these typefaces are
- sometimes criticized as cold or harsh, and may not be quite as readable
- for very extensive text work, such as books.
-
- A number of designers, perhaps semi-independently, created the first
- modern typefaces in the late 1700s and early 1800s. One of the first,
- and ultimately the most influential, was Giambattista Bodoni, of Parma,
- Italy. Ironically, historians of type often relate the development of
- the "modern" letterforms to a then-current obsession with things Roman
- - in this case the strong contrast and sharp serifs of classical Roman
- inscriptions. Although similar interests
-
- Today, the most common "modern" typefaces are the dozens of
- reinterpretations of Bodoni's work (which itself evolved over time).
- One of the most successful reinterpretations is the 1994 ITC Bodoni by
- Stone et. al., featuring three different optical sizes. Although little
- is seen of Didot, a reinterpretation by J.E. Walbaum (ca. 1800) sees
- occasional use.
-
- Sans Serif & Slab Serif
- -----------------------
-
- These type forms made their first appearances around 1815-1817. Both are
- marked by simpler letterforms with (usually) relatively uniform stroke
- weight, lacking significant contrast, often geometric in underlying
- design.
-
- The earliest forms of sans and slab typefaces tended to be heavy, often
- monolithic, display faces, but there quickly evolved a wide range of
- styles. Although the earliest designs are not much used today, their
- descendants are common enough.
-
- Sans Serif (a.k.a. Gothic or Grotesque)
- .......................................
-
- Sans serif letters have no serifs, as the name suggests. The low
- contrast and absence of serifs makes most sans typefaces harder to
- follow for general reading. They are fine for a sentence, passable for a
- paragraph, but are difficult to use well in, say, the text of a book.
- The terminology of sans serif types can be confusing: essentially,
- gothic or grotesque are both generic names for sans serif (although
- Letter Gothic, confusingly, is more of a slab serif type).
-
- In sans serif faces, the italics are often, although not always, simply
- a sloped (mechanically obliqued) version of the roman letters, making
- them totally subordinate to the roman.
-
- By far the most common sans is Helvetica (1951, Miedinger), despite
- being abhorred by many typographers. Helvetica does have the advantage
- of coming in a huge range of weights and widths, which makes it
- versatile, and its ubiquitous character makes it easy to match. Other
- general-purpose sans serifs include Univers (Frutiger, 1952+), Arial
- (Monotype), Franklin Gothic (M.F. Benton, 1903) and Frutiger (Frutiger,
- 1975).
-
- Sprouting from the Art Deco movement in the 1920s and 30s (see Art
- Deco), radical geometrical shapes began to be used as the basis for
- sans serif designs.
-
- There are a few other common sans faces which do not fall cleanly into
- the above categories. Eric Gill's 1928 Gill Sans has an almost
- architectural quality, and its greater contrast and humanistic design
- makes it better-suited than most sans serif typefaces to setting bodies
- of text. The same can perhaps be said of a number of late 20th Century
- humanistic sans faces (see below)
-
- Slab Serif (Egyptian)
- .....................
-
- These faces have block-like rectangular serifs, sticking out
- horizontally or vertically, often the same thickness as the body
- strokes. There is some debate about the origin of slab serif
- typefaces: did they originate by somebody adding serifs to a sans face,
- or were they conceived independently?
-
- But even if they had a separate genesis as a family, it is certainly the
- case that many of the most common and popular slab serif forms have been
- created by adding slab serifs to sans faces by the same designer (e.g.
- Adrian Frutiger's 1977 Glypha from his Univers, Herb Lubalin's 1974
- Lubalin Graph from his Avant Garde). Other slab serif faces include
- Berthold City (Trump, 1930), Memphis (Weiss, 1930), Serifa (Frutiger,
- 1968) and Silica (Stone, 1990).
-
- The Clarendons or Ionics are an offspring of the slab serif typefaces in
- which the serifs are bracketed. These are often used in newspaper work,
- because their sturdy serifs hold up well under adverse printing
- conditions. The most famous member of this sub-family is Century
- Schoolbook (M.F. Benton, 1924-35).
-
- Decorative & Display Type
- -------------------------
-
- Fat Faces
- .........
-
- The "Fat Face" types were an offshoot of the moderns, intended for
- display purposes (that is, to be attention-getting for use in large
- sizes, particularly advertising). The first such types appeared from
- 1810-1820. They further exaggerated the contrast of modern typefaces,
- with slab-like vertical lines and extra emphasis of any vertical
- serifs, which often acquired a wedge shape. Bodoni Ultra, Normande and
- Elephant are all examples of fat face types which are closely based on
- early to mid-19th Century originals, and are available in digital form.
-
- Wood Type
- .........
-
- Wood type answered some of the needs of display advertising during the
- industrial revolution. It is distinguished by strong contrasts, an
- overall dark color, and a lack of fine lines. It may be unusually
- compressed or extended. Many wood types have an "Old West" feel, because
- they are most strongly associated with America in the 1870-1900 period.
- Some of the wood types most widely available today are those in an
- Adobe pantheon released in 1990, which includes Cottonwood, Ironwood
- and Juniper (Buker, Lind & Redick).
-
- Script, Brush, Italic & Freehand
- ................................
-
- Script typefaces are based on handwriting; but often this is handwriting
- with either a flexible steel nib pen, or a broad-edged pen, and is thus
- unlike modern handwriting.
-
- Some common scripts based on steel nib styles include Shelley (Carter,
- 1972), Coronet (Middleton, 1937-38), and Snell Roundhand (Carter, 1965,
- based on Snell ca. 1694).
-
- Script faces based more on the broad-edged tradition include the
- contemporary Park Avenue (Smith, 1933).
-
- There are also monoline scripts, which lack significant contrast in the
- letter strokes. One such is Freestyle Script.
-
- Brush typefaces look as if they were drawn with that instrument, which
- most of them were, at least in the original design from which the
- metal/film/digital face was created. Some of them resemble sign-painting
- lettering, such as Balloon (Kaufmann, 1939), Brush Script (Smith,
- 1942), and Dom Casual (Dom, 1952).
-
- Brushwork can also be the basis for script, as with Present Script
- (Sallaway, 1974) and Mistral (Excoffon, 1953)
-
- Although modern typography typically relegates the italic to a second-
- class citizenship subordinate to the roman, there are still some italic
- typefaces designed as such in their own right. The best known is
- doubtless Zapf Chancery (Zapf, 1979). Others include Medici Script
- (Zapf 1974) and Poetica (Slimbach, 1992).
-
- Art Nouveau
- ...........
-
- The late Victorian era, from 1880 to World War I, was characterized by
- this ornamental style of art, with its organic, asymmetrical, intricate
- and flowing lines. This "Art Nouveau" (French, meaning "new art")
- produced similarly distinctive typography, which saw a revival during
- the 1960s.
-
- There are a fair number of digital revivals of art nouveau faces,
- although few are widely used. Some of the more common digital art
- nouveau typefaces are Arnold Bocklin (Weisert, 1904), Artistik,
- Desdemona, Galadriel and Victorian.
-
- Art Deco
- ........
-
- If Art Nouveau was about finding beauty in organic intricacy, Art Deco
- was perhaps about finding beauty in geometric simplicity. First
- appearing in the 1920s and 30s, Art Deco made a comeback in the 1970s
- and 80s as well.
-
- Almost by definition, Art Deco meant sans serif type. The most common
- such face is Avant Garde (1974, Lubalin), which is striking but hard to
- read at length. A more graceful geometric sans is Futura (Renner,
- 1927-39). There are also more quirky faces in this category, such as
- Kabel (Koch, 1927-30). A recent popular Art Deco display face is ITC
- Anna (1991?).
-
- Synthesis
- ---------
-
- Many of the most interesting typefaces of the twentieth century does not
- fit any of the above categories, or at least not easily. The reason is
- that they reflect not merely a single style, but cumulative experience,
- and the merger of different styles. This is perhaps true even of that
- most mundane of typefaces, Times New Roman (Lardent/Morison, 1931),
- which has old style, transitional and modern elements.
-
- Synthesis and Serif Type
- ........................
-
- Although there are many practitioners of this synthesis, the most famous
- is Hermann Zapf. His Palatino (1948) and Zapf Renaissance (1987) are
- modern typefaces with the spirit of Renaissance letterforms. Melior
- (1952), Zapf Book (1976), and Zapf International (1977) all reflect an
- obsession with the super-ellipse, a rectangulated circle, as the basis
- for letter shapes.
-
- There have also been many modern revivals of old style which, while
- close to old style in spirit, are not direct revivals of a specific
- original, and show modern influences in the proportions or
- lettershapes. These include the Granjon-inspired Galliard (Carter, 1978)
- and Minion (Slimbach, 1989).
-
- Synthesis and Sans Serif Type
- .............................
-
- After 1950, many designers began to explore a wide range of starting
- points as the basis for sans serif designs. Aldo Novarese's Eurostile
- (1964-5) takes sans serif forms and distorts them towards square and
- rectangular shapes. Zapf's 1958 Optima is a masterful blend of sans
- serif shapes with Roman and calligraphic influences. Shannon (Holmes &
- Prescott Fishman, 1981) is a sans serif based on celtic manuscript
- proportions. Several designers have reinterpreted ancient Greek
- lettering for a modern sans serif alphabet: most popularly Carol
- Twombly's Lithos (1989), and most recently Matthew Carter's Skia GX
- (1994). Hans Eduard Meier's Syntax (1969) is one of the earliest sans
- typefaces which clearly echo renaissance roman letterforms. More recent
- sans faces often draw on a humanistic background, from Meta to
- Vereschagin's Clear Prairie Dawn.
-
- "Grunge" Typography
- ...................
-
- The most recent typographic wave is one which has sometimes been called
- Grunge typography, after the musical movement originating in Seattle.
- Although it is far too early to judge the ultimate impact of Grunge, I
- see the form as the merger of the industrial functionalist movement
- called Bauhaus (contemporary with Art Deco, named after the
- architectural school) with the wild, nihilistic absurdism of Dadaism.
- Grunge, like many typographic/artistic movements before it, is a
- rebellion; but this rebellion denies not only the relevance of anything
- previous, but sometimes even legibility itself, in the belief that the
- medium *is* the message. Grunge typefaces and typography may be seen in
- magazines such as RayGun.
-
- Sources
- =======
-
- Published Sources
- -----------------
-
- Although much of this information is simply based on previous reading,
- I also actively consulted the following publications:
-
- Bauermeister, Benjamin. A Manual of Comparative Typography. Van
- Nostrand Reinhold Co., New York, NY: 1988. ISBN 0-442-21187-2.
-
- Bringhurst, Robert. The Elements of Typographic Style. Hartley &
- Marks, Vancouver, BC: 1992. ISBN 0-88179-033-8.
-
- Byers, Steve. The Electronic Type Catalog. Bantam Books, New York:
- 1991. ISBN 0-553-35446-9.
-
- Letraset Canada Limited. Letraset Product Manual. Letraset, Markham,
- Ontario, Canada: 1985.
-
- Meggs, Philip B. "American Type Founders Specimen Book & Catalog 1923"
- in Print Magazine, vol. 48 #1, Jan-Feb. 1994. Contains some interesting
- info on the effects of industrialization on the type industry.
-
- Sutton, James & Bartram, Alan. An Atlas of Typeforms. Percy, Lund,
- Humphries & Co., Hertfordshire, UK: 1968. ISBN 1-85326-911-5.
-
- Morison, Stanley & Day, Kenneth. The Typographic Book: 1450-1935.
- University of Chicago Press: 1963.
-
- Updike, Daniel Berkeley. Printing Types: Their History, Forms & Use.
- Harvard Press: 1962.
-
- Personal Contributions
- ----------------------
-
- In addition to written sources, which are identified elsewhere in the
- Internet FAQ file(s), I would like to thank the following for their
- helpful comments, corrections and additions (any errors are, of course,
- my responsibility): Robert Hemenway, Mary Jo Kostya, and Dan Margulis.
-
- ---------- Footnotes ----------
-
- (1) Version 1.0, 23 Jan 95
-
- Subject: 1.28. The Role of National Orthography in Font Design
-
- This article was constructed from postings by Anders Thulin, Charles A.
- Bigelow, and "fieseler" from Jan 1994.
-
- An open question: what role does national orthography play in the
- asthetics of a given font?
-
- Given that uppercase letters occur more frequently in German than in
- English, are German font designs better for typesetting German (because
- the designer is more concious of the relationship between capitals and
- lowercase)? Similarly, are French designs better for typesetting French
- because the designer is more atuned to the appearance of accents?
-
- Speaking of accents, there are apparently fonts in which the dots over
- the "i" and "j" are not at the same height as the dieresis over
- accented vowels. (Does anyone have an example of this?) Surely this is
- an error that a designer accustomed to working with accented letters is
- unlikely to make?
-
- Subject: 1.29. Interesting Fonts
-
- There's no end of interesting fonts, so this is really just a catch-all
- category.
-
- Highway Gothic
- ==============
-
- Kibo (James Parry) provides the following discussion of Highway Gothic:
-
- Highway Gothic is The Font Company's name for their interpretation of
- the font used on most official road signs in the United States. (The
- Font Company added a lowercase to most styles.)
-
- I don't think it has an official name. There is a government
- publication which shows the fonts (revised in the seventies to make the
- heights metric); I got a copy of it once, from a library specializing in
- transportation, and digitized Series E(M) (normal-width bold caps with
- lowercase, the only USDOT font with lowercase) for a special project. I
- don't think the specs have changed since the seventies.
-
- Besides E(M) with lowercase, there is a slightly lighter alphabet
- without lowercase, and three condensed styles. I recall there was also
- a set of really distorted letters for use in painting vehicle lanes,
- plus a few symbols for bike paths etc. The alphabets included letters
- and digits only--any periods or hyphens you see on signs are apparently
- unofficial.
-
- Where can I get extravagant initial caps?
- =========================================
-
- Don Hosek writes:
-
- I doubt that most decorated initials can be made to work in the type 1
- format because of their complexity. Color only makes things worse.
-
- One of the best choices for medieval and renaissance decorated alphabets
- hasn't been mentioned yet: BBL Typographic (they have an ad on p. 39 of
- Serif 1). A demo disk is available for \$10, B&W alphabets are \$50 each
- and full color alphabets are \$60.
-
- BBL Typographic
- 137 Narrow Neck Road
- Katoomba, NSW 2780
- AUSTRALIA
- 011-61-47-826111
- 011-61-47-826144 FAX
-
- also distributed by:
-
- Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies
- LN G99
- State University of New York
- Birmingham, NY 13902-6000
-
- I know the work only from the Serif ad, but it's gorgeous there (even
- nicer in color, although they decided not to spend the extra money for
- color in their ad... only a select few in Katoomba & Claremont have seen
- the ad in full color). Of course Serif-related disclaimers apply.
-
- Jon Pastor contributes:
-
- Check out the Aridi initials, color EPS initials, available on the
- Monotype CD (and, presumably, on the Adobe CD as well, although they
- don't advertise this; Monotype did, in a recent mailing).
-
- To which Don Hosek amends:
-
- The Aridi initials are part of the Type Designers of the World
- collection and are available on the MT CD but not the Adobe CD. Adobe
- has their own line of decorated initials available on their CD. Also
- see the catalogs from FontHaus, FontShop and Precision Type.
-
- If you want something really unique, why not hire a calligrapher. It
- may be cheaper than you think.
-
- Robert Green adds:
-
- Although they might not be on the Adobe CD, the Fall 1994 Font &
- Function advertises an Adobe "Initial Caps" collection of decorative
- initial caps designed by Marwan Aridi.
-
- Subject: 1.30. Pronounciation of Font Names
-
- Below each of the following font names, a suggested English
- pronounciation is given. This information was collected from a
- (relatively) long discussion on comp.fonts. If you disagree, or have
- other suggestions, please let me know.
-
- Arnold Boecklin
- ===============
-
- "Ar" as in car, "nold" as in "old" with an "n" on the front. "Boeck"
- is tricker. The "oe" is actually an umlaut "o" in German, and the
- closest sound to most English speakers is an "er". So try "Berklin" if
- you want to come close to the original. Otherwise, just say "Boklin",
- with a long o, like in "boat".
-
- Benguiat
- ========
-
- Ben-Gat. This according to an ITC brochure.
-
- Courier
- =======
-
- I would pronounce Courier not like Jim Courier, but the French way:
- Ku-rie, where "Ku" is pronounced like "coo", only short, and "rie" is
- pronounced "ree-eh".
-
- Didot
- =====
-
- Stressed at the last syllable. "Dee-DOOH" (not nasal).
-
- Fette Fraktur
- =============
-
- "Fet" as in "get" with a "te" that rhymes with "way". "Frak" rhymes
- with "mock", and "tur" with "tour".
-
- Fenice
- ======
-
- Feh-nee'-chey
-
- Garamond
- ========
-
- "Gara-": Use a french "r" instead of an english one. Both "a"s are
- pronounced like the "u" in the word "up". "-mond": the last syllable is
- stressed, and you don't pronounce the "n" and "d", but the whole "ond"
- is a nasal "o". Hold your nose closed and say "Ooh", then you get the
- right sound. The "ant" in "Avant-Garde" is very similar to this sound,
- it is a nasal situated between "a" and "o".
-
- Helvetica
- =========
-
- Hell-veh'-ti-ka
-
- Koch Roman
- ==========
-
- Pronounced like scottish `Loch', but with K instead of L.
-
- LaTeX
- =====
-
- Lamport lists lah'-tech, lah-tech', lay'-tech and lay'-tecks as valid
- on p.4. Last I talked to him he'd settled into lay'-tech which has
- always been my pronunciation as well. Somewhere, I heard that LL does
- explicitly rule out L.A.-tech, but he's from northern California which
- explains a lot.
-
- Mos Eisley
- ==========
-
- moss eyes-lee
-
- Novarese
- ========
-
- No-vahr-ay'-zay
-
- Palatino
- ========
-
- pa-la-TEEN-oh
-
- Peignot
- =======
-
- There's some contention here, suggested pronouncations:
-
- pay-nyoh'
-
- "P" like "P" in `Post", "ei" like "a" in "fan", "gn" like "n" in "noon"
- plus "y" in "yes", "ot" - long, closed "o" (I don't know English
- examples), stressed.
-
- "P" like "P" in `Post", "ei" like "a" in "many", "gn" like "n" in
- "noon" plus "y" in "yes", "ot" - long, closed "o" (I don't know English
- examples), stressed.
-
- Sabon
- =====
-
- Sah-bon'
-
- TeX
- ===
-
- Rhymes with Blech, (as in "Blech, that tasted awfull!")
-
- Veljovic
- ========
-
- Vel'-yo-vitch
-
- Zapf
- ====
-
- Like "tsapf". The "a" is pronounced like a short version of the well
- known tongue-depresser vowel "aaahhh". Perhaps a better English analogy
- would be the "o" in "hop" or "hops".
-
- This is Info file comp.fonts.faq.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from
- the input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Subject: 1.31. What is it?
-
- This section identifies common names for several glyphs.
-
- The "@" Character
- =================
-
- The "at" sign or "commercial at" sign. In the past, it has also meant
- "each" or "each at". Consider the following example supplied by Clive
- Burton:
-
- Unit Extended
- Qnty Unit Item Price Price
- 12 reams bond paper @ 5.50 66.00
-
- Here' "@" means each at or simply each.
-
- PostScript calls this the "at" sign.
-
- The "#" Character
- =================
-
- This mark has several common names: 'hash', 'pound sign', and
- 'octothorp' among them. The name "pound sign" is an Americanism that
- causes some confusion in countries that use the pound for currency.
-
- It was also noted that the # is a medieval abbreviation for Latin
- "numerus" - it is a cursive 'n' with a horizontal slash through it,
- much modified and abstracted.
-
- One possible derivation of the name "octothorp" was provided by Charles
- Bigelow:
-
- ... old English "thorp" meant 'hamlet' or 'village' (I'm not sure
- of the difference, except maybe hamlet is smaller, as its apparent
- diminutive suffix would suggest), and is derived from a much older
- Indo-European word *treb- for 'dwelling', which turns out to mean
- 'beam' or 'timber' in Latin "trabs", winding up as "trave" in
- Anglo-Latin, like "architrave" - the beam resting on a column, or
- "trab-" as in "trabecula" - a small supporting beam or bar. As
- Voltaire said, etymology is a science in which the vowels count
- for nothing and the consonants for very little.
-
- So, maybe "octothorp" means "8-beams", which makes a kind of sense
- if we take the 8 projections to be the thorps, or trabs or traves.
- Though it's only a "quadrathorp" if we think that the beams
- connect.
-
- Another explanation has it that the octothorp is a "thorp" surrounded
- by eight cultivated fields.
-
- Both of these etymologies received some skepticism amongst the readers
- who commented on comp.fonts.
-
- PostScript calls this the "numbersign".
-
- Subject: 1.32. Equivalent Font Names
-
- Morgan S. Brilliant, Jon Pastor, and Frank F. Smith have each
- contributed to the following list of equivalent font names.
-
- The following table shows trade/common names and the equivalent names
- used by other vendors. The vendor or trademark holder's name is shown
- in parenthesis following each typeface name.
-
- Aachen Bold (Letraset)
- Aardvark (Corel)
-
- Activa (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Kuenstler 480
-
- Ad Lib
- Adelaide (Corel)
-
- Adsans (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Humanist 970
-
- Akzidenz Grotesk (H. Berthold AG)
- Gothic 725
-
- Albertus (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Flareserif 821
-
- Aldine 401 (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Bembo
-
- Aldine 721 (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Plantin
-
- Algerian (S. Blake)
- Algiers (Corel)
-
- Allegro
- Alto (Corel)
-
- Amelia (VGC)
- Amy (Corel)
-
- Americana (ATF)
- Amherst (Corel)
-
- Antique Olive (Fonderie Olive)
- Incised 901
-
- Arnold Bocklin
- Arabia (Corel)
-
- Arquitectura (IC)
- Architecture (Corel)
-
- Avant Garde (ITC)
- Avalon (Corel)
-
- Badloc (IC)
- Bedrock (Corel)
-
- Balloon (ATF)
- Bassoon (Corel)
-
- Bamboo (ATF)
- Bard (Corel)
-
- Bauhaus (ITC)
- Bahamas (Corel)
-
- Bauhaus Heavy (ITC)
- BahamasHeavy (Corel)
-
- Bauhaus Light (ITC)
- BahamasLight (Corel)
-
- BeeBopp (IC)
- Beehive (Corel)
-
- Bembo (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Aldine 401
-
- Benguit (ITC)
- Bangkok (Corel)
-
- Bernhard Tango (VGC)
- BallroomTango (Corel)
-
- Bisque (VGC)
- Brisk (Corel)
-
- Bitstream Arrust Black BT (Bitstream)
- Bitstream Arrus Black BT (WordPerfect)
-
- Block (H. Berthold AG)
- Gothic 821
-
- Bodoni Campanile (Ludlow Industries (UK) Ltd.)
- Modern 735
-
- Bodoni Poster
- Bodnoff (Corel)
-
- Book Jacket (VGC)
- Brochure (Corel)
-
- Bookman (ITC)
- Brooklyn (Corel)
-
- Broadway (ATF)
- Bravo (Corel)
-
- Broadway Engraved (ATF)
- BravoEngraved (Corel)
-
- Brody (ATF)
- Briquet (Corel)
-
- Brush 445 (H. Berthold AG)
- Palette
-
- Brush 738
- Bison
-
- Brush Script (ATF)
- Banff (Corel)
-
- Busorama (ITC)
- Bosanova (Corel)
-
- Buster (Letraset)
- Busker (Corel)
-
- Cable (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Geometric 231
-
- Calligraphic 421 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Codex
-
- Calligraphic 810 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Diotima
-
- Carolus Roman
- Carleton (Corel)
-
- Carta (Adobe)
- GeographicSymbols (Corel)
-
- Cartoon
- Cancun (Corel)
-
- Cascade (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Freehand 471
-
- Cascade Script (Adobe)
- Castanet (Corel)
-
- Casino (IC)
- Carino (Corel)
-
- Caslon (ATF)
- Casablanca (Corel)
-
- Caslon Antique (ATF)
- CasablancaAntique (Corel)
-
- Caslon Open Face
- CasperOpenFace (Corel)
-
- Caslon Openfacce (Bitstream)
- Caslon Openface (WordPerfect)
-
- Centaur (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Venetian 301
-
- Century Old Style
- CenturionOld (Corel)
-
- Champagne (IC)
- Campaign (Corel)
-
- Charlemagne (Adobe)
- Charlesworth (Corel)
-
- Choc (Letraset)
- Chalk (Corel)
-
- Choc (Fonderie Olive)
- Staccato 555
-
- City (H. Berthold AG)
- Square Slabserif 711
-
- Codex (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Calligraphic 421
-
- Comic Book (IC)
- Cosmic (Corel)
-
- Comic Book Two (IC)
- CosmicTwo (Corel)
-
- Cooper Black
- Cupertino (Corel)
-
- CopperPlate Gothic (VGC)
- CopperPot (Corel)
-
- Coronet (Ludlow Industries (UK) Ltd.)
- Ribbon 131
-
- Cottonwood (Adobe)
- Cottage (Corel)
-
- Croissant (Letraset)
- Crescent (Corel)
-
- Decorative 035 (Tetterode Nederland (Lettergieterij Amsterdam))
- Profil
-
- Delphin
- Dauphin (Corel)
-
- Diotima (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Calligraphic 810
-
- Dom Casual
- DawnCastle (Corel)
-
- Dutch 801 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Times Roman
-
- Dutch 801 (Montype Corporation plc)
- Times Roman
-
- Electra (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Transitional 521
-
- Elektrik (VGC)
- Eklektic (Corel)
-
- Englische Screibschrift (H. Berthold AG)
- English 157
-
- English 157 (H. Berthold AG)
- Englische Screibschrift
-
- Enviro (Letraset)
- Envision (Corel)
-
- Eras (ITC)
- Erie (Corel)
-
- Eras Black (ITC)
- ErieBlack (Corel)
-
- Eras Contour (ITC)
- ErieContour (Corel)
-
- Eras Light (ITC)
- ErieLight (Corel)
-
- Estro (ATF)
- Expo (Corel)
-
- Eurostile (Adobe)
- Euromode (Corel)
-
- Eurostile (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Square 721
-
- Exotic 350 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Peignot
-
- Fairfield (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Transitional 551
-
- Fette Fraktur (ITC)
- Frankenstein (Corel)
-
- Firenze (ITC)
- Florence (Corel)
-
- Flareserif 821 (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Albertus
-
- Formal Script 421 (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Mermaid
-
- Formal Script 421 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Ondine
-
- Franfurt (TFCo)
- FrankHighlight (Corel)
-
- Frankfurt (TFCo)
- FrankHighlight (Corel)
-
- Franklin Gothic (ITC)
- FrankfurtGothhic (Corel)
-
- Franklin Gothic Heav (ITC)
- FrankfurtGothicHeavy (Corel)
-
- Freehand 471 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Cascade
-
- Freehand 521 (Ludlow Industries (UK) Ltd.)
- Mandate
-
- Freehand 575
- Jefferson
-
- Freehand 591
- Bingham Script
-
- Freestyle Script (Letraset)
- Freeport (Corel)
-
- Fritz Quadrata (ITC)
- France (Corel)
-
- Frutiger (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Humanist 777
-
- Futura 2 (FTNSA)
- Fujiyama2 (Corel)
-
- Futura Black (Bauer)
- FujiyamaBlack (Corel)
-
- Futura Cnd Extra Bol (FTNSA)
- FujiyamaExtraBold (Corel)
-
- Futura Cnd Extra Bold (FTNSA)
- FujiyamaExtraBold (Corel)
-
- Futura Cnd Light (FTNSA)
- FujiyamaLight (Corel)
-
- Futura Condensed (FTNSA)
- Fujiyama (Corel)
-
- Gallia
- Galleria (Corel)
-
- Garamond (ITC)
- Gatineau (Corel)
-
- Garamond, American
- Garamond No. 3
-
- Garamond, Classic (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Sabon
-
- Garamond, Elegant (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Granjon
-
- Garamond, Italian (Officine Simoncini s.p.a.)
- Simoncini Garamond
-
- Garamond, Original (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Stempel Garamond
-
- Geometric 231 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Cable
-
- Geometric 415 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Metro
-
- Geometric 706 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Neuzeit Grotesk
-
- Geometric SlabSerif 703 Light (Bitstream)
- GeometricSlabSerif703Light (WordPerfect)
-
- Geometric Slabserif 703 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Memphis
-
- Geometric Slabserif 712 (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Rockwell
-
- Geometric Slabserif 712 (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Slate
-
- Gill Sans (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Humanist 521
-
- Gill Sans Ultra Bold (Monotype)
- GillbertUltraBold (Corel)
-
- Glasnost (C&G)
- Czar (Corel)
-
- Glyphic Series (VGC)
- Glacier (Corel)
-
- Gold Rush (ATF)
- GoldMine (Corel)
-
- Gothic 725 (H. Berthold AG)
- Akzidenz Grotesk
-
- Gothic 821 (H. Berthold AG)
- Block
-
- Goudy Old Style
- GoldenOldStyle (Corel)
-
- Granjon (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Garamond, Elegant
-
- Graphik (IC)
- Griffon (Corel)
-
- Graphik Shadow (IC)
- GriffonShadow (Corel)
-
- Hairpin (VGC)
- Harpoon (Corel)
-
- Hammersmith (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Humanist 521
-
- Hanseatic (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Swiss 924
-
- Harlow (Letraset)
- Hollow (Corel)
-
- Hebrew (Letraset)
- Alefbet (Corel)
-
- Helv. Cnd. Black (Linotype)
- SwitzerlandCondBlack (Corel)
-
- Helv. Cond. Light (Linotype)
- SwitzerlandCondLight (Corel)
-
- Helvetica
- Arial (Microsoft)
-
- Helvetica (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Swiss 721
-
- Helvetica (Linotype)
- Switzerland (Corel)
-
- Helvetica Black (Linotype)
- SwitzerlandBlack (Corel)
-
- Helvetica Condensed (Linotype)
- SwitzerlandCond (Corel)
-
- Helvetica Inserat (Linotype)
- SwitzerlandInserat (Corel)
-
- Helvetica Light (Linotype)
- SwitzerlandLight (Corel)
-
- Helvetica Narrow (Linotype)
- SwitzerlandNarrow (Corel)
-
- Hobo
- HomewardBound (Corel)
-
- Honda (ITC)
- Heidelberg (Corel)
-
- Humanist 521 (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Gill Sans
-
- Humanist 521 (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Hammersmith
-
- Humanist 777 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Frutiger
-
- Humanist 970 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Adsans
-
- Incised 901 (Fonderie Olive)
- Antique Olive
-
- Incised 901 (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Provence
-
- Industrial 736 (Societea Nebiolo)
- Torino
-
- Informal 011 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Neuland
-
- Ionic No. 5 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- News 701
-
- Ironwood (Adobe)
- Ireland (Corel)
-
- Juniper (Adobe)
- Jupiter (Corel)
-
- Kabel Bold
- KabanaBold (Corel)
-
- Kabel Book (ITC)
- KabanaBook (Corel)
-
- Kaufmann (Kingsley/ATF)
- Koala (Corel)
-
- Korinna (ITC)
- Korinthia (Corel)
-
- Kuenstler 480 (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Activa
-
- Kuenstler 480 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Trump Medieval
-
- Kunstler Script (Linotype)
- Kastler (Corel)
-
- L.C.D. (Letraset)
- LiquidCrystal (Corel)
-
- Lapidary 333 (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Perpetua
-
- Letter Gothic
- Monospaced (Corel)
-
- Linoscript (Linotype)
- Linus (Corel)
-
- Linotext (Linotype)
- Lincoln (Corel)
-
- Lithos (Adobe)
- Lithograph (Corel)
-
- Lithos Light (Adobe)
- LithographLight (Corel)
-
- Machine (ITC)
- Motor (Corel)
-
- Mandate (Ludlow Industries (UK) Ltd.)
- Freehand 521
-
- Melior (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Zapf Elliptical 711
-
- Memphis (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Geometric Slabserif 703
-
- Mermaid (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Formal Script 421
-
- Mermaid (Bitstream)
- Merlin (Corel)
-
- Metro (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Geometric 415
-
- Micr (IC)
- Keypunch (Corel)
-
- Mistral (M.Olive)
- Mystical (Corel)
-
- Mistral (Fonderie Olive)
- Staccato 222
-
- Modern 735 (Ludlow Industries (UK) Ltd.)
- Bodoni Campanile
-
- Monospace 821
- Helvetica Monospaced
-
- Neuland (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Informal 011
-
- Neuland
- Newfoundland (Corel)
-
- Neuzeit Grotesk (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Geometric 706
-
- New Baskerville (ITC)
- Nebraska (Corel)
-
- New Century Schoolbo
- NewBrunswick (Corel)
-
- New Century Schoolbook
- NewBrunswick (Corel)
-
- New Yorker (IC)
- NewOrder (Corel)
-
- New Yorker Engraved (IC)
- NewOrderEngraved
-
- News 701 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Ionic No. 5
-
- Nuptial Script
- Nuance (Corel)
-
- Ondine (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Formal Script 421
-
- Optima (Linotype)
- Ottawa (Corel)
-
- Optima (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Zapf Humanist 601
-
- P.T.Barnum (Bitstream)
- BigTop (Corel)
-
- Paintbrush (IC)
- Palette (Corel)
-
- Palatino (Linotype)
- PalmSprings (Corel)
-
- Palatino (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Zapf Calligraphic
-
- Palette (H. Berthold AG)
- Brush 445
-
- Paper Clip (VGC)
- Pipeline (Corel)
-
- Parisian (Kingsley/ATF)
- Paragon (Corel)
-
- Park Avenue (ATF)
- Paradise (Corel)
-
- Peignot (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Exotic 350
-
- Peignot (Linotype)
- Penguin (Corel)
-
- Peignot Light (Linotype)
- PenguinLight (Corel)
-
- Pepita (Monotype)
- Pepper (Corel)
-
- Perpetua (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Lapidary 333
-
- Plantin (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Aldine 721
-
- Plaza (Letraset)
- Playwright (Corel)
-
- Ponderosa (Adobe)
- Posse (Corel)
-
- Post Antiqua (H.Berthold AG)
- ProseAntique (Corel)
-
- Poster Bodoni
- Bodoni-WP (WordPerfect)
-
- Present Script (Linotype)
- President (Corel)
-
- Princetown (TFCo)
- Indiana (Corel)
-
- Princetown (TFCo)
- IndianaSolid (Corel)
-
- Profil (Tetterode Nederland (Lettergieterij Amsterdam))
- Decorative 035
-
- Provence (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Incised 901
-
- Pump Triline (Letraset)
- PowerLine (Corel)
-
- Quicksilver (D.Morris)
- Quantum (Corel)
-
- Revival 565
- Berling
-
- Revue (Letraset)
- Renfrew (Corel)
-
- Ribbon 131 (Ludlow Industries (UK) Ltd.)
- Coronet
-
- Rockwell (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Geometric Slabserif 712
-
- Sabon (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Garamond, Classic
-
- Simoncini Garamond (Officine Simoncini s.p.a.)
- Garamond, Italian
-
- Slate (Bitstream, Inc.)
- Geometric Slabserif 712
-
- Slogun (ZSoft)
- Shogun (Corel)
-
- Sonata (Adobe)
- MusicalSymbols (Corel)
-
- Souvenir (ITC)
- Southern (Corel)
-
- Square 721 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Eurostile
-
- Square Slabserif 711 (H. Berthold AG)
- City
-
- Squire (M.Neugebauer)
- Scribe (Corel)
-
- Staccato 222 (Fonderie Olive)
- Mistral
-
- Staccato 555 (Fonderie Olive)
- Choc
-
- Stempel Garamond (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Garamond, Original
-
- Stencil
- Stamp (Corel)
-
- Stop (Nebiolo)
- Scott (Corel)
-
- Surf Style (ITC)
- Surreal (Corel)
-
- Swiss 721 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Helvetica
-
- Swiss 911
- Helvetica Compressed
-
- Swiss 921
- Helvetica Inserat
-
- Swiss 924 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Hanseatic
-
- Symbol (ITC)
- GreekMathSYmbols (Corel)
-
- Symbol (ITC)
- GreekMathSymbols (Corel)
-
- Tekton (Adobe)
- Technical (Corel)
-
- Thor (VGC)
- Viking (Corel)
-
- Thunderbird
- ThunderBay (Corel)
-
- Tiffany (ITC)
- Timpani (Corel)
-
- Tiffany Heavy (ITC)
- TimpaniHeavy (Corel)
-
- Time (Linotype)
- Toronto (Corel)
-
- Times Roman (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Dutch 801
-
- Times Roman (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Dutch 801
-
- Torino (Societea Nebiolo)
- Industrial 736
-
- Traffic (T.Hultgren)
- Trafalgar (Corel)
-
- Transitional 521 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Electra
-
- Transitional 551 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Fairfield
-
- Trump Medieval (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Kuenstler 480
-
- Umbra (Kingsley/ATF)
- Umbrella (Corel)
-
- Univers (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Zurich
-
- Univers Black (Linotype)
- USABlack (Corel)
-
- Univers Light (Linotype)
- USALight (Corel)
-
- University Roman (Letraset)
- Unicorn (Corel)
-
- Uptight (ITC)
- Uptown (Corel)
-
- VAG Rounded
- Vogue (Corel)
-
- Venetian 301 (Monotype Corporation plc)
- Centaur
-
- Vivaldi (VGC)
- Vivienne (Corel)
-
- Zapf Calligraphic (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Palatino
-
- Zapf Chancery (ITC)
- ZurichCalligraphic (Corel)
-
- Zapf Dingbats (ITC)
- Dixieland (Corel)
-
- Zapf Elliptical 711 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Melior
-
- Zapf Humanist 601 (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Optima
-
- Zurich (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Univers
-
- Zurich (Linotype AG and/or its subsidiaries)
- Univers
-
- Some fonts are published by several vendors using the same name. This
- table shows the typeface name and the vendors that supply it. Generally
- this means that one vendor licensed the face from another.
-
- Augsburger Initials
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Baskerville Old Face
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Bell MT
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- Bell MT Bold
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- Bell MT Italic
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- Bernhard Modern BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Bernhard Modern Bold BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Bernhard Modern Bold Italic BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Bernhard Modern Italic BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Bitstream Arrus BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Bitstream Arrus BT Bold
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Bitstream Arrus BT Bold Italic
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Bitstream Arrus BT Italic
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- BitstreamArrus Black BT Italic
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Blackletter 686 BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Braggadocio
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- BriemScript
- Gunnlaugur SE Briem, Microsoft
-
- Britannic Bold
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Brush 738 BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Castellar
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- Centaur
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- CommonBullets
- Corel, Corel
-
- Contemporary Brush
- Filmotype, Microsoft
-
- Contemporary Brush B
- Filmotype, Microsoft
-
- Desdemona
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Eckmann
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Edda
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Elephant
- Carter & Cone Type Inc., Microsoft
-
- Elephant Italic
- Carter & Cone Type Inc., Microsoft
-
- Engravers' Gothic BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Eurostile
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Eurostile Bold
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Futura Bold
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Futura Medium
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Futura Oblique
- URW, Microsoft
-
- GeometricSlabSerifLight Italic
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Gill Sans Ultra Bold
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- Gradl
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Harrington
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Humanist 521 Condensed BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Humanist 521 Condensed Bold BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Humanist 521 Light BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Humanist 521 Light Italic BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Impact
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- Keystroke
- Corel, Corel
-
- Kids
- Corel, Corel
-
- Memorandum
- ITC, Corel
-
- Mistral
- URW, Microsoft
-
- New Caledonia
- Linotype-Hell AG, Microsoft
-
- New Caledonia Bold
- Linotype-Hell AG, Microsoft
-
- New Caledonia Italic
- Linotype-Hell AG, Microsoft
-
- Old English Text MT
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- Onyx
- Monotype, Microsoft
-
- Onyx BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- OzHandicraft BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Parade
- Filmotype, Microsoft
-
- Peignot Medium
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Playbill
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Ransom
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Ransom Bold
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Ransom Bold Italic
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Ransom Italic
- The Font Bureau, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Ribbon 131 BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Shelley Volante BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Stencil
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Stop
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Swiss 721 Black Extended BT
- Bitstream, WordPerfect
-
- Wide Latin
- URW, Microsoft
-
- Wingdings 2
- Bigelow & Holmes, Inc., Microsoft
-
- Wingdings 3
- Bigelow & Holmes, Inc., Microsoft
-
- The following table summarizes typeface names for which no equivalent
- name is known. The vendor is listed for each font. Many of these
- fonts are builtin to the HP LaserJet line of printers.
-
- AdineKirnberg
- shareware
-
- Albertus Extra Bold
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Albertus Medium
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- American-Uncial-Normal
- shareware
-
- Antique Olive
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Antique Olive Bold
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Antique Olive Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Broadway-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- BroadwayEngraved-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- CG Omega
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- CG Omega Bold
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- CG Omega Bold Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- CG Omega Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- CG Times
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- CG Times Bold
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- CG Times Bold Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- CG Times Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Century-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- Clarendon Condensed
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- CommercialScript-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- CooperBlack
- WordPerfect
-
- Coronet Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Eurostile-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- Garamond Antiqua
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Garamond Halbfett
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Garamond Kursiv
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Garamond Kursiv Halbfett
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Hobo-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- Letter Gothic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Letter Gothic Bold
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Letter Gothic Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Marigold
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- MurrayHill-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- OldEnglish-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- OldTown-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- Stencil-WP
- WordPerfect
-
- Symbol
- Microsoft
-
- Times New Roman
- Microsoft
-
- Univers
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Univers Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Univers Bold
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Univers Bold Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Univers Condensed
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Univers Condensed Bold
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Univers Condensed Bold Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Univers Condensed Italic
- Hewlett-Packard
-
- Wingdings
- Microsoft
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: General Info (5/5)
- Supersedes: <font-faq-5_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:07 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 383
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-5_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16992 comp.answers:9900 news.answers:34562
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part5
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 1.33. Digital Type Design Tools
-
- This article was constructed from a posting by Charles A. Bigelow in
- Jun 1994 and a posting by Clive Bruton in Jan 1995.
-
- How do the various digital type designing tools compare?
- ========================================================
-
- Charles A. Bigelow contributes:
-
- Kris Holmes and I use Ikarus and IkarusM, on the Macintosh, for most of
- our work. We also use Fontographer from time to time. Both are good
- tools. We have not tried TypeDesigner. We have tried FontStudio, but
- don't use it.
-
- IkarusM and Fontographer user interfaces are different (modulo the Mac
- interface). IkarusM displays all "on-curve" points, treating the curves
- as Hermite splines, which it converts to Beziers when making Type1 or
- Type3 fonts, and to quadratic B-splines when making TrueType fonts.
- On-curve points are helpful because they are intuitively more like what
- a naive user would expect--to change a curve, change a point on its
- contour. Fontographer uses bezier on-curve and off-curve control
- points. While these take a little more getting used-to, experienced
- users have no problems manipulating curves by moving around the
- off-curve control points.
-
- Fontographer uses curve fitting of scanned input and/or mouse
- manipulation of points to get started on outlines. IkarusM uses
- graphics tablet input from drawn (or photographed) artwork or mouse
- manipulation to get started.
-
- Both provide auto-hinting capabilities (IkarusM just included this in
- version 3.0), but I haven't compared the quality of hinting between the
- applications. Both provide automatic kerning capabilities, but again I
- haven't compared the quality carefully. IkarusM itself doesn't do
- kerning, but version 3.0 comes with Kernus, a separate auto-kerning
- system.
-
- Fontographer has more "goodies" in terms of the the different kinds of
- output of fonts and screen fonts for different platforms (indeed, we
- prefer it for making BDF bitmaps for UNIX platforms), and in the "finer
- points" so to speak, of manipulating control points, whereas IkarusM
- has more internal accuracy of resolution and more geometric symmetry
- manipulation tools.
-
- Fontographer has auto-tracing capability, for fitting outlines to
- scanned images, whereas IkarusM needs a separate program, LinusM to do
- that. However, LinusM adds several capabilities that Fontographer does
- not provide.
-
- I have forgotten the current list price for Fontographer (sorry, but
- I'm sure a Fontographer user or someone from Altsys can provide it; is
- it around \$250 - \$300?). IkarusM + Kernus + LinusM is around \$900,
- but one should check with the URW office in Nashua, NH, to be certain
- of that figure and of what is included.
-
- There are many other differences between the programs, and perhaps other
- users will want to point them out.
-
- Which would I choose? Well, I have them both. Kris Holmes and I have
- produced over 75 typefaces with Ikarus, though some of those were with
- Ikarus on VAX or Sun. We are comfortable with Ikarus and feel that it
- provides the highest level of precision and control, which for our
- professional purposes is what we most value. Nevertheless, we find
- Fontographer to be very good tool and continually buy the updates and
- test it and use it for various things when we feel that it is superior
- to Ikarus in particular respects. The best thing would be to test them
- both, but unfortunately, one's preference for one or the other might
- not manifest itself until one has gained more experience.
-
- Disclaimer: We pay the standard prices and purchase our copies of
- IkarusM and Fontographer and their upgrades, figuring that font tool
- developers deserve to be paid for their work, just like font designers.
- Bigelow & Holmes has font licensing arrangements with URW, the
- developers of Ikarus, but we are not paid by them.
-
- What about FontStudio?
- ======================
-
- [Editors note: This seems like valuable information for the FAQ, which
- is why I've included it in a mostly wholesale fashion as Clive posted
- it. In general, I'm not a big fan of anonymous contributions, but in
- this case I've chosen to look the other way ;-). In particular, I've
- made no attempt to disambiguate the personal pronouns in this section!]
-
- Clive Bruton contributes the following:
-
- I will now do a mini compendium of all my comments as FontStudio's chief
- promoter, along with all the other people who support my view.
-
- Sorry to those who are not credited, but others wish to remain
- anonymous.
-
- The following snippets are not necessarily in chronological order, names
- have been changed to protect the guilty!
-
- Is FontStudio Still Being Marketed?
- -----------------------------------
-
- Well it's one of those questions isn't it, it is certainly advertised in
- the UK and as far as I know still supported by Letraset UK, but as you
- have probably seen in comp.fonts there has been some debate over the
- relative merits of FontStudio vs Fontographer, my arguement suitably
- backed-up by ...., and there is certainly some doubt over its imediate
- future.
-
- Personally I'd like to see it re-launched, if only because the market
- needs some stimulation in order to produce ground-breaking products, and
- one App/Vendor (Fontographer/Altsys) doesn't make for healthy
- competition, as we've seen with Quark getting fat and lazy over their
- upgrades for XPress with no perceived threat from PageMaker (that should
- change real soon).
-
- However it (FS) retails in the UK for \$195.00 as opposed to
- Fontographers \$295.00, the current version is 2.0, as it has been for
- over two years, but then again there have been no bug fixes for it, no
- need!
-
- I am sure that you could buy it in the US via Letraset directly, if you
- wanted to. As far as marketing goes, I have just received a software
- brochure from Camalot (UK software vendor) that partly showcases the
- full Letraset range, and FontStudio is in there with the rest.
-
- If you can't get it in the States, I'm sure I can arrange for it to be
- shipped to you.
-
- What About Bitmap Generation?
- -----------------------------
-
- FontStudio's advantage is that they call the ATM API to get
- ATM-generated bitmaps. Fontographer generates their own--and the
- results are much heavier and more messy.
-
- Yes, you're right, I did know, FS has 3 options on this, its own
- generation, which like Fontographers are rather heavy, ATM's which are
- just about perfect, and True Type, which from memory--since I only
- tried it a couple of times--tend to be a bit quirky.
-
- FontStudio is Better [than Fontographer]?
- -----------------------------------------
-
- Could you elaborate on that? Why do you suppose that FontStudio
- disappeared, and Fontographer is still around? Not being belligerent or
- challenging you, since I'm totally unfamiliar with FontStudio--but
- Altsys is not exactly a Goliath compared to Letraset, in terms of the
- size of the company or the depth of its pockets, and I'm curious why
- such a good product from a big font vendor disappeared.
-
- I'll chime in here if that's OK. I'm very glad FontStudio came along;
- Fontographer was resting on its laurels until it got serious
- competition. Many people prefer FontStudio's drawing interface (which is
- like Illustrator's) to Fontographer's (which is, unsurprisingly, like
- Freehand's). There are other parts to the interface debate as well, like
- zoom factors, dialog complexity, and so forth, although much of it may
- be a matter of taste.
-
- XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX was one of FontStudio's beta sites, and they used a lot
- of our advice, so it's not accidental that our designers still tend to
- use it until it's time to move the fonts over to the SPARCs. I use it
- when I'm playing with designs at home.
-
- It looks like Letraset didn't know how to promote what it had. It's
- worth noting that they'yre divesting themselves of their other graphics
- apps, not just FontStudio. At any rate, the biggest hurdle was that
- Fontographer had a four-year head start, capturing the hearts of nearly
- everyone who was serious about making fonts. Nobody wants to relearn an
- app, so the competition has to be darned good to get people to switch.
- It has happened (witness XPress vs PageMaker) but it's not easy.
- Another problem was that Letraset didn't develop FontStudio, they
- bought it. They and the developers (now Ares, the FontMonger people)
- didn't get along well, and that led to a painfully slow upgrade
- process. Altsys got themselves in gear, and started adding features
- right & left, outdoing FontStudio on nearly every count (technically,
- not necessarily in terms of user experience).
-
- I can only agree with what XXX has said above, plus...
-
- Just some more background info on FontStudio/Letraset. Unfortunately
- Letraset never seemed to get the knack of selling software, some
- examples of this are, Letraset were originally the distributors of Adobe
- products in the UK - a job that is now carried out by Principal, they
- also had a full complement of other Mac software - which seems to have
- reverted to its authors or disappeared alltogether, it has recently
- released the first commercially available Plug-In for Illustrator, a
- derivative of LetraStudio, to allow the creation of pespective and
- envelope effects - who knows about this?
-
- Back to the FontStudio/Fontographer debate, I have tried to use
- Fontographer, but as discussed above, the interface is just awful (as an
- aside, does anyone like FreeHand 4.0's interface?), FontStudios use of
- colour, pop-up menus, and general look and feel is completely at home
- alongside XPress and Illustrator, where as Fontographer, well... isn't!
-
- All the buzzers and bells are there in Fontographer, but can you really
- take seriously a program that won't allow you to draught your own
- bitmaps! (Yeah I have heard about ATM, that's not the point).
-
- Also, and I won't lay the blame solely at the door of Altsys, whenever
- I get asked to sort out a problem font, it's always been created with
- Fontographer. Now whether that is down to Altsys Fontographer (AF)
- trying to things that aren't exactly kosher (like using even/odd rule
- instead of winding), or the skill of the digitisers who did the work
- I've never been able to fathom, but it's usually fixed by importing into
- FontStudio (FS) and re-saving.
-
- I hope that Ares do something with FS, otherwise sooner or later I am
- going to need a new program (I have found a minor screen draw problem
- when used with System 7.5, I've yet to try it on a PowerMac [anyone
- wants me to, I can send you results]), I have already looked around, and
- seem a lot more likely to buy Ikarus M than AF, it's really that bad.
-
- I would also like to comment on XXX's point about XPress/PageMaker, I
- hope that Adobe can make a real killer of PM, and reverse that trend,
- XPress>PM that'll be the way to go!
-
- Just to take Xpress' name in vain again (I don't hate the program, just
- the smug bastards that want to charge me \$190.00 to get a native
- version, and only a native version - Adobe has got the right attitude
- there!) "XPress" is to "Word for Windows", what "FontStudio" is to
- "Fontographer".
-
- QED. Maybe not!
-
- If all those in favour send me a *YAY* (addressed to
- typonaut@d-supp.demon.co.uk) and someone sends me e-addresses for Ares
- and Letraset, then I will forward them your support, who knows Altsys
- may even decide to pack the whole Fontographer game in, and Adobe can
- relaunch FontStudio!
-
- Subject: 1.34. Type Design Firms
-
- Although it has been a long time coming, it seems only natural that the
- comp.fonts FAQ should provide a brief summary of what the various type
- design firms are producing.
-
- Carter & Cone Type, Inc.
- ========================
-
- This description was constructed from postings by Don Hosek, Erik-Jan
- Vens, and David Lemon in Sep, 1993.
-
- Carter & Cone Type Inc.
- 2155 Massachusetts Avenue
- Cambridge, MA 02140
- 617-576-0398 or 800-952-2129
- 617-354-4146 FAX
-
- We begin with Carter & Cone not because I think they should be first,
- but because I already have a few articles about them (I probably saved
- the articles more because they were about Galliard, which I have a
- fondness for, than anything else). Please contribute summaries about
- other foundries (even the foundries themselves are encouraged to
- contribute, althought I'd appreciate it if the advertising overtones
- were kept to a dull roar ;-).
-
- Galliard
- --------
-
- [Editors note: With appologies to C&C, I have the following snippet:
-
- >> the designer. He's in business for himself now as half of Carter &
- >> Cone (800 952 2129 voice), and he's worked Galliard over yet again.
- >> Should be cool. Support your local type designer.
-
- Which half of C&C does this refer to?]
-
- Don Hosek says:
-
- The specimen sheets arrived in the mail today (along with the newest
- Font & Function). Carter & Cone has three faces: ITC Galliard [CC]
- which is a family of 11 fonts. The bad news is that assignments of
- characters into expert sets and basic fonts is non-standard (the basic
- font is missing fi and fl). The good news is that the fonts are quite
- inexpensive. The whole set can be purchased for \$150. The font is a
- single weight only (if bold is strictly necessary, Bitstream Galliard
- Bold is consistent in height and can be mixed. On the other hand,
- designers need to learn to avoid the crutch of bold face on their
- pages). It is possible to purchase just those parts of the package
- which are needed. Those able to mix fonts on their own might be able to
- get a decent selection for less than \$150.
-
- Sophia
- ------
-
- Don continues,
-
- The second font is Sophia which is a kind of quirky all-caps display
- face. It features a number of upper case ligatures [!] and has a kind
- of Greek-Turkish feel to it (not suprising, really: the face is based
- in 6th c. Constantinople letterforms). When I first saw this, I didn't
- like it, but it does grow on one. The price on this is \$60.
-
- Mantinia
- --------
-
- Finally, Don concludes,
-
- The third font is Mantinia which is a more traditional display roman
- with some interesting features: e.g., more uppercase ligatures and an
- alphabet with superior caps in place of lower case (the La of LaTeX
- could be typeset without kerns or raises using this alphabet). Again,
- this took some growing on one, but I'm more accepting of this (and can
- even imagine using it for real work). The price on this is \$60.
-
- Subject: 1.35. What does `lorem ipsum dolor' mean?
-
- `Lorem ipsum dolor' is the first part of a nonsense paragraph sometimes
- used to demonstrate a font. It has been well established that if you
- write anything as a sample, people will spend more time reading the
- copy than looking at the font. The "gibberish" below is sufficiently
- like ordinary text to demonstrate a font but doesn't distract the
- reader. Hopefully.
-
- Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetaur adipisicing elit, sed do
- eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad
- minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip
- ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in
- voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur
- sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia
- deserunt mollit anim id est laborum Et harumd und lookum like Greek to
- me, dereud facilis est er expedit distinct. Nam liber te conscient to
- factor tum poen legum odioque civiuda. Et tam neque pecun modut est
- neque nonor et imper ned libidig met, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed
- ut labore et dolore magna aliquam makes one wonder who would ever read
- this stuff? Bis nostrud exercitation ullam mmodo consequet. Duis aute
- in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. At vver
- eos et accusam dignissum qui blandit est praesent luptatum delenit
- aigue excepteur sint occae. Et harumd dereud facilis est er expedit
- distinct. Nam libe soluta nobis eligent optio est congue nihil impedit
- doming id Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, set
- eiusmod tempor incidunt et labore et dolore magna aliquam. Ut enim ad
- minim veniam, quis nostrud exerc. Irure dolor in reprehend incididunt
- ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud
- exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.
- Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse
- molestaie cillum. Tia non ob ea soluad incommod quae egen ium improb
- fugiend. Officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum Et harumd dereud
- facilis est er expedit distinct. Nam liber te conscient to factor tum
- poen legum odioque civiuda et tam. Neque pecun modut est neque nonor
- et imper ned libidig met, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed ut labore et
- dolore magna aliquam is nostrud exercitation ullam mmodo consequet.
- Duis aute in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla
- pariatur. At vver eos et accusam dignissum qui blandit est praesent.
- Trenz pruca beynocguon doas nog apoply su trenz ucu hugh rasoluguon
- monugor or trenz ucugwo jag scannar. Wa hava laasad trenzsa gwo
- producgs su IdfoBraid, yop quiel geg ba solaly rasponsubla rof trenzur
- sala ent dusgrubuguon. Offoctivo immoriatoly, hawrgasi pwicos asi
- sirucor.Thas sirutciun applios tyu thuso itoms ghuso pwicos gosi
- sirucor in mixent gosi sirucor ic mixent ples cak ontisi sowios uf Zerm
- hawr rwivos. Unte af phen neige pheings atoot Prexs eis phat eit sakem
- eit vory gast te Plok peish ba useing phen roxas. Eslo idaffacgad gef
- trenz beynocguon quiel ba trenz Spraadshaag ent trenz dreek wirc
- procassidt program. Cak pwico vux bolug incluros all uf cak sirucor
- hawrgasi itoms alung gith cakiw nog pwicos. Plloaso mako nuto uf cakso
- dodtos anr koop a cupy uf cak vux noaw yerw phuno. Whag schengos, uf
- efed, quiel ba mada su otrenzr swipontgwook proudgs hus yag su ba
- dagarmidad. Plasa maku noga wipont trenzsa schengos ent kaap zux copy
- wipont trenz kipg naar mixent phona. Cak pwico siructiun ruos nust
- apoply tyu cak UCU sisulutiun munityuw uw cak UCU-TGU jot scannow.
- Trens roxas eis ti Plokeing quert loppe eis yop prexs. Piy opher
- hawers, eit yaggles orn ti sumbloat alohe plok. Su havo loasor cakso
- tgu pwuructs tyu InfuBwain, ghu gill nug bo suloly sispunsiblo fuw
- cakiw salo anr ristwibutiun. Hei muk neme eis loppe. Treas em wankeing
- ont sime ploked peish rof phen sumbloat syug si phat phey gavet peish
- ta paat ein pheeir sumbloats. Aslu unaffoctor gef cak siructiun gill bo
- cak spiarshoot anet cak GurGanglo gur pwucossing pwutwam. Ghat dodtos,
- ig pany, gill bo maro tyu ucakw suftgasi pwuructs hod yot tyubo
- rotowminor. Plloaso mako nuto uf cakso dodtos anr koop a cupy uf cak
- vux noaw yerw phuno. Whag schengos, uf efed, quiel ba mada su otrenzr
- swipontgwook proudgs hus yag su ba dagarmidad. Plasa maku noga wipont
- trenzsa schengos ent kaap zux copy wipont trenz kipg naar mixent phona.
- Cak pwico siructiun ruos nust apoply tyu cak UCU sisulutiun munityuw
- uw cak UCU-TGU jot scannow. Trens roxas eis ti Plokeing quert loppe
- eis yop prexs. Piy opher hawers, eit yaggles orn ti sumbloat alohe
- plok. Su havo loasor cakso tgu pwuructs tyu.
-
- [This version was found on CompuServe. It differs from other versions I
- have seen in print, increasingly so as you go along. It almost looks
- computer-generated, doesn't it?]
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: Macintosh Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-6_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:10 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 724
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-6_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16993 comp.answers:9901 news.answers:34563
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part6
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 2. Macintosh Information
-
- Subject: 2.1. Macintosh Font formats
-
- Bitmap Fonts
- ============
-
- Bitmap fonts: on the Macintosh, bitmap fonts also contain the kerning
- information for a font and must be installed with both type 1 and type
- 3 fonts. Their presence also speeds the display of commonly used font
- sizes.
-
- PostScript Type 1
- =================
-
- Postscript Type 1 fonts can be installed on the Macintosh only by using
- accompanying bitmapped fonts.
-
- PostScript Type 3
- =================
-
- Postscript Type 3 fonts are installed on the Macintosh in the same way
- that Type 1 fonts are.
-
- TrueType
- ========
-
- Truetype fonts: no bitmapped font is necessary with this type, though
- commonly used sizes are often supplied.
-
- QuickDraw GX
- ============
-
- This section was constructed from postings by Charles A. Bigelow, Peter
- Moller, David Opstad, and Michael Wang from Sep 93.
-
- What is it?
- -----------
-
- QuickDraw GX (QDGX) is the new Mac OS engine for handling screen
- presentation. It has many advantages over older engines, among them the
- ability to get ligatures, swashes etc. on the fly. QDGX is also a
- 16-bit font format that allows for example users in Korea to run their
- machines in their native tounge as well as write.
-
- How is it related to Unicode?
- -----------------------------
-
- Although QDGX is a 16-bit encoding, it is "orthogonal" to Unicode
- Unicode, to use a jargon term. A TrueType font, GX or otherwise, can be
- encoded using the Unicode standard, but that isn't necessary. However, a
- TrueType font, and especially a GX font, can contain glyphs for which
- there is no unique Unicode encoding, e.g. the 'fi' ligature, or a swash
- 'a' with a trailing curlicue. TrueType GX fonts, however, contain
- additional information and structure that allows the QDGX system to
- properly substitute variant glyphs for certain characters in the text.
- For the above examples, QDGX will, if requested, look for the sequence
- 'f' + 'i' and substitute the 'fi' ligature, or look for 'a' at the end
- of a line and substitute the glyph 'a-trailing curlicue'.
-
- It is really quite charming to see this happen, and it makes the font
- seem more like a clever, trained circus dog that does tricks than a
- simple font. The GX fonts begin to show an additional personality beyond
- the image of the glyphs.
-
- David Opstad contributes the following:
-
- The bidirectional text reordering algorithm defined in Unicode is fully
- implemented in GX (in fact, during our testing of GX we uncovered some
- problems with the Unicode specification!) Also, and most unfortunately,
- since Unicode is the product of an international committee process there
- were certain compromises that were made in the design, so there really
- are Unicode character codes for certain ligatures and contextual forms
- (e.g. the "Basic Glyphs for Arabic Language" codes starting at U+FE70).
- Note, however, that GX does not use these; we do Arabic contextual
- processing the same way we do Roman contextual processing. Indeed, it
- is this uniformity of approach that is, I believe, one of GX's main
- strengths.
-
- One of my greatest hopes (that keeps me going after having worked on
- getting GX done for over five years now) is that we're going to see a
- real renaissance of fonts and creativity in font designs. GX finally
- gets us back to the elegance of calligraphy, with the repeatability and
- precision of the computer.
-
- What about rotation?
- --------------------
-
- QDGX supports full 3X3 transformations (including perspective) on all
- objects in the graphics system, including text. Anti-aliasing is not
- included in GX 1.0, but we're looking at it for future versions.
-
- Is QDGX limited to TrueType fonts?
- ----------------------------------
-
- Michael Wang contributes:
-
- Just to clarify, the component of QuickDraw GX that deals with font
- features like automatic ligature substitution is called the Line Layout
- Manager (which I'll abbreviate as LLM), and LLM features are
- independent of scaler technology. In other words, a Type 1 font can
- have all of the LLM features that a TrueType font can have under
- QuickDraw GX.
-
- In fact, Apple and Adobe will be bundling a GX version of ATM with the
- QuickDraw GX release along with a Type 1 GX version of Tekton Regular
- which includes lots of additional glyphs and supports most of the LLM
- features. If you are a Macintosh developer, there are beta GX versions
- of ATM and Tekton that you can play around with on the QuickDraw GX
- 1.0b1 release that is part of the WWDC CD.
-
- This is Info file comp.fonts.faq.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from
- the input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Subject: 2.2. Frequently Requested Mac Fonts
-
- Greek Fonts
- ===========
-
- This section was constructed from a posting by John Amanatides in Jan
- 1995.
-
- There are three ways to get Greek out of a Mac. Approach one is to
- simply use the Symbol font; this solution is the easiest but Symbol
- doesn't have accents and you cannot easily exchange files with friends
- in Greece. Approach two is go all the way and install Apple's Greek
- system software on your Mac. It would make it identical to a machine
- sold in Greece and is really only an option for the diehards. Approach
- three is to just get a Greek keyboard driver and Greek typefaces. This
- article talks mostly about approach three while it does also mention the
- others.
-
- First some background. Until the early '80s the Greek alphabet included
- quite a lot of different diacritical marks. Thus if you are interested
- in classical Greek you will need to get a polytonic version of the
- typeface. Modern Greek now only uses accents, simplifying the use of
- the alphabet and this is normally what you will get when you ask for a
- Greek typeface.
-
- There are several encodings of the Greek alphabet. ISO-8859-7 is the
- most standard. It is an 8-bit encoding that uses the regular 7-bit
- ASCII standard in the lower 128 positions and Greek in the upper 128.
- Unfortunately, Apple did not use it (sigh). Apple's encoding is
- slightly different in the upper 128 positions. All modern Greek
- typefaces for the Mac seem to use this encoding and if you use it you
- can exchange files with your friends in Greece (and use Greek
- dictionaries!). If you are interested in classical Greek things become
- a little trickier. I don't know if there is a standard but Linguist's
- Software's (see below) encoding seems to be the most popular.
-
- Sources of Greek Fonts for the Mac
- ----------------------------------
-
- Apple
- .....
-
- You can go all the way with Apple and get their Greek system software
- but getting it is non-trivial. In North America the only way to get it
- seems to be to get the "Apple Developer Mailing" from APDA. Designed
- for developers, you get a CD mailed to you monthly. The CD contains
- the most recent worldwide Mac system software along with a lot of other
- stuff. It costs \$250 US and you get updates for a year. The Greek
- system software contains TrueType versions of GrCourier, GrHelvetica,
- GrTimes and several bitmap versions of some of Apple's other typefaces
- along with the Greek keyboard driver.
-
- APDA 800-282-2732 US
- 800-637-0029 Canada
- 716-871-6555
-
- A second place to get Greek system software is in Greece. Apple's
- distributor is:
-
- Rainbow Computer S.A.
- Elia Eliou 75
- Neos Kosmos, Athens
- Greece 117 44
- 30-1-9012892 Voice
- 30-1-9012540 FAX
-
- Just because you have the Greek system software doesn't mean you have
- to install the whole system; you can just take the Greek typefaces and
- the Greek keyboard driver and use them with your current system
- software.
-
- Note: Linguists' Software (see below) also market version 6.0.3 of the
- Greek operating system.
-
- Linotype-Hell
- .............
-
- Linotype sells a variety of Type1 Greek typefaces in both modern and
- polytonic versions and in a variety of weights/styles: Times,
- Helvetica, Baskerville, New Century Schoolbook and Souvenir. The
- easiest way to purchase them is to get Linotype's CD of locked
- typefaces (a new one is coming out in Dec. '94). The CD costs \$49 US
- and comes with 4 free fonts. A Greek keyboard driver comes with the
- typefaces. Linotype can be reached at:
-
- Linotype-Hell Company
- 425 Oser Avenue
- Hauppage, NY, 11788
- USA
- 800-633-1900
- 516-434-3616 FAX
-
- These typefaces are also distributed by FontShop (see below) Note: the
- new CD works on both a Mac and a PC and when you unlock a typeface you
- unlock for both systems.
-
- FontShop
- ........
-
- FontShop is an international chain of stores which supplies a wide
- variety of typefaces to both professionals and the rest of us. Their
- North American address is:
-
- FontShop Canada Limited
- 510 Front Street West
- Toronto, Ontario
- Canada M5V 3H3
- 800-363-6687
- 416-348-0916 FAX
-
- Monotype
- ........
-
- Monotype offers two Greek typefaces on their locked CD: Times New Roman
- Greek and Arial Greek. Each typeface comes in four weights/styles.
- Their CD lists for \$49 and you get 8 free fonts (just enough for both
- of their Greek typefaces :-). You can reach Monotype at:
-
- Monotype Typography Inc.
- Suite 2630, 150 South Wacker Drive
- Chicago, IL, 60606
- USA
- 800-MONOTYP (800-666-6897)
- 312-855-9475 FAX
-
- These typefaces are also distributed by FontShop. Note: you get a 5 CPU
- license.
-
- Linguist's Software
- ...................
-
- Linguist's Software has typefaces for over 250 world languages and
- gives several options for those interested in Greek. First, you can
- purchase the Greek operating system for the Mac version 6.0.3. This
- includes GrTimes and GrHelvetica (Type 3) as well as several bit-mapped
- system fonts. Second, you can purchase their modern Greek typefaces
- Olympus and Philippi (Times and Helvetica clones) in four
- weights/styles and in both Type1 and TrueType along with a keyboard
- driver for System 7. Finally, they have their own TrueType and Type1
- typefaces in the LaserGreek package. These are of particular interest
- to Greek scholars since they include extra diacritics for ancient/N.T.
- Greek. This package now includes a Uncail typeface. LaserGreek: \$99;
- Modern Greek + keyboard driver: \$99; LaserGreek + GreekOS: \$139;
- LaserGreek + Modern Greek + keyboard driver: \$139.
-
- Linguist's Software
- PO Box 580
- Edmonds, WA 98020-0580
- USA
- 206-775-1130
- 206-771-5911 FAX
-
- Ecological Linguistics
- ......................
-
- Ecological Linguistics also provides typfaces for a wide variety of
- world languages. They have a polytonic version of Times (GreekTimes)
- in their GreekClassical package and monotonic versions of Times and
- Helvetica (GkTimes, GkHelvetica) in four weights/styles in their
- GreekModern package. Both the GreekClassical and GreekModern packages
- are \$60 US each and come with a keyboard driver.
-
- Ecological Linguistics
- P.O. Box 15156
- Washington, D.C., 20003
- U.S.A.
- 202-546-5862
-
- MacCampus
- .........
-
- MacCampus of Germany provides Greek and other Eastern European
- typefaces. The Greek typefaces come in two flavors: those that are
- based on the modern Greek keyboard layout and those based on the Symbol
- font layout. MacCampus provides a keyboard driver so that you can use
- the former type on non-Greek Macs.
-
- The typefaces available are:
-
- Modern Greek (Greek layout): Olympia (Helvetica clone) and Tiryns
- (Times clone) in 4 weights/styles
-
- Classical Greek (extra diacritics, Symbol layout): Agora Times,
- Parmenides (light, sans-serif)
-
- MacCampus
- C. Kempgen
- An den Weihern 18
- D-96135 Stegaurach
- Germany
- (0951) 296739
- (0951) 296425 FAX
-
- MacCampus typefaces are distributed by FontShop.
-
- Font World
- ..........
-
- Another Greek typeface distributor is Font World. They also sell a
- variety of Eastern European typefaces. They provide a package of
- keyboard drivers for a variety of different world languages. The
- modern Greek typefaces are: FW Palace GK (Palatino?), FW Baskerfield
- GK, FW Peace GK (sans serif) & condensed version, FW Pithos GK
- (Lithos?), FW Stencil GK, FW Textbook GK, FW Tourist GK (Souvenir) and
- FW World GK (Times?). They come in a variety of weights/styles and go
- for about \$100-\$200.
-
- Font World, Inc.
- 2021 Scottsville Road,
- Rochester, NY 12623
- USA
- 716-235-6861
- 716-235-6950 FAX
-
- SkepsiS
- .......
-
- SkepsiS is a Greek publishing company that is heavily into Macs. They
- have created and sell several nice typefaces in several weights/styles:
- Corfu (New Century Schoolbook?), Ithaca (Souvenir?), Rhodes
- (University?), Mykonos (Courier?), Paros (Antique Olive?), Samos
- (modern serif), GtcFutura (Futura?), Naxos (Eurostile?), Ios (?) The
- cost for a package containing the above is 60,000 drachmas.
-
- SkepsiS Ltd
- El. Benizelou 184
- T.K. 176 75, Kallithea
- Athens, Greece
- 30-1-952-2086
- 30-1-952-2088 FAX
-
- Magenta
- .......
-
- Magenta is a Greek company that sells typefaces for Macs and PCs.
- Their catalog lists over 70 typefaces with names like MgBodoni,
- MgOptima, MgAvantGarde, etc in a variety of weights/styles. Most are
- modern Greek but they also have a few classical typefaces. Each
- typeface family goes for about 8,500 drachmas.
-
- Magenta Ltd
- Antimaxou 17
- 115 28 Athens
- Greece
- 30-1-722-9292 phone/FAX
-
- Note, I have tried to contact Magenta recently and have gotten no
- response.
-
- Fronteiras
- ..........
-
- Fonteiras is a German company that produces non-roman typefaces. They
- have 26 Greek typefaces, display and text, both polytonic and
- monotonic. Some of the families include clones of Dynamo, Stencil,
- Broadway, Revue, Futura Black, Lithos, Industria, Insignia, Palatino,
- Helvetica, Times, etc. Packages go for about \$150-\$200 US and include
- a Greek keyboard driver. The monotonic typfaces have kerning tables and
- some have real italics. (Most other vendors only have obliques.)
-
- Fronteiras
- Luisenstr. 22
- D-60316 Franfurt
- Germany
- 49-069-4980498 phone/FAX
- 100443.1305@compuserve.com
-
- Freeware/Shareware
- ..................
-
- There is a free classical Greek typeface called Ismini that is available
- on the net at:
-
- mac.archive.umich.edu:mac/system.extensions/font/type1/ismini.cpt.hqx
-
- Unfortunately, I don't think it uses the same encoding as Linguist's
- Software.
-
- Other Fonts
- ===========
-
- Many fonts are available at various archives. The king of Macintosh
- font archives is mac.archive.umich.edu. On mac.archive.umich.edu, the
- fonts are located in the following folders:
-
- /mac/system.extensions/font/type1
- /mac/system.extensions/font/type3
- /mac/system.extensions/font/truetype
-
- The following fonts are in Type 1 format for the Macintosh. Some are
- also available in TrueType format.
-
- * Tamil
-
- Paladam, T. Govindram
-
- * Hebrew
-
- ShalomScript, ShalomOldStyle, ShalomStick, Jonathan Brecher
-
- * Japanese
-
- Shorai (Hirigana, with application)
-
- * Star Trek
-
- StarTrekClassic, Star TrekClassicMovies, StarTrekTNGCrille,
- StarTrekTNG Titles, TNG monitors, StarFleet, Klinzai (Klingon font)
-
- * Command-key symbol
-
- Chicago (TrueType or bitmap, key: Ctrl-Q), Chicago Symbols
- (Type3, key: 1), EncycloFont (Type3, key: d)
-
- * Astrologic/Astronomic symbols
-
- Hermetica (Type1), InternationalSymbols (Type 3, Mars and Venus
- only), MortBats (Type3), Zodiac (bitmap)
-
- * IBM OEM Line Drawing Characters
-
- Try Adobe PrestigeElite or Adobe LetterGothic. They have all the
- characters you want, but the `line draw' characters are unencoded
- -- you will need tools to reencode the outline font itself and
- make a new PFM metric files.
-
- Or try IBMExtended from Impramatur Systems in Cambridge, Mass. It
- already is encoded using IBM OEM encoding (some DOS code page).
-
- The IBM version of Courier distributed freely under the X11
- Consortium also contains the appropriate characters. It is
- distributed in PC format, however. Again, the font will have to
- be reencoded for Windows. Appropriate AFM files for this font can
- be obtained from: jasper.ora.com:/pub/norm/comp.fonts. The file
- is called IBM-Courier-PC8-SymbolSet-AFMs.zip.
-
- Many of these mac fonts are available in files that are either entitled
- xxxx.sit or xxxx.cpt. xxxx.sit files are Stuffit archives. xxxx.cpt
- files are Compact Pro archives. StuffitLite (shareware $25) and Compact
- Pro (shareware $25) are available at the standard ftp sites.
- Uncompressors for these programs (free) are also available at the
- archive sites. Check the utilities/compression utilities folders.
-
- Subject: 2.3. Commercial Font Sources
-
- Commercial fonts can be obtained from a number of different companies,
- including the large font houses: Adobe, Font Haus, Font Company,
- Bitstream, and Monotype. At these companies, fonts cost about $40 for a
- single face, and must be purchased in packages. Adobe, Bitstream, and
- Monotype also sell pre-designated type collections for slightly lower
- prices.
-
- Image Club sells a wide selection of fonts for about $50 for a 4 font
- family.
-
- Other, cheaper companies sell fonts of lesser quality, including
- KeyFonts, which sells a set of 100 fonts for $50 and Casady & Green's
- Fluent Laser Fonts, a set of 79 fonts for $99. Casady & Greene also
- sells Cyrillic language fonts in Times, Bodoni, and Helvetica sell for
- about $40 for each 4 font family.
-
- Foreign language fonts, ranging from Egyptian hieroglyphics to Cyrillic
- can be obtained from Ecological Linguistics.
-
- Please consult the vendor list for a more complete list of vendors.
-
- Subject: 2.4. Mac Font Installation
-
- * System 7
-
- Install the fonts by opening the suitcase containing the bitmap
- file and dropping the fonts into your system suitcase, located
- inside your system folder. You will need to quit all other
- applications before doing this. For a TrueType font, the icon for
- the font will have a stack of "A"s in it, instead of just one.
- Dropping it into your system suitcase will make all sizes of the
- font available. For Postscript type 1 fonts, you also need to
- place the printer font in the extensions folder in your system
- folder. If you are using ATM you need to place these fonts in the
- root level of your system folder (not inside another folder).
- Using Suitcase, a font management utility, you can avoid
- cluttering your system folder with printer fonts.
-
- You can make new suitcases of fonts (generally not needed, but
- used by those who use Suitcase) by using Font DA mover. It
- operates the same as in system 6, except that the most recent
- version must be used.
-
- * System 6
-
- Bitmap fonts can be installed using Font DA mover to move the
- fonts, located inside suitcases, into your system. You will need
- to restart your computer to make these fonts available. Printer
- fonts must be placed in the system folder, not inside any other
- folder.
-
- Truetype fonts can be used with system 6 if you get the Truetype
- init. Then the fonts can be installed in your system with Font DA
- mover. Suitcase can also be used under system 6.
-
- Subject: 2.5. Mac Font Utilities
-
- * SUITCASE
-
- Suitcase is a nifty little system extension that lets you avoid
- having to install fonts into your system. In system 6, it means
- that you can avoid restarting your system every time you want to
- install a new font.
-
- In system 7, Suitcase lets you avoid quitting all applications
- before making fonts available. Some programs, like Quark Xpress
- will automatically update their font list when you open a new
- suitcase, allowing much more flexibility in opening and closing
- font suitcases and making different sets of fonts available.
-
- Suitcase appears in your Apple menu in both system 7 and 6 and
- allows you to open suitcases, as though they were files, thus
- making the fonts contained in them accessible to programs.
-
- In addition, when suitcase is installed, printer fonts can be
- stored with the bitmap suitcases they correspond to, instead of
- having to drop them into your system folder.
-
- The most recent version of Suitcase is compatible with TrueType.
- Suitcase is about $54 from the mail order places.
-
- * Carpetbag
-
- A shareware program with functionality equivalent to Suitcase.
-
- * MASTER JUGGLER
-
- Does similar things
-
- * ATM
-
- Adobe Type Manager is an Init and Control panel allows accurate
- screen display, at any size of PostScript type 1 fonts. It's
- function is replicated with Truetype (but for different outline
- font format). With it installed, you can print fonts of any size
- to non-PostScript printers. When using ATM, printer fonts must
- either be stored with the bitmap files opened with suitcase (when
- using Suitcase), or they must be stored in the root level of the
- system folder (with System 7.0, printer fonts must be stored in
- the Extension folder if you are not using Suitcase). ATM is now
- available, with the System 7.0 upgrade, as well as directly from
- adobe with 4 Garamond fonts.
-
- ATM is not built into System 7.1 as previously expected. With
- System 7.1, printer fonts must be stored in the Fonts folder if
- you are not using Suitcase.
-
- If you are using version 7.x prior to 7.1, the following hack
- allows you to have a Font folder (if you don't use Suitcase):
-
- Open the second 'DCOD' resource from the ATM 68020/030 file. Do an
- ASCII search for the string "extn" and change it to "font" (it's
- case sensitive). Save, close, and Reboot.
-
- This process should work for 68000 machines using the proper ATM
- file instead.
-
- * Super ATM
-
- This is a utility that will create fonts, on the fly, that match
- the metrics of any Adobe-brand fonts you don't have. It does a
- remarkably good job of mimicry because it uses two "generic"
- Multiple Master typefaces, serif and sans serif to simulate the
- appearance of the missing typefaces. (There is a 1.4 megabyte
- database file that allows Super ATM to simulate the fonts that
- aren't there.) You also get Type On Call (a CD-ROM), which has
- locked outline fonts, and unlocked screen font for all but the
- most recent faces in the Adobe Type library.
-
- * TTconverter
-
- A shareware accessory available at the usual archives will convert
- Truetype fonts for the IBM into Macintosh format.
-
- * reAdobe
-
- Converts text (PFA) format PostScript Type 1 fonts into Mac format.
-
- * unAdobe
-
- Converts Mac format PostScript Type 1 fonts into text (PFA) format.
-
- * Microsoft Font Pack
-
- If you work with a mixture of Macs and PCs running Windows 3.1,
- this is a good deal; 100 TrueType fonts compromising the Windows
- 3.1 standard set and the two Font Packs for Windows. This includes
- various display fonts, the Windows Wingdings font, and the Lucida
- family.
-
- A variety of programs, for example, Font Harmony, etc. will allow you
- to change the names and ID numbers of your fonts.
-
- Fontmonger and Metamorphosis will let you convert fonts among several
- formats (type 1 and 3 and Truetype for the Mac and PC), as well as
- letting you extract the font outlines from the printer fonts.
-
- Subject: 2.6. Making Outline Fonts
-
- This is very, very difficult. Many people imagine that there are
- programs that will simply convert pictures into fonts for them. This is
- not the case; most fonts are painstakingly created by drawing curves
- that closely approximate the letterforms. In addition, special rules
- (which improve hinting, etc.) mandate that these curves be drawn in
- specific ways. Even designing, or merely digitizing, a simple font can
- take hundreds of hours.
-
- Given that, there are two major programs used for font design on the
- Macintosh, Fontographer ($280) and FontStudio ($400). These programs
- will allow you to import scanned images, and then trace them with
- drawing tools. The programs will then generate type 1, 3, TrueType and
- Bitmap fonts for either the Macintosh or the IBM PC. They will also
- generate automatic hinting. They also open previously constructed
- outline fonts, allowing them to be modified, or converted into another
- format.
-
- As far as I know, there are no shareware programs that allow you to
- generate outline fonts.
-
- Subject: 2.7. Problems and Possible Solutions
-
- 1. Another font mysteriously appears when you select a certain font
- for display.
-
- This is often the result of a font id conflict. All fonts on the
- Macintosh are assigned a font id, an integer value. When two fonts
- have the same id, some programs can become confused about the
- appropriate font to use. Microsoft word 4.0 used font id's to
- assign fonts, not their names. Since id's can be different on
- different computers, a word document's font could change when it
- was moved from one computer to another. Other signs of font id
- problems are inappropriate kerning or leading (the space between
- lines of text). Some font ID problems can be resolved by using
- Suitcase, which will reassign font ID's for you, as well as saving
- a font ID file that can be moved from computer to computer to keep
- the id's consistent. Font ID problems can also be solved with
- several type utilities, which will allow you to reassign font
- id's. Most newer programs refer to fonts correctly by name
- instead of id number, which should reduce the frequency of this
- problem.
-
- 2. When using a document written in MSWord 5.0, the font mysteriously
- changes when you switch from your computer at home to work, or
- vice versa.
-
- This is the result of a bug in MSWord 5.0. The MSWord 5.0 updater,
- which can be found at the info-mac archives at sumex (in the demo
- folder), will fix this bug.
-
- Subject: 2.8. Creating Mac screen fonts
-
- Creating Mac screen fonts from Type 1 outlines
- ==============================================
-
- Peter DiCamillo contributes the following public domain solution:
-
- BitFont is a program which will create a bitmapped font from any font
- which can be drawn on your Macintosh. In addition to standard
- bitmapped fonts, it works with Adobe outline fonts when the Adobe Type
- Manager is installed, and works with TrueType? fonts. BitFont will
- also tell you how QuickDraw will draw a given font (bitmapped, ATM, or
- TrueType) and can create a text file describing a font and all its
- characters.
-
- BitFont was written using MPW C version 3.2. It is in the public
- domain and may be freely distributed. The distribution files include
- the source code for BitFont.
-
- Berthold K.P. Horn contributes the following solution.
-
- This is a commercial solution. A font manipulation package from Y&Y
- includes:
-
- AFMtoPFM, PFMtoAFM, AFMtoTFM, TFMtoAFM, AFMtoSCR, SCRtoAFM, TFMtoMET,
- PFBtoPFA, PFAtoPFB, MACtoPFA, PFBtoMAC, REENCODE, MODEX, DOWNLOAD,
- SERIAL, and some other stuff I forget.
-
- To convert PC Type 1 fonts to Macintosh use PFBtoMAC on the outline
- font itself; then use AFMtoSCR to make the Mac `screen font'
- (repository of metric info). You may need to use PFMtoAFM to first make
- AFM file.
-
- To convert Macintosh font to PC Type 1, use MACtoPFA, followed by
- PFAtoPFB. Then run SCRtoAFM on screen font to make AFM file. Finally,
- run AFMtoPFM to make Windows font metric file.
-
- Y&Y are the `TeX without BitMaps' people (see ad in TUGboat):
-
- Y&Y makes DVPSONE, DVIWindo, and fonts, for use with TeX mostly, in
- fully hinted Adobe Type 1 format.
-
- Y&Y, Inc., 45 Walden Street, Concord MA 01742 USA
-
- (800) 742-4059
-
- (508) 371-3286 (voice)
-
- (508) 371-2004 (fax)
-
- Mac Screen fonts can be constructed from outline fonts using
- Fontographer, as well.
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: MS-DOS Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-7_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:11 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 605
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-7_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16994 comp.answers:9902 news.answers:34564
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part7
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 3. MS-DOS Information
-
- The easiest way to get outline fonts under MS-DOS is with Microsoft
- Windows 3.x or OS/2 2.x.
-
- Microsoft Windows 3.0 with Adobe Type Manager (ATM) and OS/2 2.0
- support PostScript Type1 fonts.
-
- Microsoft Windows 3.1 supports TrueType fonts natively.
-
- Bitmap fonts are available in a variety of formats: most formats are
- designed with the printer in mind and not the display since (prior to
- graphical environments like Windows, GEM, and OS/2) the majority of
- work under MS-DOS was done with a character-based interface.
-
- Subject: 3.1. Frequently Requested MS-DOS fonts
-
- Many fonts are available at various archives. The biggest font archive
- for MS-DOS format fonts is ftp.cica.indiana.edu. Note: you can use any
- Mac format Type1 font on your PC by converting it to PC format with the
- free/shareware as described below.
-
- The following fonts are in Type 1 format for MS-DOS. Some are also
- available in TrueType format.
-
- * Hebrew
-
- ShalomScript, ShalomOldStyle, ShalomStick
-
- * Japanese
-
- Shorai
-
- * Star Trek
-
- Crillee, TNG monitors
-
- * IBM OEM Line Drawing Characters
-
- Try Adobe PrestigeElite or Adobe LetterGothic. They have all the
- characters you want, but the `line draw' characters are unencoded
- -- you will need tools to reencode the outline font itself and
- make a new PFM metric files.
-
- Or try IBMExtended from Impramatur Systems in Cambridge, Mass. It
- already is encoded using IBM OEM encoding (some DOS code page).
-
- The IBM version of Courier distributed freely under the X11
- Consortium also contains the appropriate characters. Again, the
- font will have to be reencoded for Windows. Appropriate AFM files
- for this font can be obtained from:
- jasper.ora.com:/pub/norm/comp.fonts. The file is called
- IBM-Courier-PC8-SymbolSet-AFMs.zip.
-
- Lee Cambell suggests the following alternative:
-
- Line Drawing characters are also available on ftp sites as
- gc0651.exe which is a self-expanding archive. It is on cica (and
- mirrors thereof). From the text file that comes with it, it looked
- like it was distributed by Microsoft. I printed some text in the
- normal A-z range and it looked identical to the truetype Courier
- font distributed with Windows. Perhaps it is an upgrade to that
- font. I didn't try the linedraw glyphs, so I can't say how they
- look.
-
- Subject: 3.2. MS-DOS Font Installation
-
- If you have any information that you feel belongs in this section, it
- would be greatly appreciated.
-
- * Windows
-
- * Pat Farrell contributes the following description of font
- installation under Windows.
-
- Installing Fonts into Windows:
-
- This only covers Windows 3.1 with ATM. Font is a four-letter
- word in Windows versions prior to 3.1 due to the distinctions
- between screen fonts and printer fonts. The upgrade price of
- Windows 3.1 is justified by the integration of TrueType into
- the package and the inclusion of useful fonts for all
- printers.
-
- Commercial fonts usually have installation instructions with
- their manuals. The approach may differ from the method used
- for PD and shareware fonts.
-
- To install PD and shareware fonts in Windows 3.1:
-
- 1. Copy the fonts onto a suitable scratch area (i.e. a
- floppy, or any temporary area of your hard disk.
-
- 2. Execute "Control Panel" by double-clicking on the icon
- in the Windows Program Manager's "main" group.
-
- 3. Double-click on the Fonts icon.
-
- 4. Double-click on the "Add" button.
-
- 5. Select the scratch directory holding the new fonts.
-
- 6. A list of the fonts will be displayed. You can manually
- select the fonts you like, or you can use the
- "Select All" button.
-
- 7. Make sure the "Copy Fonts to Windows Directory"
- check-box is checked. This will copy the fonts
- from the scratch area to your Windows directory.
-
- 8. Click on the "Ok" button.
-
- * Special notes for Windows applications:
-
- Word for Windows (W4W) stores font/printer information in its
- own initialization files. After you add new fonts, you have
- to tell W4W that the printer can use the new fonts. Do this
- by selecting "Printer Setup" from the W4W main "File" menu
- item, click on the "Setup" button, and then click on two "Ok"
- buttons to back out of the setup mode.
-
- * Note concerning Windows 3.1 upgrade:
-
- There are two upgrade packages available from Microsoft for
- Win3.1. There is the standard version which contains
- TrueType support, and about six font families (Times New
- Roman, Arial, Courier, Symbols, Wingdings, etc.). It costs
- something like $50 (US). The second version contains a number
- of TrueType fonts that includes equivalents for the 35
- standard Postscript fonts. This adds an additional $50, which
- is a pretty good value. However, if you plan on buying
- Microsoft's PowerPoint, it includes the same additional
- fonts/typefaces. So you can save money by not buying the
- fonts twice.
-
- * More about Windows
-
- * [Q:] Why are don't the TrueType fonts that come with
- Microsoft products (Word-for-Windows, PowerPoint,
- Windows 3.1 TrueType Font Pack, etc.) display and
- print properly on my system?
-
- * [A:] The font matching algorithm in Win3.1 is fairly
- simplistic. If you install lots of TrueType fonts,
- the algorithm can get confused. In this case, "lots"
- is more than 50 or so.
-
- * According to Luann Vodder who supports Microsoft Word on
- CompuServ:
-
- "There is a procedure which Windows must go through when an
- application requests a font. Each font contains a list of
- attributes such as Family, FaceName, Height, Width,
- Orientation, Weight, Pitch, etc. When an application
- requests a font, it fills out a logical font for Windows
- containing the necessary attributes, then starts going
- through a font mapping algorithm to determine which of the
- installed fonts most closely matches the requested (logical)
- font. Penalties are applied against fonts whose attributes
- do not match the logical font, until the fonts with the
- fewest penalties are determined. If there is a "tie",
- Windows may need to rely on the order of the fonts in the
- WIN.INI file to determine the "winner".
-
- If the fonts you want are in your WIN.INI file, and show up in
- Windows' Control Panel, then try moving them higher in your
- WIN.INI file with a file edittor such as SYSEDIT."
-
- * Kesh Govinder suggested the following warning:
-
- CAUTION: While many Windows 3.1 users would like to have many
- TrueType fonts at their disposal (and they are many available
- in the PD) a word of caution. A large number (>50) TT fonts
- will slow down your windows startup time. This occurs as
- every installed font is listed in the win.ini file, and
- Windows has to go through the entire file before starting up.
- While this may not affect most users, it will especially
- affect users of CorelDraw!, so be warned.
-
- * Other Programs
-
- It is an unfortunate fact that almost all MS-DOS programs do things
- differently. Your best bet is to read the manual that comes with
- the program you want to use.
-
- Subject: 3.3. What exactly are the encodings of the DOS code pages?
-
- DOS uses `code pages' for `IBM OEM' encoding of fonts. There are six
- code pages supplied with DOS 5.0:
-
- 437 (English)
- 850 (Multilingual - Latin I)
- 852 (Slavic - Latin II)
- 860 (Portugal)
- 863 (Canadian French)
- 865 (Nordic)
-
- (The character code range 0 - 127 is the same in all code pages).
-
- The problem is that MS idea of how to define what a code page is, is to
- show a low resolution print out of the glyphs! Which is fine for the
- letters of the alphabet, numerals and the obvious punctuation marks,
- but worthless for accents (is it `cedilla' or `ogonek'? is it `caron'
- or `breve'?) and many other characters. For example, 249 is a small
- dot, while 250 is a slightly larger dot. Is one of these supposed to
- be `bullet' (which already occurs at 7)? Or is one of them maybe
- supposed to be `middot' or `dotcentered'? Is 228 supposed to be
- `Sigma' or `summation'. Is 225 supposed to be `beta' or `germandbls'?
- Etc etc
-
- And what is the character that looks like `Pt' in code position 158?
-
- Anyway, surely there is a table somewhere that defines precisely what
- these encodings are supposed to be. That is, a table that gives for
- each code number the name and/or a description of the character.
-
- Subject: 3.4. MS-DOS Font Utilities
-
- * PS2PK
-
- PS2PK allows you to convert PostScript Type1 fonts into bitmap
- fonts. The bitmap files produced are in TeX PK format.
-
- * PKtoSFP
-
- PKtoSFP allows you to convert TeX PK fonts into HP LaserJet
- softfonts.
-
- * PFBDir/PFBInfo
-
- PFBDir and PFBInfo format and display the "headers" in a binary
- Type1 font.
-
- Subject: 3.5. Converting fonts under MS-DOS
-
- Subject: 3.5.1. Converting Mac Type 1 fonts to MS-DOS format
-
- Converting Macintosh Type1 fonts into PC Type1 fonts can be done using
- purely free/shareware tools. I've outlined the procedure below. Make
- sure you read the "readme" files that accompany many fonts. Some font
- authors specifically deny permission to do cross-platform conversions.
-
- The tools you need
- ==================
-
- XBIN
- xbin23.zip in /pub/msdos/mac on oak.oakland.edu (or other
- mirrors)
-
- UNSIT
- unsit30.zip in /pub/msdos/mac on oak.oakland.edu
-
- UNSITI
- unsiti.exe in /pub/onset/util on ftp.std.com
-
- Peter Gentry indicates that this program can extract SIT
- archives that use the newer compression techniques that unsit
- doesn't recognize.
-
- UNCPT
- ext-pc.zip in /pub/pc/win3/util on ftp.cica.indiana.edu
-
- REFONT
- refont14.zip in /pub/norm/mac-font-tools on jasper.ora.com
-
- BMAP2AFM
- bm2af02.zip in /pub/norm/mac-font-tools on jasper.ora.com
-
- XBIN converts Mac "BinHex"ed files back into binary format. BinHex is
- the Mac equivalent of UUencoding, it translates files into ascii
- characters so that mailers can send them around without difficulty. It
- also aids in cross platform copying too, I'm sure. BinHexed files
- generally have filenames of the form "xxx.yyy.HQX".
-
- UNSIT explodes "Stuffit" archives. Stuffit archives generally have
- filenames of the form "xxx.SIT". UNSIT will ask if you want to
- seperate resource and data forks. Yes, you do. There has been some
- confusion about whether or not you want headers. I'm inclined to
- conclude that it can be made to work either way. Personally, I say no.
-
- UNCPT explodes "Compactor" archives. The ext-pc implementation is
- called "extract" and does not require windows (even thought it's in the
- windows section on cica). Compactor archives generally have filenames
- of the form "xxx.CPT".
-
- REFONT converts Mac type1 fonts into PC type1 fonts. It also converts
- Mac TrueType fonts to PC TrueType format. And vice-versa.
-
- BMAP2AFM constructs AFM files from the metric information contained in
- Mac screen fonts (.bmap files). The screen font files do not have any
- standard name (although they frequently have the extension .bmap). The
- screen fonts have file type "FFIL" which, in combination with some
- common sense, is usually sufficient to identify them.
-
- I've listed the tools that I've used and the sites that are reasonable
- for me to retrieve them from. It's probably a good idea to check with
- archie for closer sites if you're not in North America. These tools
- run under MS-DOS. XBIN and UNSIT can also be run under Unix.
-
- How to do it?
- =============
-
- Collect the Mac fonts from the archive or BBS of your choice. Most of
- these files will be in BinHexed format. As a running example, I'm
- going to use the imaginary font "Plugh.cpt.hqx". When I download this
- font to my PC, I would use the name "PLUGH.CPX". The actual name you
- use is immaterial.
-
- Run XBIN on PLUGH.CPX. This will produce PLUGH.DAT, PLUGH.INF, and
- PLUGH.RSR. The data fork of the Mac file (the .DAT file) is the only
- one of interest to us, you can delete the others.
-
- If the original file had been "Plugh.sit.hqx", we would be using the
- UNSIT program. Since I chose a .cpt file for this example, I'm going
- to run UNCPT.
-
- Run UNCPT on PLUGH.DAT. You want to extract the AFM file (if present),
- the documentation or readme file (if present), and the Type1 outline
- file. The AFM and README files will be in the data fork of the archive
- file. The Type1 outline will be in the resource fork. The AFM and
- README files have Mac "TEXT" type. The Type1 outline file has "LWFN"
- type. I'm not trying to describe this part in a step-by-step fashion.
- Use the docs for UNCPT and UNSIT as a guide. If you got this far you
- probably won't have much difficulty. If you do, drop me a line and
- I'll try to help.
-
- If the font does not contain an AFM file, extract the screen font.
- Screen fonts frequently have the extension .bmap and are "FFIL" type
- files. Use Bmap2AFM to construct an AFM from the screen font. If the
- archive _does_ contain an AFM file, it's safe to bet that the author's
- AFM will be better than the one created by Bmap2AFM.
-
- Finally, run REFONT on the Type1 outline that you extracted above. The
- result should be an appropriate PC type1 outline. REFONT will create a
- PFM file for you from the AFM file, if you desire.
-
- Remember to register your shareware...
-
- Other comments
- ==============
-
- vkautto@snakemail.hut.FI makes the following observations:
-
- * UNCPT is easier to use than UNSIT
-
- * UNCPT has to be run twice. I usually do it like this
-
- extract *.cpt -f
-
- extract *.cpt -f -r
-
- * When using "unsit30" you probably want the outline file with the
- MacHeader and the others without it. I think that REFONT
- requires it but I am not sure.
-
- * REFONT works usually ok. You want a PFA (ASCII) file which is
- directly usable on NeXT (you may need to convert carriage-returns
- to newlines but I am not sure if it is necessary).
-
- The biggest problem is with the .afm files that are completely
- missing or generated by the tools that don't do their job
- properly.
-
- * BMAP2AFM requires some extra files (ie. other than bmap2afm.exe) to
- work properly.
-
- Subject: 3.5.2. Converting PC Type 1 and TrueType fonts to Mac format
-
- Refont
- ======
-
- Refont (version 1.4) can convert (in both directions) between PC and Mac
- formats of Type1 and TrueType fonts. Note: it _cannot_ convert
- _between_ formats, only architectures. The procedure described above
- outlines how to convert a Mac archive into PC format so that you can
- get at the data. Presumably, the process can be reversed so that you
- can get at the data on the Mac side as well. Unfortunately, I don't
- have a Mac so I can't describe the process in detail.
-
- Font Manipulation Package
- =========================
-
- The Y\&Y Font Manipulation package can convert PFA/B files into Mac
- format and AFM files into Mac screen fonts.
-
- Subject: 3.5.3. Converting PC Type 1 fonts into TeX PK bitmap fonts
-
- The release of PS2PK by Piet Tutelaers is a godsend to those of us
- without PostScript printers. PS2PK converts PC/Unix format Type 1 fonts
- into TeX PK files. Used in conjunction with the AFM2TFM utility for
- creating TeX metric files, this allows almost anyone to use Type 1
- PostScript fonts. PS2PK is distributed under the GNU License and has
- been made to run under MS-DOS with DJGPP's free GNU C compiler. The PC
- version requires a 386 or more powerful processor. Check with Archie
- for a source near you.
-
- Note: if TeX PK files are not directly usable for you, there seems to
- be a fair possibility that LaserJet softfonts would be useful. If so,
- check below for instructions on converting TeX PK files to LaserJet
- softfonts.
-
- Subject: 3.5.4. Converting TeX PK bitmaps into HP LaserJet softfonts (and vice-versa)
-
- There is some possibility that someone will yell 'conflict of interest'
- here, but I don't think so. I wrote the following utilities:
-
- PKtoSFP: convert TeX PK files to LaserJet (bitmapped) softfonts
-
- SFPtoPK: convert LaserJet (bitmapped) softfonts to TeX PK files
-
- But they are completely free, so I don't gain anything by "advertising"
- them here. These are MS-DOS platform solutions only. If you know of
- other solutions, I would be happy to list them.
-
- This is Info file comp.fonts.faq.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from
- the input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Subject: 3.5.5. TrueType to HP LaserJet bitmap softfonts (HACK!)
-
- If you have the tools, the following suggestion does work, but it isn't
- easy and it hasn't been automated. To be honest, I haven't really
- tested it.
-
- If you are using Windows 3.1, get a LaserJet printer driver (you don't
- need the printer, just the driver). Using the LaserJet driver, direct
- output to a file and print a simple file containing all the letters you
- want in the softfont in the font that you are converting. When the
- print job has completed, the output file will contain, among other
- things, a LaserJet softfont of the TrueType font you selected. If you
- know the LaserJet format, you can grab it out of there.
-
- I didn't say it was easy ;-)
-
- This method will not work with ATM [ed: as of 7/92] because ATM does
- not construct a softfont; it downloads the whole page as graphics.
-
- Here is an overview of the LaserJet bitmap softfont format. It should
- help you get started. If you have any questions, ask norm. If anyone
- wants to write better instructions... ;-)
-
- Many details are omitted from this description. They are thoroughly
- discussed in the HP Technical Reference for each model of laser printer.
- I recommend purchasing the Tech Ref. If you have additional questions
- and do not plan to purchase the Tech Ref (or do not wish to wait for its
- arrival), you can ask norm.
-
- An HP LaserJet softfont can occur almost anywhere in the output stream
- destined for the printer. In particular, it does _not_ have to be
- wholly contiguous within the output file. In fact, fonts can be
- "intermixed" at will. The following "pieces" make up a font:
-
- A begin font descriptor command (followed by the descriptor) and a
- series of begin character descriptor commands (followed by their
- associated data). When a new character descriptor is encountered, it
- is added to the current font (which may change between descriptors).
-
- In the discussion that follows, the following notational conventions
- are followed:
-
- Key elements are surrounded by quotation marks. The quotation marks
- are not part of the element. Spaces within the element are for clarity
- only, they are not part of the element. All characters (except ESC and
- #, described below, are literal and must be entered in the precise case
- shown).
-
- ESC means the escape character, ASCII character number 27 decimal.
-
- # means any decimal number. The meaning of the number is described in
- the commentary for that element.
-
- * What is a font descriptor?
-
- A font descriptor begins with a font descriptor command and is
- followed immediately by the data for the descriptor. Font
- descriptors define data global to the font. In general, more
- recent printers are less strict about these parameters than older
- printers.
-
- * What is the font descriptor command?
-
- "ESC ) s # W"
-
- In this command, # is the number of bytes in the descriptor. The
- first element of the descriptor indicates how many of these bytes
- should be interpreted as the font descriptor (the remaining bytes
- are commentary only-to the printer, at least). This area is
- frequently used for copyright information, for example, although
- some systems insert kerning data into this area.
-
- * What is the font descriptor data?
-
- The data is:
-
- UI Font descriptor size
- UB Descriptor format
- UB Font type
- UI Reserved (should be 0)
- UI Baseline distance
- UI Cell width
- UI Cell height
- UB Orientation
- B Spacing
- UI Symbol set
- UI Pitch
- UI Height
- UI xHeight
- SB Width Type
- UB Style
- SB Stroke Weight
- UB Typeface LSB
- UB Typeface MSB
- UB Serif Style
- SB Underline distance
- UB Underline height
- UI Text Height
- UI Text Width
- UB Pitch Extended
- UB Height Extended
- UI Cap Height
- UI Reserved (0)
- UI Reserved (0)
- A16 Font name
- ?? Copyright, or any other information
-
- UI = unsigned integer, SI = signed integer, UB = unsigned byte, SB
- = signed byte, B = boolean, and A16 =sixteen bytes of ASCII.
-
- After the font name, ?? bytes of extra data may be inserted. These
- bytes pad the descriptor out to the length specified in the begin
- font descriptor command.
-
- Note: integers are always in big-endian order (MSB first).
-
- * What is a character descriptor?
-
- A character descriptor describes the character specific info and
- the layout of the bitmap. Newer printers can accept compressed
- character bitmaps.
-
- * What is a character descriptor command?
-
- "ESC * c # E"
-
- The # is the length of the descriptor, in bytes.
-
- * What is the character descriptor data?
-
- UB Format
- B Continuation
- UB Descriptor size
- UB Class
- UB Orientation
- SI Left offset
- SI Top offset
- UI Character width
- UI Character height
- SI Delta X
- ?? Character (bitmap) data.
-
- Although older printers cannot accept characters that include
- continuations, newer printers can. If the "continuation" field is
- 1, the character bitmap data begins immediately after that byte and
- the remaining fields _are not_ present.
-
- * Ok, now I understand the data, what do I look for in the output
- stream?
-
- ESC * c # D
- defines the font number (remember the number).
-
- ESC ) s # W
- defines the font descriptor (as described above).
-
- ESC * c # E
- specifies the character code (the #, in this case).
- The next character descriptor maps to this position in
- the font. Characters do not have to appear in
- any particular order.
-
- ESC ( s # W
- defines the character descriptor (as described above).
-
- Remember, these can occur in any order. Experimentation with the
- particular driver you are using may help you restrict the number of
- different cases that you have to be prepared for.
-
- Please report your experiences using this method to norm (both to
- satisfy his own curiosity and to help improve the FAQ).
-
- Subject: 3.6. MS-DOS Screen Fonts (EGA/VGA text-mode fonts)
-
- Editors note: the following description was mercilessly stolen from
- comp.archives on 02SEP92. It was originally Yossi Gil's
- posting.
-
- FNTCOL14.ZIP contains more than 200 text mode fonts for EGA/VGA
- displays. It includes fonts in different sizes for Hebrew, Greek,
- Cyrillic, math symbols and various type styles including smallcaps and
- script.
-
- It is available at borg.poly.edu:/pub/reader/dos/fntcol14.zip
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: OS/2 Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-8_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:15 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 397
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-8_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16995 comp.answers:9903 news.answers:34565
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part8
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 4. OS/2 Information
-
- [ed: Except as otherwise noted, the entire OS/2 section of the
- comp.fonts FAQ List is derived from the "Draft OS/2 Font FAQ" posted by
- David J. Birnbaum.]
-
- This section if the FAQ is Copyright (C) 1993 by David J. Birnbaum.
- All Rights Reserved. Reproduced here by permission.
-
- [ed: Since this section of the FAQ is wholly derived from David's
- document, some sections contain information repeated elsewhere in the
- comp.fonts FAQ.]
-
- David Birnbaum's Introduction
- =============================
-
- 4 June 1993
-
- A couple of weeks ago I posted an inquiry to comp.fonts,
- comp.os.os2.misc, and the OS2-L ListServ concerning some apparent
- peculiarities in the way OS/2 handles font files. These "peculiarities"
- actually reflect regular, systematic differences in OS/2, Windows, and
- DOS font handling, which are not conveniently described in end-user
- documentation. This posting is intended to spare others some of the
- confusion I encountered as a result of this paradigm shift.
-
- This is the first (draft) distribution of this document and corrections
- and suggestions are welcome. I am grateful to Henry Churchyard, Marc L.
- Cohen, Bur Davis and Kamal Mansour for helpful discussions; they are
- not, of course, responsible for any misinterpretation I may have
- inflicted on their comments.
-
- Subject: 4.1. Preliminaries
-
- Character: an informational unit consisting of a value (usually a byte)
- and roughly corresponding to what we think of as letters, numbers,
- punctuation, etc.
-
- Glyph: a presentational unit corresponding roughly to what we think of
- as letters, numbers, punctuation, etc.
-
- Character vs glyph: Glyph and character are not necessarily the same;
- the character <a> may be mapped to a Times Roman Lower Case <a> glyph
- in one font and to a Helvetica Lower Case <a> glyph in another font.
- Change of glyphs normally means a change in style of presentation,
- while change in characters normally means a change in information.
- There are gray areas and the definitions provided above are general,
- approximate, and imprecise.
-
- Character set: an inventory of characters with certain assigned values.
- ASCII is a 7-bit character set that specifies which "character cell"
- (byte value) corresponds to which informational unit.
-
- Code Page: essentially synonymous with character set.
-
- Font: A collection of glyphs. A specific font may be isomorphic with a
- specific character set, containing only glyphs corresponding to
- characters in that set, with these glyphs mapped to the same byte
- values as the characters they are intended to represent. PostScript
- fonts often contain additional (unmapped) characters. Most importantly,
- PostScript fonts may sometimes be remapped by an operating environment,
- which is what leads to the disorienting cross-environment mismatch that
- spurred my original posting.
-
- Fonts may be bitmapped or outline in format; a bitmapped format
- corresponds to a particular size and weight for a particular device or
- device resolution, while a single outline font is used to generate
- multiple sizes as needed. Within an outline font system, different
- weights (bold, semibold, italic, etc.) may be encoded as separate font
- resources (separate outline files used to generate the glyphs) or may
- all be generated from a single outline (slanting characters to make
- "italics," fattening them for "bold," etc.).
-
- Subject: 4.2. Fonts under DOS
-
- I used a large assortment of fonts under DOS for intricate multilingual
- work. My setup at that time consisted of a library of bitmapped fonts
- that could be sent to my HP LaserJet II printer, as well as a set of
- fixed-size, fixed-width screen fonts that were supported by my Hercules
- Graphics Card Plus (not the same as Hercules Graphics; the "Plus"
- included an ability to store 3072 screen glyphs and display any of
- these together, while standard character-mode displays were normally
- limited to 256 or 512 such entities).
-
- Using XyWrite as a word processor, I would enter a "Mode" command to
- change fonts and character sets simultaneously; this would make
- different sets of screen glyphs available at the keyboard and would
- insert a font-change command for my printer into the text stream. The
- "Mode" and font-change commands were not displayed on the screen. The
- result was not WYSIWYG, since I was limited to fixed-width screen
- display and since I had far more printer glyphs available than the 3072
- limit imposed by my video card; I used a brightness attribute to
- indicate bold, I used the same screen font for different sizes of
- printer fonts, etc. This worked and worked well, in that I could see
- (for example) Russian, Greek, English, Polish, and other characters
- simultaneously on the screen and I could print documents combining them.
-
- Architecturally, what was going on was that the character sets (code
- pages) and fonts were entirely isomorphic and were hard- coded. If I
- put a particular Russian letter into cell 246 of my screen and printer
- fonts, that character was always there, and any strategy that would let
- me access this cell (remapped keyboards, numeric keypad) was guaranteed
- always to find the same character.
-
- Subject: 4.3. Windows
-
- I recently began using PostScript fonts in Windows with AmiPro as my
- word processor. These fonts came with printed cards indicating the
- glyph mappings; I could look at the card and it would tell me that a
- specific character lived in cell 246, and if I entered Alt-0246 at the
- numeric keypad that glyph would appear on the screen. If I loaded the
- font into Fontographer for Windows, these glyphs would be arrayed in
- cells according to the map provided by Adobe with the fonts.
- Fontographer also revealed that these fonts had other, "unmapped"
- glyphs assigned to cells above 255.
-
- Given what appeared to be a hard correspondence among what I saw in
- Fontographer, what was printed in Adobe's maps, and what was displayed
- when I entered something at the keyboard, I naively assumed that
- PostScript fonts were operating much like my bitmapped fonts under DOS.
- There were some obvious differences, the primary one being that glyphs
- of different sizes were all drawn from the same font resource files
- under PostScript, but it appeared as if a glyph lived in a certain cell.
-
- Subject: 4.4. Differences between Windows and OS/2
-
- This assumption was incorrect; PostScript fonts can be subdivided into
- two types, one of which observes hard and invariant encodings similar
- to those that apply to my bitmapped fonts, while the other represents a
- completely different font mapping strategy. This difference became
- apparent only when I attempted to share PostScript fonts between
- Windows and OS/2 and got some unexpected results.
-
- A PostScript font under Windows involves two files, a PFB (PostScript
- Font Binary) file, which contains the PostScript instructions needed to
- draw each glyph and some mapping information, and a PFM (Printer Font
- Metrics) file, which encodes width and kerning information. A
- PostScript font under OS/2 also uses the same PFB file, but instead of
- the PFM file it uses an AFM (Adobe Font Metrics) file. The AFM and PFM
- files contain much of the same basic information (although the AFM file
- is somewhat more complete); the most important differences are in
- format (AFM is plain text, PFM is binary) and use (OS/2 uses AFM,
- Windows uses PFM).
-
- Subject: 4.5. Installation under Windows and Win-OS/2
-
- The OS/2 2.0 Font Palette tool (see below for changes to be introduced
- with 2.1) by default installs fonts (both PFB and AFM files) into the
- "\os2\dll" directory. Win-OS/2 by default installs PFB files into
- "\psfonts" and PFM files into "\psfonts\pfm". These defaults can be
- changed; since OS/2 and Win-OS/2 use the same PFB files, the user can
- save disk space by allowing these to be shared (through installing into
- the same directory, e.g., install OS/2 fonts into the "\psfonts"
- directory instead of "\os2\dll".) Note that fonts must be intalled and
- removed through the Font Palette; if you copy, move, or delete a font
- file without using the Font Palette, the system configuration files are
- not updated and all hell breaks loose.
-
- Deleting fonts from Win-OS/2 causes the system to update the win.ini
- file to remove references to the font, but does not delete any files
- physically. Deleting fonts from the OS/2 Font Palette updates the
- os2.ini configuration file and physically deletes the AFM and PFB files
- from the disk. This means that if you are sharing PFB files between
- OS/2 and Win-OS/2, you can delete a Win-OS/2 font without hurting
- native OS/2 operations, since the PFB reamins installed where OS/2
- thinks it is. But if you delete an OS/2 font using the Font Palette,
- the PFB file is erased from the disk even though the win.ini file is
- not updated, so that Win-OS/2 thinks it is still there.
-
- Subject: 4.6. FontSpecific PostScript Encoding
-
- Every PFB file contains an "encoding vector"; this is a plain text line
- embedded near the head of the PFB file. Encoding vectors are of two
- types: AdobeStandardEncoding and everything else. Adobe usually uses
- the label "FontSpecific" for fonts that are not encoded according to
- AdobeStandardEncoding, and I use it as a cover term here for any such
- font.
-
- If you look at the readable plain text information at the head of a
- FontSpecific type font, it includes a range of text that begins:
-
- /Encoding 256 array
-
- followed by a bunch of lines, each of which includes a number (which
- corresponds to a cell in the font layout) and the name of the glyph
- that lives in that cell. The unreadable binary data below this array
- specification lists the name of each glyph and the PostScript
- instructions for how the glyph is to be drawn. There may be PostScript
- code for drawing glyphs that are not included in the mapping array, but
- only glyphs mentioned in the array specification are available to
- applications.
-
- FontSpecific type fonts are comparable to the bitmapped fonts I used
- under DOS. Each character physically is assigned to a specific cell
- within the font file and operating environments are not allowed to
- remap these. The glyph in cell 246 will be the same in both Windows and
- OS/2.
-
- Subject: 4.7. AdobeStandardEncoding
-
- AdobeStandardEncoding is a specific mapping of certain glyphs to
- certain cells; in this respect it resembles FontSpecific encoding.
- Because it is standardized, the array is not spelled out in the PFB
- file; the line
-
- /Encoding StandardEncoding def
-
- tells Adobe Type Manager (ATM, either the Windows and Win-OS/2 version
- or the native OS/2 version) that the encoding is "standard," and the
- environments are expected to know what this standard is without having
- the array spelled out in each font file.
-
- Although AdobeStandardEncoding is a real mapping, there is an
- importance difference between it and various FontSpecific mappings:
- operating environments are expected to remap AdobeStandardEncoding
- fonts according to their own requirements. That is, although
- AdobeStandardEncoding does assign glyphs to cells, no operating
- environment actually uses these assignments and any environment remaps
- the glyphs before rendering them. Confusion arises because Windows and
- OS/2 remap such fonts in different ways.
-
- Subject: 4.8. AdobeStandardEncoding under Windows (and Win-OS/2)
-
- An AdobeStandardEncoding font under Windows is remapped according to a
- character map (code page) that MicroSoft calls Windows ANSI (can other
- code pages be installed in Windows?). This determines which character
- resides in which cell and the font is remapped so that glyphs and
- characters will correspond. Since Fontographer for Windows is a Windows
- application, it displays glyphs not in the cells in which they live
- according to AdobeStandardEncoding, but in the cells to which they get
- reassigned under the remapping to Windows ANSI. There is nothing
- explicit in the PFB file that associates these characters with the
- specific cells in which they appear under Windows.
-
- Subject: 4.9. AdobeStandardEncoding under OS/2
-
- OS/2 operates within a set of supported code pages; two system- wide
- code pages are specified in the config.sys file and an application is
- allowed to switch the active code page to any supported code page (not
- just these two). DeScribe, for example, currently operates in code page
- (CP) 850, which includes most letters needed for western European Latin
- alphabet writing. CP 850 does not contain typographic quotes, en- and
- em-dashes, and other useful characters. It does contain the IBM
- "pseudographics," which are useful for drawing boxes and lines with
- monospaced fonts.
-
- When the user inputs a value (through the regular keyboard or the
- numeric keypad), the application checks the active CP, looks up in an
- internal table the name of the character that lives in that cell within
- that CP, and translates it into a unique number that corresponds to one
- of the 383 glyphs supported by OS/2 (the union of all supported code
- pages). This number is passed to PM-ATM (the OS/2 ATM implementation),
- which translate the glyph number into the glyph name that PostScript
- fonts expect and searches the font for that name. The system never
- looks at where a glyph is assigned under the AdobeStandardEncoding
- array; rather, it scans the font looking for the character by name and
- gives it an assignment derived from the active code page. This is the
- remapping that OS/2 performs on AdobeStandardEncoding type fonts.
-
- As a result, a situation arises where, for example, <o+diaeresis> is
- mapped to cell 246 under Windows ANSI but to cell 148 under CP 850.
- Using the identical PFB file, this glyph is accessed differently in the
- two operating environments.
-
- Subject: 4.10. Consequences for OS/2 users
-
- If your font has a FontSpecific encoding, there are no unexpected
- consequences; the same glyphs will show up at the same locations in
- both Windows (Win-OS/2) and native OS/2. Regardless of what the active
- code page is, if the font has a FontSpecific encoding OS/2 goes by cell
- value; a specific glyph is hard-coded to a specific cell and OS/2 will
- give you whatever it finds there, even if what it finds disagrees with
- what the active code page would normally predict. In other words,
- FontSpecific encoding means "ignore the mapping of the active code page
- and rely on the mapping hard-coded into the font instead."
-
- If your font has an AdobeStandardEncoding encoding, the following
- details obtain:
-
- 1) The same PFB file may have glyphs that are accessible in one
- environment but not another. For example, if DeScribe thinks it is
- operating in CP 850, there is no access to typographic quotes, even if
- those do occur in the PFB file and even if Windows can find them in the
- same exact font file. DeScribe could switch code pages, but if the
- application isn't set up to do so (and DeScribe currently isn't), those
- characters are absolutely inaccessible to the user.
-
- 2) If the active code page includes a character that isn't present in
- the font, OS/2 has to improvise. For example, AdobeStandardEncoding
- fonts do not normally include the IBM pseudographics, yet the user who
- inputs the character value for one of these sends the system off to
- look for it. As described above, OS/2 first checks the active font for
- the glyph name that corresponds to that character and, if it finds it,
- displays it. If the glyph isn't found, OS/2 looks to the system Symbol
- font. This is not reported back to the user in DeScribe; if I have
- Adobe Minion active (AdobeStandardEncoding, no information anywhere in
- the font files for pseudographics) and input a pseudographic character,
- DeScribe tells me it is still using Adobe Minion, even though it has
- fetched the character it displays and prints from the Symbol font, a
- different font resource file.
-
- Subject: 4.11. Advice to the user
-
- OS/2's code page orientation provides some advantages, in that it
- separates the character set (code page) mapping from the encoded font
- mapping. The main inconvenience isn't a loss of function, but a
- disorientation as users become accustomed to the new paradigm.
-
- If you need a glyph that you know is in your PFB file but that isn't in
- the active code page (and if you can't change code pages within your
- application), you can't get at it in OS/2 without tampering with the
- font files. To tamper, you can use font manipulation tools to
- redesignate the PFB file as FontSpecific ("Symbol" character set to
- Fontographer). If you then map the glyphs you need into one of the
- lower 256 cells (with some limitations), they will be accessible in all
- environments. The Fontographer manual does not explain what the
- "Symbol" character encoding label really does, it just tells you not to
- use it except for real symbol fonts. In fact you should use it for any
- font that will not correspond in inventory to the code page supported
- by your application, which means any non-Latin fonts.
-
- You do not have to recode all your fonts, and you wouldn't normally
- want to do so, since Fontographer hinting is not nearly as good as
- Adobe's own hand-tuning and regenerating a font regenerates the hints.
- All you have to do is make sure you have one FontSpecific type font
- installed that includes your typographic quotes, etc. for each typeface
- you need. Within DeScribe, you can then write a macro that will let you
- switch fonts, fetch a character, and switch back, thereby allowing you
- to augment any group of fonts with a single, shared set of typographic
- quotes (or whatever) that you put in a single FontSpecific font.
- Alternatively, OS/2 also supports CP 1004, which does contain
- typographic quotes and other characters used for high-quality
- typography, but the user may not be able to convince an application to
- invoke this code page if it was not designed to do so.
-
- You can have any number of FontSpecific fonts installed, which means
- that there is a mechanism for dealing with unsupported character sets
- (code pages).
-
- You can also tinker with the font files to try to trick the operating
- system. For example, using Fontographer or other utilities, you can
- change the name assigned to a glyph description within the PFB file. If
- you want to use AdobeStandardEncoding and you want to see a specific
- glyph at a specific cell when DeScribe thinks it's using CP 850, you
- have to make sure that the name assigned to the description of that
- glyph is what DeScribe expects to find. OS/2 doesn't care whether, say,
- <o+diaeresis> really looks like <o> with two dots over it, as long as
- it bears the right name.
-
- This second approach is obviously far more complex and provides much
- more opportunity for error. Its advantage is that OS/2 does not support
- case conversion and sorting (other than in machine order) for
- unsupported code pages, since these operations depend on character
- names. Keeping supported names from supported code pages while changing
- the artwork is one way to maintain order and case correspondences while
- increasing the range of glyphs actually supported. I have not
- experimented with this approach, since the use I would get out of the
- adding functionality (over the FontSpecific encoding approach) is not
- worth the amount of effort required.
-
- Subject: 4.12. OS/2 2.1 and beyond
-
- OS/2 2.1 will change some aspects of font handling. First, OS/2 2.0
- GA+SP has a bug that can cause OS/2 to crash when an AFM file with more
- than 512 kern pairs is read. This is fixed in 2.1. (This bug is
- separate from a design limitation in MicroSoft Windows that causes
- large kern tables to be read incorrectly. This problem is still under
- investigation; watch this space for a report.)
-
- Fonts in 2.1 will be installed by default into the "\psfonts" directory,
- so that they will normally be shared with Win-OS/2 fonts. (The user will
- still be able to specify a directory; all that will change is the
- default). The user will also be able to instruct the Font Palette not to
- delete font files when fonts are uninstalled, so as to avoid clobbering
- a Win-OS/2 font by removing it from native OS/2 use through the Font
- Palette (although the default will still be to delete the physical font
- files).
-
- OS/2 will stop using AFM files and will replace these with OFM files, a
- binary metrics file (different from PFM) that OS/2 will compile from
- the AFM file during font installation. This will speed font loading,
- since the system will not have to parse a plain text metrics file.
- Additionally, the OS/2 PostScript printer driver used to install its
- own, large font files, but will now use the OFM and PFB files, thereby
- saving 50k-200k of disk space per installed font outline.
-
- IBM's long-term goal is to replace the 383-entity inventory of
- supported glyphs with Unicode. This is very much a long-term goal and
- there is not even a hint of when it might become available. It has its
- own problems, stemming from the fact that Unicode is essentially a
- character standard and glyph and character inventories may differ is
- assorted ways, but it will be a significant step in the proverbial
- right direction.
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: Unix Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-9_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:20 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 61
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-9_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16996 comp.answers:9904 news.answers:34566
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part9
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 5. Unix Information
-
- See also the 'utilities' section for more information. Most of the
- utilities described in that section run under Unix.
-
- The bulk of this section was contributed by Johannes Schmidt-Fischer in
- Jun 1993.
-
- Unix Font Formats
- =================
-
- Most printers attached to Unix hosts are PostScript printers. As a
- consequence, most Unix users are also using PostScript fonts. If you
- are not using a PostScript printer, you need a front-end, like
- GhostScript, to convert the PostScript into a format compatible with
- your printer.
-
- There is no Unix specific Postscript Type 1 format. The most often used
- (and most easily usable) format is Adobe's PFA format. The other often
- used format is PFB format. The PFB format is more compact (by about
- 50%), but in order to use it you need make sure that your font
- downloading tools are prepared to convert PFB to PFA on fly.
-
- Postscript Type 3 fonts are no problem, they can be handled the same
- way as Type 1 fonts.
-
- Most Unix tools expect to get character metric information from AFM
- files. You may have difficulty using fonts collected off of the 'Net
- if they do not include AFM files
-
- Font Installation
- =================
-
- Application
- -----------
-
- It depends. (Well, what did you expect me to say? ;-)
-
- Printer using an ExitServer
- ---------------------------
-
- Convert PFB fonts into PFA format if necessary and then send them to
- printer inside a wrapper like so:
-
- %!PS-Adobe-2.0 ExitServer Job
- serverdict begin 0 exitserver % 0: substitute your password
- ... % font in PFA-format
- %%EOF
-
- Or include them directly in your print job:
-
- %!PS-Adobe-2.0
- ... % font in PFA-format
- ... % other initialisation
- %%Page: 1 i % beginning of your job...
- ... % ...
- %%EOF
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: Sun Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-10_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:22 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 148
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-10_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16997 comp.answers:9905 news.answers:34567
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part10
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 6. Sun Information
-
- Someone mailed a file of Sun-related font tips. Unfortunately, I cannot
- find the file. If you have any suggestion for this section (or if you
- are the person that mailed me the other list), please forward your
- suggestions to norm.
-
- Subject: 6.1. Fonts Under Open Windows
-
- The following information regarding fonts under Open Windows was donated
- by Liam R.E. Quin from the Open Windows FAQ.
-
- Subject: 6.1.1. Does OpenWindows support Type 1 PostScript fonts?
-
- Type 1 fonts are supported starting with the NeWSprint 2.0 and Solaris
- 2.0 (OpenWindows 3.0.1) releases.
-
- There are also 57 F3 format fonts supplied with OpenWindows which are
- fully hinted. Documentation on the F3 font format and the F3 font
- interpreter, TypeScaler, is available from Sun.
-
- Subject: 6.1.2. Improving font rendering time
-
- Although the Sun type renderer (TypeScaler) is pretty fast, it's not as
- fast as loading a bitmap. You can pre-generate bitmap fonts for sizes
- that you use a lot, and you can also alter and access the font cache
- parameters. If you have a lot of memory you might want to increase
- the font cache size.
-
- $ psh -i
- Welcome to X11/NeWS Version3 <--- psh will say this at you
- currentfontmem = % type this line ...
- 300 % ... my server was using 300 Kbytes
- 1024 setfontmem
- % Just to check:
- currentfontmem =
- 1024
-
- See pp. 328ff of the NeWS 3.0 Programmer's Guide. You need to say psh
- -i so that the PostScript packages are loaded - see the psh man page.
-
- You could also add the following line to your $HOME/.openwin-init file
- to perform this task every time you start OpenWindows:
-
- echo 1024 setfontmem | psh -i > /dev/null 1>&2
-
- Subject: 6.1.3. Making bitmap fonts for faster startup
-
- Sun supports the F3 scalable outline format. These descriptions are
- stored in .f3b files. The makeafb program is used to create a bitmap
- font at a particular size which is stored in a .afb file, which is an
- Adobe ASCII format for font bitmaps. X11/NeWS really prefers a binary
- format though for speed and other reasons, so convertfont is used to
- "compile" the font into a font binary or .fb file.
-
- Once this is done, X11/NeWS needs to understand the relationship between
- the .f3b file and all the bitmaps which are based on it. Thus, the
- bldfamily program makes these correlations and stores the data in the
- font family or .ff file.
-
- bldfamily also builds a global list of all fonts stored in the working
- directory, writing the results out to the file Families.list. If one
- wishes to create font aliases, these can be added to the Synonyms.list
- file by hand and bldfamily will then add them to Families.list for you.
- X11/NeWS uses Families.list to construct the font list it advertises
- to applications.
-
- To go from F3 to BDF, use makeafb to generate a bitmap font in .afb
- format. Then use one of convertfont's many options to change to this
- to .bdf format and from there it should be clear.
-
- $ mkdir $HOME/myfonts
- $ cd $HOME/myfonts
- $ makeafb -20 -M $OPENWINHOME/lib/fonts/Bembo.f3b
- Creating Bembo20.afb
- $ convertfont -b Bembo20.afb
- Bembo20.afb->./Bembo20.fb
- Chars parameter greater than number of characters supplied.
- $ ls
- Bembo20.afb Bembo20.fb Synonyms.list
- $ bldfamily
- * Bembo ./Bembo.ff (Encoding: latin)
- cat: ./Compat.list: No such file or directory
- $ xset +fp `pwd`
- $ xset fp rehash
-
- If you want the server to see your new font directory every time, add
- this directory to your FONTPATH environment variable in one of your
- start-up files, e.g. .login or .profile.
-
- Subject: 6.1.4. Converting between font formats (convertfont, etc.)
-
- You can also use F3 fonts with an X11 server, by converting them to a
- bitmap (X11 bdf format) first. Your license restricts use of these
- fonts on another machine, and unless you have NeWSPrint you shouldn't
- use them for printing. Having said all that... you can use makeafb
- and convertfont to generate bdf files that you can compile with
- bdftosnf or bdftopcf.
-
- Use mftobdf (from the SeeTeX distribution) to convert TeX PK fonts to
- X11 BDF format, which you can then use with either X11 or OpenWindows.
-
- Subject: 6.1.5. Xview/OLIT fonts at 100 dpi
-
- There aren't any. More precisely, the various text fonts, such as
- Lucida Typewriter Sans, are available at 100 dpi, and in fact are
- scalable under OpenWindows. The glyph fonts used to be bitmaps, which
- don't scale very well, but starting with OpenWindows 3.2, the OpenLook
- UI glyph fonts are provided in scalable format as well.
-
- Subject: 6.2. Where can I order F3 fonts for NeWSprint and OpenWindows?
-
- 600 F3 fonts are available for unlocking from Printer's Palette, a CD
- available with NeWSprint 2.0.
-
- In addition, F3 fonts are available from the following sources:
-
- Linotype AG Linotype Company
- Mergenthaler Allee 55-75 425 Oser Avenue
- 6236 Eschborn Germany Hauppague, NY 11788
- 49/(61 96) 4031 (800) 336-0045
- FAX 011/49/6196-982185 FAX 516-434-2055
- attn: F3 Font Production attn: F3 Font Production
-
- Monotype Plc. Monotype Typography
- Salfords Redhill RH1 5JP 53 W. Jackson Boulevard Suite 504
- England Chicago, IL 60604
- 44/(737) 765959 (800) 666-6893
- FAX 011/44/737-769243 FAX (312) 939-0378
- attn: F3 Font Production attn: F3 Font Production
-
- U R W U R W
- Harksheider Strasse 102 One Tara Boulevard Suite 210
- D2000 Hamburg Germany Nashua, NH 03062
- 49/(40) 606050 (603) 882-7445
- 49/(40) 60605148 (603) 882-7210
- attn: F3 Font Production attn: F3 Font Production
-
- Bigelow & Holmes Autologic
- P. O. Box 1299 1050 Rancho Conejo Boulevard
- Menlo Park, CA 94026 Newbury Park, CA 91320
- 415/326-8973 (800)235-1843, or (805)498-9611 in CA
- FAX (415) 326-8065 FAX (805) 499-1167
- attn: F3 Font Production attn: F3 Font Production
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: NeXT Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-11_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:26 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 579
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-11_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16998 comp.answers:9906 news.answers:34568
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part11
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 7. NeXT Information
-
- If you have any suggestions for this section, please forward your
- suggestions to norm.
-
- Subject: 7.1. Tell me about NeXTstep fonts
-
- NeXTstep fonts are Adobe Type 1 fonts stored in ASCII (PFA) format.
- There are several rules about how fonts must be installed before they
- work.
-
- I'd like to thank Henry for rewriting this section.
-
- Basic Format
- ============
-
- NeXTstep fonts live in one of three folders:
-
- /NextLibrary/Fonts
- Contains system fonts. In general, you will not install any
- new fonts here.
-
- /LocalLibrary/Fonts
- Contains fonts which are accessible to every user on a system
- or a network.
-
- ~/Library/Fonts
- (where ~ is your home folder) means fonts which are private to
- a specific user.
-
- A NeXTstep font is actually a folder containing various components of
- the font. Components are:
-
- * the outline font file - REQUIRED
-
- * the font metrics (AFM) file - REQUIRED
-
- * one or more screen font (bitmap) files - OPTIONAL
-
- Font Folder and Font Filename Requirements
- ==========================================
-
- The name of the folder containing a font and the name of the font file
- itself must follow strict rules - the names can NOT be any old name you
- like. For a font to work correctly, the base folder and font filename
- MUST BE THE SAME as the name of the outline font. This is usually the
- same as the value of the FontName field in the AFM file or the value of
- the /FontName key in the actual font itself. Suppose you have a font
- called Headhunter. The Headhunter font must live within a folder called
-
- Headhunter.font
-
- within one of the three folders mentioned above. Within the
- Headhunter.font folder, you must have the two files
-
- Headhunter ( the outline file )
- Headhunter.afm ( the AFM file )
-
- If you have a bitmap file for Headhunter, it must live in a file
-
- Headhunter.bepf ( the bitmap file )
-
- Variations such as Bold, Italic, etc., should be their own font files
- in their own folder. So if you have a font called Headhunter-Bold, you
- need to create a folder called
-
- Headhunter-Bold.font
-
- within one of the three folders mentioned above. Within the
- Headhunter.font folder, you must have the two files
-
- Headhunter-Bold ( the outline file )
- Headhunter-Bold.afm ( the AFM file )
-
- If you have a bitmap file for Headhunter, it must live in a file
-
- Headhunter-Bold.bepf ( the bitmap file )
-
- For NeXTstep 1.0 ONLY, you also need to take the following steps:
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- * If they do not already exist, create the following folders:
-
- * ~/Library/Fonts/outline
-
- * ~/Library/Fonts/afm
-
- * ~/Library/Fonts/bitmap
-
- * In each of these folders, create a symbolic link to the
- corresponding component file in each font.
-
- For NeXTstep 2.0 and up:
- ------------------------
-
- The font description is taken from the font folder itself, so you don't
- need to do this. It may be beneficial to simply create these folders
- and put nothing in them, but I'm not sure it matters.
-
- Certain "old" applications which haven't upgraded to the NeXTstep 2.0
- scheme of fonts may depend on these folders being present.
-
- The last step is to get the system to recognize the new font(s). You
- may have noticed the existence of three files in the Fonts folder:
- .fontdirectory, .fontlist, and .afmcache. These are files the system
- looks at to see which fonts exist.
-
- The easiest way to update them is to simply start up an application and
- open the font panel. It should recognize that the update time stamp on
- the Fonts folder has changed, and update the files accordingly. It is
- probably a good idea to simply delete the three above files beforehand.
-
- You should get a message window saying "incorporating information on
- new fonts. Please wait (this may take xx seconds)". Your new fonts
- should be available now.
-
- If this does not work, you can update them manually. Open up a Terminal
- shell and go to your Fonts folder. At the prompt, type two commands:
-
- buildafmdir
- cacheAFMData afm (the parameter is the <afm dir>)
-
- The new fonts will not work if the cacheAFMData command is not run, and
- since it is an undocumented command, it is a common culprit.
-
- [ed: the cacheAFMData step may not be required in 3.0 OS]
-
- I believe this is true. Looks like the PasteBoard Services runs
- cacheAFMData in 3.0.
-
- You should now be able to see and preview your fonts in the font panel.
-
- If you are still having problems with your font, such as the <<
- Unusable font >> message, consult NeXTAnswers. There are some useful
- suggestions for debugging faulty fonts there. It is also always
- helpful to look at existing fonts to see how they are installed.
-
- One note on the NeXTAnswers. Supposedly there are only a few discrete
- values which are allowed to appear in the weight field of the font:
- "Ultra Light", "Thin", "Light", "Extra Light", "Book", "Regular",
- "Plain", "Roman", "Medium", "Demi", "Demi-Bold", "Semi-Bold", "Bold",
- "Extra Bold", "Heavy", "Heavyface", "Black", "Ultra", "UltraBlack",
- "Fat", "ExtraBlack", and "Obese". However, I have a few fonts where
- this is not the case ("standard" is a common entry) and have had no
- problems as of yet. But it would probably be wiser to be on the safe
- side.
-
- See below for a definitive list.
-
- This is Info file comp.fonts.faq.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from
- the input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Subject: 7.2. Tell me more about NeXTstep fonts
-
- Outline files should be in PFA or hexadecimal ASCII format. The font
- name should be taken either from the outline (font) file or the AFM
- file. In both case the name is given after the word "FontName" at the
- beginning of the file)
-
- As a matter of fact, fonts don't strictly HAVE to be in all hexadecimal
- ASCII format. The eexec portion of the font can be in binary if you
- wish, and in fact some Mac->NeXTstep or PFB->NeXTstep font converters
- simply strip off the Mac/PFB storage format headers and leave the
- binary sections as binary.
-
- However, if you wish to send such a font across a serial channel to a
- PostScript printer, you will need some way to unpack the binary eexec
- portion to seven-bit ASCII before sending the font.
-
- Where to Obtain Fonts for NeXTstep
- ==================================
-
- Adobe Type 1 fonts are available in NeXTstep format from RightBrain
- Software of Palo Alto. RightBrain are the authorised Adobe reseller
- for Type 1 fonts on NeXTstep. Adobe fonts for NeXTstep come with AFM
- files and a font installer for installing on NeXTstep and downloading
- to non-NEXT printers.
-
- RightBrain Software
- 132 Hmilton Avenue
- Palo Alto
- California 94301
- (415) 326-2974.
- info@rightbrain.com
-
- Other vendors in general do not provide Type 1 fonts in a form suitable
- for UNIX/NeXTstep. In such cases you must obtain the fonts in either
- Macintosh format or PC (PFB) format. When you obtain fonts from other
- vendors, MAKE SURE you INSIST they supply AFM files. Fonts without
- AFM files can be converted to NeXTstep format, but it can be a big
- deal. Trilithon Software currently supply utilities to generate AFM
- files directly from the font, but you get only the character metrics -
- other data such as kerning pairs is not in the font and cannot be
- synthesised.
-
- Converted Fonts After Conversion
- --------------------------------
-
- After conversion they are just like any other freeware or shareware
- font that you can get in NeXTstep-format from the archives. That's just
- outline and AFM files but no bitmapped screen fonts. So small point
- size means poor resolution on screen but they most of should print OK
- if they are any good ( = usually made with Fontographer).
-
- About Conversion Utilities
- --------------------------
-
- NeXTstep utilities
- ..................
-
- * unfont
-
- You can find a package, named something like
- pcATMfont2NeXT.tar.Z, from NeXT archives (cs.orst.edu)
- that converts PC fonts to NeXT format (PFB -> PFA).
-
- The most useful tool for me has been "unfont" which
- converts the .pfb (binary outline) font to ASCII outline
- font.
-
- I usually use it like this
-
- $ unfont new_font.pfb >NewFont
-
- If the conversion was successful all I have to after that is
- maybe to rename the font correctly and move the outline file
- in the correct .font folder.
-
- * Opener.app
-
- Opener seems to be a very useful application since it can
- open several kinds file packages on NeXTstep that are
- common on other platforms. E.g. ".sit", ".hqx", ".zoo",
- ".zip", ".z", etc.
-
- I haven't used it a lot but looks very promising.
-
- * T1utils-1.1
-
- This is collection of command-line programs that manipulate
- PS Type 1 fonts and one of them can also do the PFB->PFA
- conversion (t1ascii?).
-
- Basic unarchiving of Mac and PC files.
-
- On your Unix machine:
-
- xbin
- Converts .hqx to:
- .data
- Rename and transfer to PC (or use opener.app on NeXT?)
-
- .info
- Discard
-
- .rsrc
- Discard
-
- unzip
- Converts .zip to:
- .inf
- Discard
-
- .wfn
- Discard
-
- .pfm
- Discard (unless it can generate a better AFM file)
-
- everything else
- Transfer to NeXT On a PC:
-
- xbin
- Converts .hqx to:
- .data
- Rename and transfer to PC (or use opener.app on NeXT?)
-
- .info
- Discard
-
- .rsrc
- Discard
-
- extract -f ...
- Converts .cpt to:
- file with no extension
- This is usually the outline font. Refont and transfer to
- NeXT.
-
- .afm
- Transfer to NeXT.
-
- .pfm
- Discard (unless it can generate a better AFM file)
-
- .bma
- Discard if you have an AFM file.
-
- unsit30 -eb ...
- Converts .sit to:
- file with no extension
- This is usually the outline font. Refont and transfer to
- NeXT.
-
- .afm
- Transfer to NeXT.
-
- .pfm
- Discard (unless it can generate a better AFM file)
-
- .bma
- Discard if you have an AFM file.
-
- refont
- Converts outline formats from Mac to NeXT format (PFA).
-
- pkunzip
- Converts .zip to:
- .inf
- Discard
-
- .wfn
- Discard
-
- .pfm
- Discard (unless it can generate a better AFM file)
-
- everything else
- Transfer to NeXT On a NeXT
-
- Opener.app
- Converts archive formats (.sit, .hqx, .zip) to NeXT format.
-
- unfont
- Converts PFB files to NeXT format.
-
- afm
- Converts AFM files to NeXT format AFM files (CR/LF hackery)
-
- Installation
- ------------
-
- There are scripts (installfont) available that can handle the
- installation process but here is how you do it manually.
-
- * .font
-
- After all that you have to create the .font folder, move the
- outline and .afm files there and start fighting with the strangely
- formatted .afm file. The most common problems are font name
- mismatch between outline and AFM files (family name is incorrect
- or too long, etc) and missing fields (ex. no ItalicAngle entry) in
- the AFM file.
-
- * buildafmdir AND cacheAFMData
-
- buildafmdir puts its complains to Console but cacheAFMData put
- them on stdout or stderr (ie. Terminal Window).
-
- PARSE ERRORS ----------- "Parse error 10000011 ..." comes from
- mismatch between of CharMetrics declared in the .afm and actually
- found. I haven't been able to figure out the other strange parse
- errors.
-
- buildafmdir in the 3.0 release has the limitation of not being
- able to install more that 255 fonts in any one font folder. This
- is supposed to be fixed in 3.1.
-
- * The Dreaded <<Unusable Font>> Message
-
- <<Unusable Font>> appears in the font panel when you have run
- buildafmdir and it finds things it thinks are wrong with the AFM
- file. Errors can also be generated by parsing routines inside the
- PasteBoard Services.
-
- <<Unusable Font>> almost NEVER has anything to do with the font
- itself, since buildafmdir doesn't actually look inside the font.
- Errors in the font due to faulty conversion will likely show up at
- the time the PostScript server actually attempts to define the
- font or render characters from the font.
-
- The only error I have ever seen from a converted font was the
- results of a naive Macintosh to PFA converter, which didn't
- understand that the POST resources in a Macintosh format Type 1
- font do not have to be in order, nor do the POST resources all
- have to be contiguous - they can be interspersed with other
- resources. The results were that a comment resource ended up in
- the middle of the eexec section of the font and the PostScript
- interpreter threw out lots of errors.
-
- <<Unusable Font>> almost ALWAYS occurs because there is something
- wrong with the AFM file you installed. Here is a partial list of
- problems that can occur with AFM files:
-
- * Carriage-return characters (^M) at ends of lines.
-
- This happens when you get incomplete translations from PC
- files, which use carriage-return-line-feed combinations at
- ends of lines.
-
- Solution: edit away the carriage returns. Make sure the
- lines are terminated only by line-feed characters.
-
- * Spaces or tabs at ends of lines.
-
- Fixed in NeXTstep 3.1.
-
- * Missing fields.
-
- NeXTstep DEMANDS that certain fields be present in the AFM
- file. Required fields are: FontName, FullName, FamilyName,
- Weight, EncodingScheme, and ItalicAngle. If any of these
- fields are missing, you will get the <<Unusable Font>>
- message.
-
- Solution: fill in the required fields.
-
- * Incorrect Weight field.
-
- buildafmdir accepts only a certain set of values for the
- Weight field. Acceptable values are: "Ultra Light", "Thin",
- "Light", "Extra Light", "Book", "Regular", "Plain", "Roman",
- "Medium", "Demi", "Demi-Bold", "Semi-Bold", "Bold", "Extra
- Bold", "Heavy", "Heavyface", "Black", "Ultra", "UltraBlack",
- "Fat", "ExtraBlack", and "Obese".
-
- * Character information count mismatches.
-
- AFM files contain several sets of information which are
- introduced by a "Startxxxxx nnn" line where the xxxxx is the
- name of the section (such as StartCharMetrics) and nnn is the
- purported number of lines of information of this type to
- follow. Sad to say, many many AFM files supplied by vendors
- and others are such that the actual number of lines of data
- do not match the number stated on the Startxxxxx line. When
- this error occurs in the AFM file, buildafmdir emits a Parse
- Error message to the console and the font will be marked
- unusable. The parse error messages from buildafmdir is of
- the form:
-
- Parse error nnnnnnnn xx yy
-
- where nnnnnnnn is the error number, xx is the number of lines
- of information claimed to exist, and yy is the number of
- lines actually read. The nnnnnnnn are are:
-
- 10000011 mismatch in the StartCharMetrics section
- 10000012 mismatch in the StartTrackKern section
- 10000013 mismatch in the StartKernPairs section
- 10000014 mismatch in the StartComposites section
- 10000015 mismatch in a composite character specification
-
- I have converted many fonts from the Berkeley Macintosh User
- Group CD ROM and fully half of the supplied AFM files are
- incorrect.
-
- * Other AFM file errors.
-
- Parse error numbers 10000001 through 10000010 means some kinds of
- syntax errors in the AFM data file. Any of these errors mean that
- the AFM file is truly hosed. You'd probably be better off
- obtaining AfmBuilder from Trilithon Software and building a new
- AFM file straight from the font.
-
- Subject: 7.3. Porting fonts to the NeXT
-
- Porting PC/Unix Type 1 Fonts
- ============================
-
- You must have the .pfb and .afm files
-
- A PC Adobe font is stored in binary format, so the first step is to
- convert it to ascii.
-
- There are a couple of utilities out there which can do this. I think
- t1utils can do it, and there is a nice utility called pcATMfont2Next
- which has a couple of tools to do this (unfont and pfb2ps). Look for
- the file pcATMfont2Next.tar.Z; it is available on many ftp sites.
-
- Also, since NeXTstep run on Unix, there is the customary problem of
- converting the CRs (carriage returns) that PCs use to the LFs
- (Linefeeds) that Unix uses. The easiest way to do this is to use tr to
- delete the octal for the CR character from both the .afm and outline
- file. The command to do this is:
-
- tr -d '\015' < inputfile > outputfile
-
- The unfont program will do this automatically when it converts the .pfb
- file, but pfb2ps does not. I'm not sure if t1utils' utility does or not.
-
- Once you have the outline file, you can go ahead and install it by the
- process outlined above.
-
- Otto J. Makela (otto@jyu.fi) posted a terrific cshell script to
- comp.fonts, which automates just about everything for you. It converts
- the .pfb to ASCII format, extracts the name from the FontName field,
- creates the font folder, copies in the component files with the correct
- name, and runs buildafmdir and cacheAFMData when done. A newer version
- of this script is now available from the standard NeXT step archives
- (Sonata, etc.).
-
- Porting Mac Type 1 Fonts
- ========================
-
- A variety of programs and scripts exist to convert Macintosh format
- Type 1 fonts to UNIX format. Their ability to do a complete job
- varies. Common traps which naive font converters fall into are:
-
- * not dealing with Macintosh POST which are out of order.
-
- * not dealing with Macintosh POST which are interspersed with other
- resources.
-
- * not dealing at all with POST Type 4 resources where the font
- program starts in resource fork of the file but the remainder of
- the data is in the data fork.
-
- Most naive converters we've looked at have this problem. This
- means that most Type 3 fonts won't convert at all.
-
- * not dealing with MacBinary headers.
-
- MacToPfa
- --------
-
- Trilithon Software provides a commercial NeXTstep `MacToPfa' utility
- which converts Mac to NeXTstep format and installs the converted fonts
- for you. `MacToPfa' overcomes a lot of the problems which plague other
- font conversion schemes.
-
- MetroTools
- ----------
-
- MetroSoft provides a commercial NeXTstep Mac->NeXTstep utility as a
- part of their MetroTools package for NeXTstep. MetroTools is a kind of
- Boy Scout Knife, containing a Mac to NeXTstep font converter, a Mac to
- NeXTstep sound converter, a screen saver, a dock extender, and others.
- MetroTools will not convert Macintosh fonts if it can't find AFM files.
- The font converter converts font formats and installs them on NeXTstep
- for you.
-
- MetroSoft,
- San Diego, California 94028
- (619) 488 9411.
- info@metrosoft.com
-
- Porting PC (PFB) Type 1 Fonts
- =============================
-
- Trilithon Software provides a commercial NeXTstep `PfbToPfa' utility
- which converts Mac to NeXTstep format and installs the converted fonts
- for you. `PfbToPfa' overcomes a lot of the problems which plague other
- font conversion schemes.
-
- Subject: 7.4. Font availability
-
- Public Domain fonts for the NeXT are available via anonymous FTP from
- sonata.purdue.edu, in the directory next/graphics/fonts. The README
- for this file states that the directory is currently being restructured
- by the archive moderator, although fonts are still available in that
- directory.
-
- Subject: 7.5. Why can I only install 256 fonts on my NeXT?
-
- Included to NS3.0 there's a new 'buildafm'-routine (for non-NeXTers:
- 'buildafm' is a shell script which announces a new font to the
- computer) at /usr/bin/buildafmdir. The new one only allows to install
- about 256 fonts. Running the new 'buildafmdir' to install a new font
- surpresses every font above this number. Workaround: Re-install the
- 'old buildafmdir' from NS2.1 at /usr/bin/buildafmdir and everything
- should be fine!
-
- (thanks to: Rob Parkhill and d'Art Computers/Germany d'art)
-
- [ed: and my thanks to Borris Balzer for sending this to me]
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: Amiga Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-12_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:29 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 311
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-12_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:16999 comp.answers:9907 news.answers:34569
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part12
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 8. Amiga Information
-
- Daniel Amor contributes the following sections:
-
- Font Concepts
- =============
-
- The Amiga is able to use two different concepts of fonts. First of all
- there are the bitmap fonts. These fonts are created by drawing a letter
- pixel for pixel onto the screen. The advantage is that they look good
- at small sizes, but are not very good for printout. Also they don't
- look very good when you change their size. Therefore you have to
- recreate the font for each size. Second there are the vector fonts.
- They are created by curves which are stored as mathematical formula.
- This has the advantage that changing the sizes does not effect the
- output. But this only applies for larger sizes and print-outs. Vector
- fonts also use less memory.
-
- Amiga Font Formats
- ==================
-
- 1. Agfa IntelliFont (suffix: .type or .lib) is the native font format
- on the Amiga. You can use it in any application and it can be
- converted to the standard bitmap format using the system
- utilities `IntelliFont' (OS 3.x) or `Fountain' (OS 2.x).
-
- 2. Postscript Type 1 fonts can be used within many applications, it
- can be used in every word processor and DTP program. There are
- two versions of the Type 1 format: Binary and ASCII (suffix:
- .pfb & .pfa). The Amiga software uses the Binary format, but you
- can easily convert them with TypeSmith or some PD software
- products (z.B. PFB2PFA) . In Addition to the files mentioned
- above, there are the metrics files with the suffixes .afm or
- .pfm. They contain information about the size (width) of the
- letters and most programs expect this file to be in the same
- directory as the font file.
-
- 3. Postscript Type 3 fonts (suffix: .ps or nothing) are not often
- used on the Amiga, but some applications do support this font
- format (e.g. PageStream). There are also some download
- utilities from PD sources available.
-
- 4. Truetype fonts (suffix: .ttf) are not very common on the Amiga,
- there is one word processor supporting this format (Wordworth
- 3.0). Due to the lower quality of the format, Amiga users tend
- to use higher quality for their DTP, DTV and word processing...
- There are also two formats: Mac & Windows available. The Amiga
- software is able to use the Windows format.
-
- 5. DMF fonts is the privat format of PageStream (suffix: .dmf), since
- PageStream is the market leader in DTP programs on the Amiga, so
- this format is very common!
-
- 6. Bitmap fonts (suffix: .font and numbers in a directory by the name
- of the font, sometimes .otag when converted from IntelliFont)
- were used in the OS 1.x, but have been replaced by the superior
- IntelliFont Format in OS 2.0. Under 2.0 or higher you still are
- able to use the bitmap fonts for small sizes, but for printouts
- you should use the IntelliFont format or any other vector font
- format mentioned above.
-
- 7. Colour Bitmap fonts (same suffixes as Bitmap Fonts, but the
- numbers have in addition a C, e.g. 35C) are also very common on
- the Amiga, they are mainly used for DTV applications, like the
- Video Toaster and Scala.
-
- Frequently Requested Amiga Fonts
- ================================
-
- 1. First place to look for fonts is the AMINET archive. This is the
- biggest archive of Amiga software and there you will find also
- quite a lot of fonts. The Aminet consists of many mirrors
- around the world. Here are some of them:
-
- 1. ftp.wustl.edu,
-
- 2. ftp.luth.se,
-
- 3. ftp.eunet.ch,
-
- 4. ftp.uni-paderborn.de,
-
- 5. ftp.doc.ic.ac.uk.
-
- Just log in as ftp and go to the directory
-
- /pub/aminet/text/font.
-
- 2. Another good ftp server to look is the CICA-server:
-
- 1. ftp.cica.indiana.edu
-
- To this server are also some mirrors around the world available.
-
- 3. Also a good place to look for is the following WWW server:
-
- 1. http://jasper.ora.com/Internet-Font-Archive.html
-
- 4. Another good place is the Fresh Fonts I CD-ROM, there you will
- almost certainly find some nice fonts. The CD is available from
-
- 1. Fred Fish / Amiga Library Services (orders@amigalib.com)
-
- 2. Stefan Ossowski / Schatztruhe GmbH
-
- The CD is for free when buying another CD from that company.
-
- You can also access the HTML pages on the CD under the following
- address:
-
- 1. http://macke.gris.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de:4711/~damor/
-
- Commercial Font Sources
- =======================
-
- Commercial fonts can be obtained from a number of different companies,
- including the large font houses: Adobe, Font Haus, Font Company,
- Bitstream, and Monotype. At these companies, fonts cost about $40 for a
- single face, and must be purchased in packages. Adobe, Bitstream, and
- Monotype also sell pre-designated type collections for slightly lower
- prices.
-
- There are also a lot of PD reseller who have a vast quantity of fonts,
- check out your local Amiga magazin for more information.
-
- Please consult the vendor list for a more complete list of vendors.
-
- Non-Latin fonts on the Amiga
- ============================
-
- Due to the really bad information policy by C= there was actually no
- information about non-latin fonts. But still it is possible to use them,
- without difficulty. You just have to get yourself some additional
- files. First of all you need the non-latin font files. There is a
- large selection of them on the Fresh Fonts CD-ROM mentioned above. In
- order to use the non-latin font files, you have to get yourself the
- appropriate keymap file, this will remap the keys on the keyboard to
- the appropriate letters of the foreign alphabet, e.g. in order to use
- a Russian font, you should set the russian keymap file in the
- preferences (via PREFS/INPUT).
-
- Not only that you can write with a non-latin alphabet, you can also
- localize your workbench. How about a Greek workbench or a Hebrew
- workbench? Have a look into the AMINET archive (mentioned above) for
- these files!
-
- In addition to this you can easily use Hebrew & Arabic in any word
- processor incl. writing from right-to-left! This can be easily done
- by setting the kerning value to negative values (like this the cursor
- moves left and not right) and moving the characters into the negativ
- part! You can get fonts from me with this feature!
-
- Amiga Font Installation
- =======================
-
- The installation of Postscript, DMF and Truetype fonts is described by
- the application that use them. Please refer to the manuals of the
- software packages.
-
- The installation of IntelliFonts is very easy. Just start `IntelliFont'
- (OS 3.x) or `Fountain' (OS 2.x) and follow the guidelines from within
- the program.
-
- In order to install bitmap fonts, either copy them to the logical device
- FONTS: or assign the directory with your bitmap fonts:
-
- ASSIGN Fonts: <your_directory> ADD
-
- Right after this you can start your application and use them. When using
- non-latin fonts, don't forget to set the appropriate keymap file!
-
- Amiga Font Utilities
- ====================
-
- 1. IntelliFont
-
- IntelliFont is the system program by OS 3.x which lets you install
- Agfa IntelliFonts and converts them to bitmap fonts. The program
- is located in the drawer `SYS:System/'. For more information
- read your Workbench 3.x manual.
-
- 2. Fountain
-
- Is the preceding program to IntelliFont and comes with the now
- obsolete OS 2.x. Please read the section about Fountain in your
- Workbench 2.x manual.
-
- 3. PFB2PFA
-
- This neat little utility lets you convert Postscript Binary files
- to Postscript ASCII files. This is needed in order to use DOS &
- Amiga Adobe Type 1 fonts on the Mac!
-
- 4. CacheFont
-
- This great program caches the fontlist for you, in order to save a
- huge amount of time. The program looks for all fonts available
- on the system and creates a special cache-file on disk.
-
- 5. TypeSmith
-
- This is the best font converter on the Amiga, besides this
- function it is also a full blown font editor (see below) :-).
- The program is able to convert between:
-
- 1. Truetype
-
- 2. DMF
-
- 3. Adobe (Type 1 & 3)
-
- 4. IntelliFont
-
- 5. Bitmap (Amiga, Adobe, DMF)
-
- Making Outline Fonts
- ====================
-
- This is very, very difficult. Many people imagine that there are
- programs that will simply convert pictures into fonts for them. This is
- not the case; most fonts are painstakingly created by drawing curves
- that closely approximate the letterforms. In addition, special rules
- (which improve hinting, etc.) mandate that these curves be drawn in
- specific ways. Even designing, or merely digitizing, a simple font can
- take hundreds of hours.
-
- The easiest way of learning how to create fonts, is to have a look at
- existing fonts and try to change some letters.
-
- Given that, there are two major programs used for font design on the
- Amiga, TypeSmith 2.5 ($150) and FontDesigner ($100). These programs
- will allow you to import scanned images, and then trace them with
- drawing tools. The programs will then generate Adobe type 1, 3,
- TrueType, AGFA Intellifont, DMF and Bitmap fonts for either the
- Amiga, the Macintosh or the IBM PC. They will also generate automatic
- hinting. They also open previously constructed outline fonts,
- allowing them to be modified, or converted into another format.
-
- As far as I know, there are no shareware programs that allows you to
- generate outline fonts.
-
- There are also two programs for creating bitmap fonts. Personal Fonts
- Maker and Calligrapher. The second one has not been updated for several
- years, but it still is a good tool to work with. The first Program was
- created by adding some features to a good bitmap paint program
- (Personal Paint).
-
- There are some shareware tools to create bitmap fonts which you can
- convert to outline (vector) fonts with TypeSmith.
-
- Problems and Possible Solutions
- ===============================
-
- 1. Pagestream does not recognize your newly installed font.
-
- This happens when you have two fonts with the same ID. The
- solution is to load such a font into a font editor and enter a
- new ID for one of the fonts. Still it might happen that you
- choose another one, that has already been used by!
-
- 2. Your application does not find the IntelliFont.
-
- This happens when you haven't set the locigal device FONTS: to
- your drawer. You can change this by typing the following
- command into your SHELL or add this line to your
- `S:User-Startup' file:
-
- ASSIGN Fonts: <your_drawer> ADD
-
- 3. You're using a non-latin font and the wrong characters appear when
- typing.
-
- This happens when you forget to set the appropriate keymap file.
- Enter the Prefs directory and start the program `INPUT'. There
- you can choose your keymap file.
-
- Adobe Type 1 fonts for the Amiga
- ================================
-
- Darrell Leland contributes the following information:
-
- There are now three high end DTP packages for the Amiga that can
- directly or indirectly use Adobe Type 1 Fonts or AGFA Compugraphic
- fonts. The best of the lot in both my and Amiga World's opinions is
- SoftLogik's Pagestream, currently in version 2.2 but about to go to
- version 3.0. Pagestream can take Adobe fonts in MS-DOS format directly
- with no format conversion needed. All you have to do is get them on an
- Amiga format disk, which is very easy using the new version of
- Commodore's Workbench operating system. Pagestream has import modules
- for MacWrite, Adobe Illustrator, and every other format in the universe
- (seems like). It is generally a very stable and well behaved program
- with a lot of features. I haven't had a chance to see 3.0 yet, but they
- are claiming it's going to be a real killer. We shall see. It does color
- seps, twists and rotates fonts, etc. Pagestream's job has been made
- easier with Commodore's (about time) release of their own Postscript
- printer drivers and Preferences postscript printer control tools.
-
- SoftLogik also sells a program called Typesmith, which is (at last!) a
- structured font maker/editor for the Amiga. Typesmith will work with
- both formats mentioned above plus SoftLogik's own font format, which I
- get the impression they are discontinuing in favor of Postscript. They
- also sell ArtExpression, a very nice structured drawing package that
- does everything I can think of. I understand SoftLogik has also been
- getting several Mac and PC font makers to make Amiga fonts for them too.
- They even have a program system that allows programs to publish to other
- programs, sort of like in Mac System 7.0. They are lisencing it out to
- any Amiga developer who pays a paltry sum to lisence it.
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: Atari Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-13_789320251@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:31:31 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 130
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:30:50 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-13_792102650@ora.com>
- References: <font-faq-1_792102650@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:17000 comp.answers:9908 news.answers:34570
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part13
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 9. Atari ST/TT/Falcon Information
-
- Erlend Nagel contributed the following information about the Atari
- ST/TT/Falcon.
-
- Subject: 9.1. SpeedoGDOS
-
- SpeedoGDOS is similar to ATM.
-
- Fonts included with SpeedoGDOS 4.x
- ==================================
-
- 14 fonts are included with SpeedoGDOS 4.x.
-
- Bitstream Cooper Black, Dutch 801 Roman, Dutch 801 Bold, Dutch 801
- Italic, Dutch 801 Bold Italic, Monospace 821, More Wingbats SWC, Park
- Avenue, Swiss 721, Swiss 721 Bold, Swiss 721 Italic, Swiss 721 Bols
- Italic, Symbol Monospaced, and VAG Rounded
-
- Fonts included with SpeedoGDOS 5.x
- ==================================
-
- 24 fonts are included with SpeedoGDOS 5.x. All fonts included with
- SpeedoGDOS 4.x plus the following:
-
- American Garamond Roman, American Garamond Bold, American Garamond
- Italic, American Garamond Bold Italic, AD LIB Regular, Allegro Regular,
- Amelia Regular, and Cataneo Bold
-
- Subject: 9.2. Atari File Formats
-
- Atari Font formats
- ==================
-
- The standard Atari OS in ROM does not support any type of fonts. To use
- different fonts in applications, either the application has to have
- built-in support for some font format, or an add-on program is needed.
- This add-on program is called a GDOS, a Graphical Device Operating
- System. There are many different versions of GDOS.
-
- The earliest versions of GDOS supported only GEM bitmap fonts (*.FNT).
- These versions include GDOS, AMC-GDOS (Atari), G-plus (Codehead) and
- Font-GDOS (Atari again). Font-GDOS (available for free) added caching
- to the font-manager, so not all fonts need to reside in memory at the
- same time.
-
- After FontGDOS came FSM-GDOS. The FSM stands for Font Scaling Manager
- and allowed vector fonts to be used. The font-format for FSM-GDOS is
- not known (*.QFM and *.OTL files), and the only fonts available for it
- were a set of 15 Lucida fonts, including a symbol, a Hebrew, and
- Italic, Roman and Bold versions. FSM-GDOS was only included with
- Wordflair II and G-Man. FSM-GDOS also still supported GEM bitmap fonts.
-
- After FSM-GDOS, Atari introduced SpeedoGDOS 4.0, using Speedo font
- scaling technology licensed from Bitstream. 14 fonts are included with
- this version (see 1.15). SpeedoGDOS 4.0 and 4.1 can use GEM bitmap,
- Atari encrypted and commercially encrypted Speedo fonts. As of version
- 4.2 also the publicly available X11 Speedo fonts can be used.
- SpeedoGDOS offers improved speed and reliability over FSM-GDOS, as well
- as track- and pair-kerning.
-
- Recently Compo Software introduced SpeedoGDOS 5.x which supports GEM
- bitmap, Speedo, Truetype and Type 1 fonts. Included are 22 Speedo fonts
- (see 1.15).
-
- Also recently introduced was NVDI 3.0 by Behne & Behne, which supports
- GEM bitmap, Speedo and Truetype fonts. The biggest difference when
- compared to SpeedoGDOS 5.x is the improved speed, because NVDI is
- written in Assembler instead of C. Only 2 fonts are included with NVDI
- 3.0.
-
- These fonts are transparent to programs. There are a few other options
- that require support by the program using the fonts. Two major font
- formats are supported in this way on the Atari, namely
- Signum!2/Signum!3 fonts and Calamus fonts.
-
- The Signum!2 font format is a bitmapped font format supported by many
- wordprocessors and some drawing packages. Amazing print quality on
- 9-needle printers. Many high quality designs are available in Signum!2
- and Signum!3 format (Mostly German), especially for some special
- languages like Polish. There are also many PD fonts available in this
- format.
-
- The Calamus (*.CFN) format was introduced by DMC, in their Calamus DTP
- program that uses soft-RIPping. The Calamus font format has no hinting
- since it is meant to be used on very high resolution type setting
- machines. Also supported by Digital Art's (DA's) software. Many
- professional designs are available in this format, as well as a lot of
- PD fonts.
-
- Atari Font Format Extensions
- ============================
-
- File formats specific to the Atari platform:
-
- * .E24
-
- Bitmapped Signum!2 screen font.
-
- * .L30
-
- Bitmapped Signum!2 printer font for Laser and Deskjet printers.
-
- * .OTL
-
- Vector font table used by FSM-GDOS.
-
- * .P9
-
- Bitmapped Signum!2 printer font for Hi-Res 9-needle printers
- (214*196 dpi).
-
- * .P24
-
- Bitmapped Signum!2 printer font for 24-needle printers.
-
- * .QFM
-
- Vector font used by FSM-GDOS.
-
- Subject: 9.3. Frequently Requested Atari Fonts
-
- Some fonts, including a few Speedo fonts are available from various
- archives. The most important Atari archive is atari.archive.umich.edu.
-
- Most fonts can be had from PD/Shareware distributors around the world...
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: X11 Info
- Supersedes: <font-faq-14_792102650@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:50:37 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 227
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:50:34 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-14_792103834@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:17005 comp.answers:9913 news.answers:34575
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part14
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 10. X11 Information
-
- This section needs a lot of work. At the time of this release, I'm not
- in a position to write it so I'm leaving it basically blank. Even if
- you don't have time to write it, if you know what should be in this
- section, please forward it to norm.
-
- Subject: 10.1. Getting X11
-
- The standard location for X software is ftp.x.org.
-
- Subject: 10.2. Historical Notes about X11
-
- The X Window System has been in widespread use through releases 3, 4,
- and now 5 of X Version 11.
-
- Fonts weren't really treated by the X Consortium very well until X11
- release 5 (X11R5). In X11R3 and X11R4, the default format used by the X
- servers was called SNF (server normal format). Basically the font was
- formatted on disk in such a way that the X server could quickly read and
- use it (it was basically a memory-dump). The important element of the
- SNF format is that it was not a portable format: it depended on the
- architecture of the machine running the server (little endian vs. big
- endian, for example) and as a consequence you needed different directory
- structures for different systems on your network. On top of that,
- several systems vendors implemented their own font format, making font
- portability even more difficult.
-
- With X11R5, two things changed: the font service protocol was defined as
- a standard and interoperable way for an X server to obtain fonts
- (independent of their format, origin, or current location on disk) and
- the default format for storing fonts was changed from SNF to PCF
- (Portable Compiled Font). PCF is a format originally developed by DEC.
- Its primary advantage is that it is not architecture dependent. That
- is, if you compile a font to PCF format on different systems, then you
- may end up having two different PCF files, but each system will be able
- to read the other's file correctly.
-
- Subject: 10.3. X11 Font Formats
-
- There are many different font formats that can play a role in an X11
- system configuration. The following table summarizes some of the
- common formats:
-
- * BDF
-
- The Bitmap Distribution Format (BDF) is the standard format for
- distribution of fonts. It is an ASCII format so it can easily be
- edited it with your favourite editor or E-mailed to other users.
- As the name suggests, it stores bitmap fonts only.
-
- Another virtue of the BDF format is that most font format
- converters convert to or from this format. Means if you want to go
- from format A to format B, neither of which is BDF, then you are
- likely to convert A to BDF, then BDF to B.
-
- The BDF format is defined by Adobe. A document describing the
- format is available by ftp from Adobe's file server at
- "ps-file-server@adobe.com". It is also available in the standard X
- distribution. Look under ../X11R4(5)/mit/hardcopy/BDF. This
- document is also reproduced in any text describing the X standard.
-
- * SNF
-
- The Server Normal Format (SNF) is an older format for bitmap
- fonts. The format is X Server and host dependent. This means that
- if you have two SNF files, their actual format may be different.
- Also, if you have an "snftobdf" utility, it may not be able to
- read font files from other systems. Convert to BDF format before
- you move it off the host system.
-
- Snftobdf is one utility that can generate a BDF file from a SNF
- file. It was part of the X11R4 contrib release. To compile under
- X11R5, you need some of the X11R4 snf include files.
-
- * PCF
-
- The Portable Compiled Font (PCF) format is a binary format for
- bitmap fonts. The binary contains sufficient information to be
- readable by other systems.
-
- * PHIGS
-
- These fonts are only applicable in PEX environments. PHIGS fonts
- don't really have any relationship to the normal X font mechanism.
-
- * DWF
-
- The DECWindows Fonts (DWF) are bitmap fonts.
-
- * Intellifont
-
- These are HP scalable fonts.
-
- * PFA/PFB
-
- These are Adobe Type 1 PostScript fonts.
-
- They can be used in X11R5 based X servers and font servers because
- IBM has donated a renderer for this format to the X Consortium.
- The renderer can be found on the X11R5 contrib, and on ftp.x.org.
-
- * Speedo
-
- This is a format from Bitstream, Inc. Bitstream has also donated a
- font renderer to the X Consortium, and a couple of fonts.
-
- I have been told that in order to use commercial fonts from
- BitStream, you must patch the renderer somewhat to make it use the
- right decryption code for the font.
-
- * FB
-
- These are Sun X11/NeWS format bitmap fonts used by the Sun
- OpenWindows system.
-
- You can use "convertfont" which comes with OpenWindows to convert
- to/from BDF.
-
- * F3/F3B
-
- This is the scalable Sun Folio format, also used by OpenWindows.
-
- You can use "convertfont" to convert to (not from) BDF.
-
- Subject: 10.4. X11 Font Server
-
- X11 Release 5
- =============
-
- With X11 Release 5, the X Consortium has created a network-based
- standard font protocol. As a user of the X Window System, you have an X
- server on your desktop, which does the interface between the hardware
- (screen, mouse, keyboard), and the X network protocol. This X server
- needs fonts. Before X11R5, the only way it could get to those fonts
- was to make font directories readable for the X server on that host,
- either by NFS-mounting or by copying.
-
- With the X Font Service protocol, you just tell your X server that it
- must use the services of a font server, which is a daemon process
- sitting on a host on your network. The font server is a program which
- talks a standardized protocol on the network, and which is capable of
- reading several font formats.
-
- The font server sources are modular, such that it is easy to add a
- renderer for an additional font format to the existing code. This is
- obviously also the intention: the X Consortium provides the core
- technology, and supposes that all systems vendors will add font
- renderers for their proprietary formats to the code, and then ship that
- to their customers.
-
- If you have a multi-vendor environment, then you are supposed to run a
- font server on every host that carries the font files. Then all of the
- X servers on your network can put all the fonts they need in their font
- path. Automatically, IBM fonts will be requested from the font server
- on an IBM host, DEC fonts from a DEC host, etc.
-
- Other benefits of using font server technology include the ability of
- the font server to implement caching, provide for fault-tolerant setup,
- etc.
-
- A final example of the good use of the font server is the combination
- of a font server with a Type 1 font renderer. As mentioned above, IBM
- donated a Type 1 font renderer which can easily be built into the X
- font server. As the Type 1 font format, and the ATM format are the same,
- it is perfectly possible to use commercial ATM fonts with the X Window
- System. See also /contrib/fonts/lib/font/Type1/ in the X11
- distribution.
-
- X11 Release 6
- =============
-
- The X11R6 font server is very similar to the X11R5 server described
- above. Under X11R6, the font server has been renamed to xfs and the
- Type 1 rendering engine is now incorporated into the base
- distribution--it is no longer a contributed package.
-
- Subject: 10.5. Fonts and utilities for X11
-
- Here's a quick list of possible steps to get from "what you got" to X:
-
- * Mac format bitmaps:
-
- No idea. If you know how to read a Mac format bitmap file on some
- other platform, please tell norm.
-
- * PC format bitmaps:
-
- Conversion to BDF is possible from TeX PK format and LaserJet
- softfont format. Other conversions are also within the realm of
- possibility. Feel free to ask norm for more information if you
- have a specific conversion in mind.
-
- * TeX PK format bitmaps:
-
- PKtoBDF gets us directly to BDF format from here.
-
- * Mac format postscript:
-
- Under MS-DOS, conversion to PC format postscript allows the font to
- be accessed with PS2PK (under *nix or MS-DOS). See above for TeX
- PK to X conversions.
-
- * PC/Unix format PostScript
-
- Conversion to TeX PK with PS2PK allows you to get to BDF
- (indirectly).
-
- * XtoBDF, getbdf, FStoBDF
-
- XtoBDF and getbdf are two public-domain applications which are
- capable of asking an X server to give them all it knows about a
- given font. They then print the BDF representation of that font on
- stdout.
-
- You can use these if you have an X server that can read some font
- file, but nothing else can.
-
- FStoBDF is distributed with X11R5.
-
- If you use one of these programs, you may actually be converting a
- scalable font into a bitmap font, but converting a bitmap font to a
- scalable one is not currently possible.
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.mathworks.com!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: Utilities
- Supersedes: <font-faq-15_792102650@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:50:40 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 525
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:50:34 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-15_792103834@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:17006 comp.answers:9914 news.answers:34576
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part15
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 11. Utilities Information
-
- I have just started collecting information about font utilities. I
- will gladly add any information that you can pass my way. Please send
- your submissions to norm.
-
- I would appreciate it if you could include a paragraph or so of
- description and the appropriate site/filename for retrieval.
-
- Subject: 11.1. How do I convert AFM files to PFM files
-
- You can get afm2pfm and pfm2afm files from jasper.ora.com in the
- directory /pub/pfm2afm.
-
- Subject: 11.2. PS2PK
-
- PS2PK is a utility for converting Type1 postscript fonts into TeX PK
- files. The source code is distributed and it has been compiled for
- both *nix boxes and MS-DOS based machines.
-
- Here is the original announcement:
-
- Ps2pk-1.2 available
- -------------------
- (June 1992)
-
- Version 1.2 of ps2pk is now available on:
- ftp.urc.tue.nl (address: 131.155.2.79)
- directory: /pub/tex
- files: ps2pk12.README ( 1k) This file
- ps2pk12.tar.Z (391k) Sources
- ps2pk386.zip (232k) MSDOS executables
- utopia.tar.Z (342k) Adobe Utopia font family
- courier.tar.Z (207k) IBM Courier font family
-
- For people having difficulties in handling UNIX `.tar.Z' format I
- have made some UNIX tools (only executables) available in:
- directories: /pub/unixtools/dos
- /pub/unixtools/vms
-
- See the system specific TARZ file for some help.
-
- Ftp.urc.tue.nl can not handle E-mail requests. But sites are free
- to put the ps2pk12 stuff on any server that can.
-
- When do you need ps2pk?
- =======================
-
- Ps2pk is a tool that converts a PostScript type1 font into a corres-
- ponding TeX PK font. The tool is especially interesting if you want to
- use fully hinted type1 fonts in your DVI previewer (instead of the
- unhinted type1 fonts currently used in GhostScript) or on a printer
- that has no PostScript interpreter.
-
- In order to use the ps2pk generated fonts your driver and previewer need
- to support virtual fonts. The reason is that PostScript fonts and TeX
- fonts do have a different font encoding and handle ligatures in a
- different way. With virtual fonts the PostScript world (encoding +
- ligatures) can be mapped to the old style TeX world on which the current
- plain macro packages still are based (despite the fact that TeX3.0 can
- handle 8bits).
-
- It is also possible to use the ps2pk generated PK fonts directly
-
- Subject: 11.3. TeX Utilities
-
- There are many TeX font utilities. For TeX related questions, I direct
- you to comp.text.tex or the Info-TeX mailing list. I will happily list
- any utilities here that the comp.fonts public feels should be present.
- I am listing MetaFont because it is the obvious font-specific component
- of TeX and PKtoSFP because it allows anyone to use PS2PK to create
- LaserJet softfonts.
-
- Liam R. E. Quin is the original author of the MetaFont section. It has
- been hacked at a bit by norm to make it fit the tone of the comp.fonts
- FAQ. Assume that norm is responsible for any errors, not Liam.
-
- MetaFont
- ========
-
- About MetaFont:
- ---------------
-
- Metafont is a programming language for describing fonts. It was
- written by Donald Knuth and is documented in
-
- Computers & Typesetting/C: The METAFONTbook
- Knuth, Donald E.
- Addison Wesley, 1986
- ISBN 0-201-13445-4, or 0-201-13444-6 (soft cover)
- Library access: Z250.8.M46K58, or 686.2'24, or 85-28675.
-
- A font written in MetaFont is actually a computer program which, when
- run, will generate a bitmap (`raster') for a given typeface at a given
- size, for some particular device.
-
- What do you need in order to use the fonts:
- -------------------------------------------
-
- You cannot print the MetaFont fonts directly (unless you want a listing
- of the program, that is). Instead, you must generate a bitmap font and
- use that to print something.
-
- If you are using TeX, the sequence of steps is something like this:
-
- MF to MetaFont to GF
- Convert a MetaFont program into a bitmapped font. Also produces a
- TFM file.
-
- MF to MetaFont to TFM
- Covnert a MetaFont program into a TFM file. Also produces a
- GF bitmapped font.
-
- GF to GFtoPK to PK
- Convert a GF bitmapped font into a compressed PK font.
-
- TEX + TFM to TeX to DVI
- Produce a device independent output file.
-
- DVI + PK to dvi driver to output format
- Produce a device-specific output file (or preview).
-
- The above steps are idealized. In reality, you have to make sure that
- the fonts get installed in the correct places and you may have to
- adjust description files, etc. The friendly folks on comp.text.tex can
- probably get it staightened out for you if you can't find a local guru.
-
- If you are not using TeX, it's almost impossible to predict. At some
- point in the above sequence, you'll insert some other conversion
- program and proceed differently. Here, for example, is how you might
- use TeX fonts with WordPerfect and a LaserJet printer.
-
- PK to PKtoSFP to SFP
- Convert a TeX PK file into an HP LaserJet softfont.
-
- SFP to SFP2Auto to TFM
- Make HP AutoFont Tagged Font Metric file.
-
- SFP + HP AutoFont TFM to PTR to Installed in WP
- Install the new font in WordPerfect.
-
- Use WordPerfect as you normally would.
-
- Subject: 11.4. MFPic
-
- MFpic is a macro package for including pictures in TeX documents. The
- idea behind this package is to have Metafont do the actual drawing, and
- store the pictures in a font that TeX can include in the document. The
- macros have been designed so that the user should never have to learn
- Metafont to use these macros--the TeX macros actually write the
- Metafont file for you.
-
- This is Info file comp.fonts.faq.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from
- the input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Subject: 11.5. fig2MF
-
- Briefly, fig2MF uses the mfpic macros to create formatted, commented MF
- code from the fig graphics language. This means that programs like xfig
- can be used as interactive font creation tools. I wrote fig2MF so that
- I could portably illustrate TeX documents, but I suppose one could use
- it to design letterforms as well.
-
- The package consists of a single C source code file, modified mfpic
- macros, documentation, and sample fig files. It is available at the
- shsu archives.
-
- Subject: 11.6. GNU Font Utilities
-
- Here is a brief description of the programs included:
-
- * imageto extracts a bitmap font from an image in PBM or IMG format,
- or converts the image to Encapsulated PostScript.
-
- * xbfe is a hand-editor for bitmap fonts which runs under X11.
-
- * charspace adds side bearings to a bitmap font.
-
- * limn fits outlines to bitmap characters.
-
- * bzrto converts a generic outline font to Metafont or PostScript.
-
- * gsrenderfont renders a PostScript outline font at a particular
- point size and resolution, yielding a bitmap font.
-
- * fontconvert can rearrange or delete characters in a bitmap font,
- filter them, split them into pieces, combine them, etc., etc.
-
- * imgrotate rotates or flips an IMG file.
-
- We need volunteers to help create fonts for the GNU project. You do not
- need to be an expert type designer to help, but you do need to know
- enough about TeX and/or PostScript to be able to install and test new
- fonts. Example: if you know neither (1) the purpose of TeX utility
- program `gftopk' nor (2) what the PostScript `scalefont' command does,
- you probably need more experience before you can help.
-
- If you can volunteer, the first step is to compile the font utilities.
- After that, contact me [ed: Karl Berry] (karl@gnu.ai.mit.edu). I will
- get you a scanned type specimen image. The manual explains how to use
- these utilities to turn that into a font you can use in TeX or
- PostScript.
-
- You can get the source by ftp from any GNU archive site.
-
- You can also order tapes with GNU software from the Free Software
- Foundation (thereby supporting the GNU project); send mail to
- gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu for the latest prices and ordering information, or
- retrieve the file DISTRIB from a GNU archive.
-
- Subject: 11.7. Font Editors
-
- * Editors for BDF fonts
-
- There is a bdf font editor that comes with HP/Apollo workstations.
- It's called 'edfont'. It's not the best but it works.
-
- Gary reports:
-
- The standard X distribution for X11R5 contains "xfed", which
- allows you to play with BDF fonts. "xfedor" has a more elaborate
- user interface, and is available on most contrib directories.
-
- The last time I tried:
-
- "xfedor" couldn't handle BDF files with more than 256 characters.
-
- "xfed" aborts if the BDF file contains a COMMENT line with no other
- text. The workaround is to edit the BDF file, to put text after
- the word COMMENT. A single blank space is sufficient. For some
- reason, the standard BDF files included in the X release contain
- blank spaces on the otherwise empty COMMENT lines. It was
- probably easier to add the space to the COMMENT lines of every BDF
- file than it was to fix the lex code for xfed. :-)
-
- * Editors for PK fonts
-
- The GNU font utilities include an X-based editor called Xbfe which
- edits bitmapped fonts under X.
-
- Eberhard Mattes' emTeX includes PKedit.
-
- Subject: 11.8. The T1 Utilities
-
- This is a snippet from the README file for I. Lee Hetherington's
- t1utils package:
-
- t1utils is a collection of simple type-1 font manipulation programs.
- Together, they allow you to convert between PFA (ASCII) and PFB
- (binary) formats, disassemble PFA or PFB files into human-readable
- form, reassemble them into PFA or PFB format. Additionally you can
- extract font resources from a Macintosh font file (ATM/Laserwriter).
-
- Subject: 11.9. Where to get bitmap versions of the fonts
-
- There are archives containing the bitmaps of many of these fonts at
- various sizes and resolutions. The fonts must have been generated for
- the correct print engine: e.g. write-white or write-black. The
- archives generally hold only the sizes used by TeX. These are
- `magstep' sizes, and are not exact point sizes. It is probably better
- to generate them from the Metafont sources yourself if you can.
-
- The best place to look for raster fonts was almost certainly:
- mims-iris.waterloo.edu
-
- but it isn't any more, the fonts have all gone. Let me know if you
- find them elsewhere. Most people seem to have moved to using
- PostScript fonts or Bitstream ones instead now.
-
- Some other sites are:
-
- ctrsci.math.utah.edu (128.110.198.1)
- science.utah.edu (128.110.192.2)
- ymir.claremont.edu (134.173.4.23)
-
- The occasional posting of ftp sites to comp.misc and comp.archives
- lists these and several other sites.
-
- Subject: 11.10. Converting between font formats
-
- Conversions to and from pbm and pk format were posted to comp.text.tex
- and to alt.sources on the 9th of August, 1990 by Angus Duggan. The
- program is pbmtopk, and there are also at least two patches.
-
- Chris Lewis' psroff package includes a program to go from pk both to
- the HP LaserJet and to PostScript.
-
- John McClain <ophelp@tamvenus.bitnet> has some conversion programs for
- various graphics formats to/and from pk files.
-
- A PC program, CAPTURE, turns HPGL files into PK format, US$130 from
- Micro Programs Inc., 251 Jackson Ave., Syosset, NY 11791 U.S.A.
-
- Metaplot can take pen-plotter files and prouce metafont files. Note:
- Pat Wilcox is no longer at Ohio State.
-
- Kinch Computer Company sell .pk fonts derived from PostScript fonts.
- Kinch Computer Co., 501 S. Meadow St.Ithaca, NY 14850 U.S.A.
- telephone: +1 607 273 0222; fax: +1 607 273 0484
-
- Subject: 11.11. Getting fonts by FTP and Mail
-
- If you are using ftp, you will need either the name of the host or the
- Internet number. For example, to connect to ymir, listed as ftp:
- ymir.claremont.edu [134.173.4.23] you will need to type something like
-
- ftp ymir.claremont.edu
-
- If that doesn't work, try using the number:
-
- ftp 134.173.4.23
-
- If that doesn't work, on Unix systems you can use nslookup (it's
- usually /usr/etc/nslookup) to find the host number - it might have
- changed. Type the entire host name, and after a few seconds nslookup
- will give you the address. Of course, if you have nslookup installed,
- the first form will probably work...
-
- Once you have connected, you will need to go to the appropriate
- directory, lists its contents, and retrieve the files.
-
- Most of the machines listed here run Unix, and you use "ls" and "cd" to
- list files and to change directories. Ymir runs VMS, and you will have
- to put square brackets around directory names, like [this].
-
- Remember that although Metafont sources are text files, pk fonts are
- not ASCII, and you will have to use binary mode for them. In general,
- use text mode for README files and *.mf files, and binary mode for
- other font files. Files ending in .Z are compressed binary files - you
- will need to use binary mode, and then uncompress the files when you
- get them.
-
- You can get files from ymir by sending mail messages to
-
- mailserv@ymir.claremont.edu
-
- For example,
-
- send [tex.mf.misc]cmapl10.mf
-
- will get the file cmapl10.mf from the directory "tex.mf.misc". You
- can't get binary files in this way.
-
- There is an ftp-by-mail BITNET service, BITFTP, for BITNET users.
-
- Before getting large files by mail, please remember to get permission
- from all intervening sites. Ask your site administrator, who can send
- mail to Postmaster at each site on the way if necessary.
-
- Subject: 11.12. MetaFont to PostScript Conversion
-
- There are (I believe) two programs that perform this task. At least
- one of them is called "mf2ps". If you have any more information about
- these tools, please let me know.
-
- Chang Jin-woong reports that he found the "mf2ps" package with Archie.
- It is written by Shimon Yanai <yanai@israearn.bitnet> and Daniel M.
- Berry <dberry@cs.technion.ac.il>. The source programs are written in
- Pascal.
-
- Subject: 11.13. How to use Metafont fonts with Troff
-
- If, when you run troff, you get the message `typesetter busy', you have
- the original Ossanna-troff, also called otroff. Chris Lewis has a
- package which will let you use TeX fonts with troff - it's called
- psroff, and comes with documentation.
-
- ftp: gatekeeper.dec.com (16.1.0.2) pub/misc/psroff-3.0
- ftp: ftp.cs.toronto.edu [128.100.1.105] pub/psroff-3.0/*
-
- If, when you run troff, you get something like this:
-
- x T 300
- x res 300 1 1
-
- you have ditroff. This is sometimes called titroff or psroff. In this
- case, you will probably need to do the following:
-
- 1. convert the font to your printer's format
-
- 2. generate a width table for the font
-
- 3. add the font to the DESC file for the appropriate device
-
- 4. arrange for troff to download the font
-
- 5. tell troff about the font by running `makedev DESC' in the
- right place.
-
- If, when you run troff, you get something like this:
-
- X hp(SCM)(CM)(AF)(AD) 300 1 1
- Y P default letter 2550 3300 0 0 90 90 2460 3210
-
- you have sqtroff:
-
- 1. convert the font to your printer's format
-
- 2. generate a width table for the font
-
- 3. add the font to the DESC file for the appropriate device
-
- 4. put the font in the appropriate raster directory
-
- 5. tell sqtroff about the font by running `sqmakedev DESC' or
- `sqinstall'.
-
- In each case, you should be able to get help from your vendor.
-
- Note that Chris Lewis' psroff package has software to make width tables
- for troff from pk files.
-
- Subject: 11.14. PKtoBDF / MFtoBDF
-
- From the SeeTeX distribution, programs to help previewers under X11.
- They convert TeX PK files into X11 BDF fonts (which can be further
- converted into one or more server native formats).
-
- Subject: 11.15. PKtoPS
-
- Included in the psroff distribution, this utility converts PK fonts
- into PostScript fonts (bitmaps, I presume). If you have any more
- information about these tools, please let me know.
-
- Subject: 11.16. PKtoSFP / SFPtoPK
-
- Convert fonts from TeX PK format to HP LaserJet softfont (bitmap)
- format.
-
- Subject: 11.17. PostScript to MetaFont
-
- ps2mf started out as a way of creating bitmaps via MF for TeX. Only,
- when I had just finished it, Piet Tutelaers came with ps2pk. This was a
- far superior way runtime-wise. He uses the IBM X11-R5 fontutilities
- library, which is extremely ugly code. But, it works. So, to generate
- bitmaps, I suggest everyone use ps2pk.
-
- To generate a MF outline description, ps2mf is *the* tool. Yannis
- Haralambous has just started a project where he wants to create
- meta-ized fonts for MF from Postscript descriptions. ps2mf does the
- basic conversion. This project wants to revive the use of MF for it is
- a truly beautiful program with enormous possiblities.
-
- The following information comes from the README file for ps2mf:
-
- This is pfb2mf. It is a copyleft program. See the file COPYING for more
- details. I suggest that for the translation of Type-One to readable
- PostScript you use I. Lee Hetherington's Type-1-Utils. You can find
- these somewhere on obelix.icce.rug.nl in pub/erikjan.
-
- If you find any bugs, please do report.
-
- If you have any complaints, please do report.
-
- Now for some info about the different stages. This package contains
- four programs:
-
- * pfb2pfa
-
- * pfa2chr
-
- * chr2ps
-
- * ps2mf
-
- pfb2pfa
- =======
-
- pfb2pfa will decompress an IBM (!) Postscript type 1 fontfile into
- readable and downloadable hexadecimal data.
-
- The resulting file still contains two layers of encryption:
-
- * eexec encryption
-
- * charstring encryption
-
- pfa2chr
- =======
-
- pfa2chr will do an eexec-decryption of a readable hexadecimal font file
- to a fontfile with encrypted charstrings.
-
- chr2ps
- ======
-
- chr2ps will perform a charstring-decryption of a font file with
- encrypted charstrings to fontfile with postscript commands for type 1
- fonts.
-
- With a "-" as filename, these programs will read from <stdin> and write
- to <stdout>. This way you can pipe the results, as in:
-
- pfb2pfa garmnd - | pfa2chr - - | chr2ps - garmnd
-
- This will create a garmnd.ps from garmnd.pfb without explicitely
- creating the intermediate files.
-
- These previous stages can be replaced by (when using Lee Hetherington's
- type-1-utils):
-
- t1disasm garmnd.pfb garmnd.ps
-
- ps2mf
- =====
-
- This last stage will convert to a MetaFont program with the use of the
- corresponding .afm file and a mapping configuration file. It can
- convert to an ordinary form with Bezier controlpoints. It can also
- generate a curl specification. For this last option specifify -C.
-
- Subject: 11.18. Mac Bitmaps to BDF Format
-
- I [ed: who?] have posted a program which I hacked together for
- extracting all NFNT and FONT resources from a MacBinary form of a
- standard Mac file and dumping the fonts as Adobe BDF files. It has only
- been compiled and tested on a Sun system to date. It can be fetched
- from METIS.COM, /pub/mac2bdf.c.
-
- I wrote this tool to be able to use Mac Bitmaps under X Windows and
- OpenWindows (which take Adobe BDF format files).
-
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!swrinde!sgiblab!uhog.mit.edu!news.mathworks.com!noc.near.net!amber.ora.com!ruby.ora.com!not-for-mail
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: Vendor List
- Supersedes: <font-faq-16_792102650@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 6 Feb 1995 15:50:42 -0500
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- Lines: 768
- Sender: norm@ruby.ora.com
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 22 Mar 1995 20:50:34 GMT
- Message-ID: <font-faq-16_792103834@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ruby.ora.com
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://jasper.ora.com:8080/comp.fonts
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:17007 comp.answers:9915 news.answers:34577
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part16
- Version: 2.1.1
-
- Subject: 12. Vendor Information
-
- Type/Font Vendors
- =================
-
- The following list is based on information from Masumi Abe, Norm Walsh
- and many others. I (Don Hosek) have been calling vendors and attempting
- to make sure information is up to date. I have removed a number of
- vendors who do not sell fonts. Fonts bundled with applications (e.g.,
- the bitmap fonts which are part of Quicken) are not considered enough
- to merit inclusion in the list. Also, a number of the vendors on the
- list actually were selling various printing software but no fonts per
- se and were likewise removed. Finally, some companies seem to have
- disappeared, most likely gone out of business. I've indicated the
- verification date of any information which appears on the list. I would
- appreciate aid in contacting those companies which are listed as
- unverified (particularly companies outside the US). Please send updates
- and corrections to me at dhosek@pitzer.edu
-
- Achtung Entertainment TrueType (shareware) for Macs, 300+
- 508 N. College Ave. #215 fonts. HyperCard demo disk $3.00
- Bloomington, IN 47404 (refundable/order)
- no phone number
-
- ADH Software (Mac)
- P.O. Box 67129
- Los Angeles, CA 90067
-
- Adobe Systems Incorporated : Type 1 (Mac, PC)
- 1585 Charleston Rd. : Originals, designs licensed from
- P.O. Box 7900 : Linotype, Monotype, Berthold, and
- Mountain View, CA 94039-7900 : others
- (415) 961-4400
- (800) 344-8335
- Verified: 16 Feb 1994
-
- Agfa Division, Miles Inc. : Type 1 Truetype, (PC, Mac),
- 90 Industrial Way : Intellifont (PC), Compugraphic
- Wilmington, MA 01887 : typesetter fonts. Originals,
- (800) 424-TYPE : fonts licensed from Adobe.
- (508) 657-0232
- FAX: (508) 657-8568
- Verified: 17 Feb 1994
-
- Allotype Typographics : Downloadable Fonts (Mac)
- 1600 Packard Rd. Suite #5 Kadmos (Greek)
- Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Czasy & Szwajcarskie
- (313) 663-1989 Demotiki
-
- Alphabets, Inc. : Type 1, TrueType (PC, Mac)
- P.O. Box 5448 : New and licensed designs
- Evanston, IL 60204-5448
- (800) 326-8973
- (708) 328-2733
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994
-
- Alphatype Corp.
- 220 Campus Dr., Suite 103
- Arlington Heights, IL 60004
- (708) 259-6800
-
- Altsys Corporation, : FONTastic Fonts,
- 269 West Renner Road, : Fontographer Fonts (Mac)
- Richardson,
- Texas 75080.
- (214) 680-2060.
-
- Artworx Software Co. (Mac)
- 1844 Penfield Rd. Hebrew Typefaces
- Penfield, NY 14526
- (716) 385-6120
- (800) 828-6573
-
- Architext, Inc. (HP/IBM)
- 121 Interpark Blvd. Suite 1101
- San Antonio, TX 78216
- (512) 490-2240
-
- Asiagraphics Technology Ltd. (Mac)
- 9A GreatMany Centre Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai
- 109 Queen's Road East
- Wanchai, Hong Kong
- (5) 8655-225
- Fax: (5) 8655-250
- Modem: (5) 865-4816
-
- Autologic, Inc. (Mac)
- 1050 Rancho Conejo Blvd.
- Newbury Park, CA 91320
- (805) 498-9611
-
- Azalea Software, Inc.
- PO Box 16745
- Seattle WA 98116-0745 USA
- 800 48-ASOFT 206 932.4030 206 937.5919 FAX
- azalea@igc.org
-
- Bear Rock Technologies,
- 4140 Mother Lode,
- Shingle Springs,
- California 95682-8038.
- (916) 672-0244
-
- Berthold of North America
- 7711 N. Merrimac Avenue
- Niles, IL 60648
- (708) 965-8800
-
- Bitstream, Inc.
- Athenaeum House
- 215 First St.
- Cambridge, MA 02142
- (617) 497-6222
- (800) 237-3335
-
- A representative of Bitstream sent the following correction to me.
-
- Bitstream offers:
-
- **1100 PostScript Type 1 fonts for the Mac & PC. (These can
- be ordered direct from Bitstream or thru several resellers.)
- ** Bitstream Type Treasury - the Bitstream Type Library for
- the Mac (Type 1 format) on CD ROM.
-
- ** Bitstream Type Essentials-a series of 4 Typeface Packages
- for PC & Mac that were selected to work well for different
- jobs (Letters, Memos & Faxes; Newsletters, Brochures &
- Announcements; Spreadsheets, Graphs & Presentations;
- Headlines).
-
- **Bitstream Typeface Packages for the PC - 52 packages (most
- with 4 faces each) that include a total of over 200 faces,
- with mutiple font formats in each package (Bitstream Speedo,
- Type 1, Bitstream Fontware)
-
- ** Bitstream TrueType Font Packs 1 & 2 for Microsoft Windows
- ** Bitstream PostScript Font Packs 1 & 2 for the PC **
- Bitstream FaceLift for Windows ** Bitstream FaceLift for
- WordPerfect - both are font scaling/font management
- utilities.
-
- ** Bitstream MakeUp for Windows - a type manipulation/
- special effects program.
-
- ** Bitstream Li'l Bits - a new product line of novelty fonts
- in TrueType format for Windows 3.1. The first release began
- shipping last week and includes The Star Trek Font Pack, The
- Flintstones Font Pack and The Winter Holiday Font Pack.
-
- We offer OEM customers an extensive range of non-latin type
- (as you have noted in the current listing), but these faces
- are not currently available to individual end-users.
-
- We also offer font-scaling and rasterizing technology to OEM
- customers.
-
- Blaha Software/Janus Associates : Big Foot (Mac) (HP/IBM)
- 991 Massachusetts Ave.
- Cambridge, MA 02138
- (617) 354-1999
-
- Blue Sky Research : Type 1 (Mac)
- 534 SW Third Avenue, #816 : Computer Modern in PostScript
- Portland, OR 97204
- (800) 622-8398
-
- Carter & Cone
-
- Casady & Greene, Inc. : Fluent Fonts, Fluent Laser Fonts (Mac)
- 26080 Carmel Rancho Blvd. #202 Russian/Ukranian/Bulgarian/Serbian
- P.O. Box 223779 Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew, Kana, Polish
- Carmel, CA 93922 Glasnost
- (408) 484-9228
- (800) 331-4321 -------------no longer valid
- (800) 851-1986 (California)-no longer valid
-
- Caseys' Page Mill (Mac)
- 6528 S. Oneida Court
- Englewood, CO 80111
- (303) 220-1463
-
- Castle Systems : (Truetype, Type1) (Mac, IBM)
- 1306 Lincoln Avenue : Revivals of art deco faces,
- San Ragael, CA 94901-2165 : calligraphy, variations of
- (415) 459-6495 : existing designs
-
- Century Software (MacTography) font developer for MacTographyc
- 702 Twinbrook Parkway : LaserFonts (Mac)
- Rockville, MD 20851
- (301) 424-1357
-
- Coda Music Software
- 1401 E. 79th St.
- Mineapolis, MN 55425-1126
- (612) 854-1288
- (800) 843-1337
-
- Compugraphic Corporation (Mac) (HP/IBM)
- Type Division
- 90 Industrial Way
- Wilmington, MA 01887
- (800) 622-8973 (U.S.)
- (800) 533-9795 (Canada)
-
- Computer EdiType Systems (HP/IBM)
- 509 Cathedral Parkway, Ste. 10A
- New York, NY 10025
- (212) 222-8148
-
- Computer Peripherals, Inc. : JetWare (HP/IBM)
- 2635 Lavery Ct. #5
- Newbury Park, CA 91320
- (805) 499-5751
-
- Computer Prod. Unlimited (Mac)
- 78 Bridge St.
- Newburgh, NY 12550
- (914) 565-6262
-
- Conographic Corp. (Mac) (HP/IBM)
- 17841 Fitch
- Irvine, CA 92714
- (714) 474-1188
-
- Corel Systems Corp. (HP/IBM)
- 1600 Carling Ave.
- Ottawa, Ontario, CANADA KIZ 7M4
- (613) 728-8200
-
- Data Transforms (HP/IBM)
- 616 Washington St.
- Denver, CO 80203
- (303) 832-1501
-
- Devonian International software Co. (Mac)
- P.O. Box 2351 Cyrillic
- Montclair, CA 91763
- (714) 621-0973
-
- Digi-Fonts (HP/IBM)
- 528 Commons Drive Greek, Cyrillic
- Golden, Colorado 80401
- (303) 526-9435
- Fax: (303) 526-9501
-
- Digital Type Systems (DTS) (HP/IBM)
- 38 Profile Circle
- Nashua, NH 03063
- (603) 880-7541
-
- Dubl-Click Software, Inc. : World Class Fonts (Mac)
- 9316 Deering Ave.
- Chatsworth, CA 91311
- (818) 700-9525
-
- Ecological Linguistics (Mac)
- P.O. Box 15156 Cyrillic, Greek
- Washington, DC 20003
- (202) 546-5862
-
- The Electric Typographer : Type 1 and TrueType (Mac & PC)
- 2216 Cliff Dr. : Original designs
- Santa Barbara, CA 93109
- (805) 966-7563
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994
-
- EmDash : EmDash Fonts (Mac)
- P.O. Box 8256
- Northfield, IL 60093
- (312) 441-6699
-
- The Font Company
- 12629 N. Tatum Boulevard
- Suite 210
- Phoenix, AZ 85032
- (602) 996-6606
-
- The Font Factory (HP/IBM)
- 2400 Central Parkway
- Ste. J-2
- Houston, TX 77092
-
- FontCenter (HP/IBM)
- 509 Marin St., #121
- Thousand Oaks, CA 91360
- (805) 373-1919
-
- Font FunHouse CD-ROM (PC/Mac)
- Wayzata
- PO Box 807
- Grand Rapids, Minnesota 55744
- (800) 735-7321
-
- FontHaus Inc (United States)
- 15 Perry Avenue, A7
- Norwalk CT 06850
- 203 846 3087
- 203 849 8527 Fax
-
- FontHaus is a manufacturer of typefaces and a licensed reseller for
- Adobe, Monotype, Bitstream, Elsner+Flake, Giampa Textware,
- Treacyfaces, Panache Graphics, and others around the world.
-
- FontHaus discounts most Adobe fonts up to 40% off list price, and
- have CD-ROM discs available so you can buy individual fonts instead
- of entire families. All their fonts are available in Macintosh Type
- 1; most are also available in PC format; and a growing number are in
- TrueType format. In addition, some type manufacturers support other
- platforms through thier CD-ROM font libraries (i.e. Monotype for Mac,
- PC, or NeXT). Contact them regarding availability for the fonts and
- formats you want.
-
- FontHaus ships internationally and also has several agents overseas,
- although these agents may not have everything available as the main
- office here in the US.
-
- Rhyscon Systems (Canada)
- PO Box 245 Clarkson PO
- Mississauga Ontario L51 3Y1
- 416 278 2600
- 416 278 3298 Fax
-
- TypoGabor (France)
- 5, rue de 8 Mai 1945
- 92586 Clichy (Paris)
- 33 1 4739 6600
- 33 1 4739 0638 Fax
-
- Elsner+Flake Fontinform GmbH (German)
- Billstrasse 103
- 2000 Hamburg 26
- 40 789 2608
- 40 789 1217 Fax
-
- Signus Limited (Britain)
- South Bank TechnoPark
- 90 London Road
- London SE1 6LN
- 71 922 8805
- 71 261 0411 Fax
-
- Font Bolajet (Sweden, Finland, Norway)
- Kungstengaten 18
- 113 57 Stockholm
- 46.8.16.81.00
-
- Font World (Mac)
- 2021 Scottsville Rd. Cyrillic, Hebrew
- Rochester, NY 14623-2021
- (716) 235-6861
-
- Genny Software R&D (Mac)
- P.O. Box 5909
- Beaumont, TX 77706
- (409) 860-5817
-
- Gradco Systems Inc.
- 7 Morgan
- Irvine, CA 92718
- (714) 770-1223
-
- Handcraftedfonts Co.
- Box 14013
- Philadelphia, PA 19122-0013
- Tel/Fax: 215-634-0634
-
- Our fonts are licensed to Monotype Typography, ITC DesignPalette,
- International TypeFounders, Precision Type and Phil's Fonts.
-
- Hewlett-Packard (HP/IBM)
- P.O. Box 15
- Boise, ID 83707
- (208) 323-6000
-
- ICOM Simulations, Inc.
- 648 S. Wheeling Rd.
- Wheeling, IL 60090
- (312) 520-4440
- (880) 877-4266
-
- Image Club Graphics, Inc. : (Mac & PC)
- 729-24th Ave. SE
- Calgary, AB
- T2G 5K8
- Canada
- (800) 661-9410
- (403) 262-8008 (Canada)
-
- Image Processing Systems :Turbofonts (HP/IBM)
- 6409 Appalachian Way, Box 5016
- Madison, WI 53705
- (608) 233-5033
-
- Invincible Software (Mac)
- 9534 Burwick
- San Antonio, TX 78230
- (512) 344-4228
-
- Kabbalah Software
- 8 Price Drive
- Edison, NJ 08817
- (908) 572-0891
- (908) 572-0869 Fax
-
- Hebrew fonts for PC and Mac. While I am part owner, so I am biased,
- we have been reviewed in the October 27 1992 issue of PC Mag as
- having high-quality fonts.
-
- Keller Software (HP/IBM)
- 1825 Westcliff Dr.
- Newport Beach, CA 92600
- (714) 854-8211
-
- Kensington Microware Ltd. (Mac)
- 251 Park Ave. S
- New York, NY 10010
- (212) 475-5200
-
- Kingsley/ATF Type Corp. (Mac)
- 200 Elmora Ave.
- Elizabeth, NJ 07202
- (201) 353-1000
- (800) 289-TYPE
-
- Laser Technologies International : Lenord Storch Soft Fonts
- 15403 East Alondra Blvd. (HP/IBM)
- La Mirada, CA 90638
- (714) 739-2478
-
- LaserMaster Corp. : LM Fonts (HP/IBM)
- 7156 Shady Oak Rd.
- Eden Prairie, MN 55344
- (612) 944-9330
- (800) LMC-PLOT
- Fax: (612) 944-0522
-
- LeBaugh Software Corp : LeFont (HP/IBM)
- 2720 Greene Ave.
- Onaha, NE 68147
- (800) 532-2844
-
- Letraset USA : LetraFont (Mac)
- 40 Eissenhower Dr.
- Paramus, NJ 07653
- (201) 845-6100
- (800) 634-3463
-
- Linguists' Software, Inc. (Bitmap, Type 1, Truetype) (Mac, IBM)
- P.O.Box 580 Fonts for numerous alphabets. Not all
- Edmonds, WA 98020-0580 fonts available in all languages.
- (206) 775-1130 They support ~50 languages.
- Fax: (206) 771-5911
- Verified: 16 Feb 1994
-
- Linotype Company (Mac)
- 425 Oser Ave.
- Hauppauge, NY 11788
- (800) 842-9721 (US)
- (516) 434-2706 (FAX)
-
- MacTography
- 326-D North Stonestreet Ave.
- Rockville, MD 20850
- (301) 424-3942
-
- Megatherium Enterprises : Mac The Linguist 2 (Mac)
- P.O. Box 7000-417
- Redondo Beach, CA 90277
- (310) 545-5913
-
- Metro Software, Inc. (HP/IBM)
- 2509 N. Cambell Ave., Ste. 214
- Tucson, AZ 85719
- (602) 299-7313
-
- Microcosm
- 819 Devon Court
- San Diego, CA 92109
- 619-488-4462
- 619-488-3087 fax
- email: Tom Wright <wright@siggraph.org>
-
- Provides fonts for resale to (mostly Unix & MS-DOS) software companies
- & hardware comapnies in its own portable file format together with
- portable C font rendering code. Pricing plans include royalty-free
- option & end-user site licenses. Standard Type-1 & TrueType formats
- also supplied. Font files from your artwork available too.
-
- Modern Graphics :Organic Fonts (Mac)
- P.O. Box 21366
- Indianapolis, IL 46221
- (317) 253-4316
-
- Monotype Typography Inc.
- Suite 504-53 West Jackson Blvd.
- Chicago, IL 60604
- (312) 855-1444
- (800) MONOTYPE
-
- Network Technology Corp. : LaserTEX Font Library (HP/IBM)
- 6825 Lamp Post Lane
- Alexandria, VA 22306
- (703) 765-4506
-
- Nippon Information Science Ltd. (NIS) (Mac)
- Sumire Bldg. 4F
- 5-4-4 Koishikawa
- Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 112
- Japan
- (03) 945-5955
-
- Olduvai Corporation : Art Fonts (Mac)
- 7520 Red Road, Suite A
- South Miami, FL 33143
- (305) 665-4665
- (800) 822-0772 (FL)
-
- Page Studio Graphics : PIXymbols (Mac)
- 3175 N. Price Rd. #1050
- Chandler, AZ 85224
- (602) 839-2763
-
- Paperback Software : KeyCap Fonts
- 2830 9th St.
- Berkeley, CA 94710
- (415) 644-2116
-
- PenUltimate Fonts : Vernacular type for Mac and PC
- 14101 Walters Rd. #805 : Custom font design
- Houston, TX 77014
- Houston, TX 77014
- E-Mail: PenUltimte@aol.com Send $2 for catalog
-
- Prosoft (HP/IBM)
- 7248 Bellair Ave., P.O. Box 560
- North Hollywood, CA 91605
- (818) 764 3131
-
- Qume Corp. (HP/IBM)
- 2350 Qume Dr.
- San Jose, CA 95131
- (800) 223-2479
-
- R.M.C. : PrintR fonts (HP/IBM)
- 12046 Willowood Dr.
- Woodbridge, VA 22192
- (703) 494-2633
-
- Richard Beatty Designs : Type 1 and TrueType (PC, Mac)
- 2312 Laurel Park Highway : 45 fonts decorative elements
- Hendersonville, NC 28739 : 270 alphabets, 50 original
- (704) 696-8316 : rest translated from lead and
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994 : phototype. Goudy a specialty
-
- S. Anthony Studios : Fonts Vol. 1
- 889 DeHaro Street
- San Francisco, CA 94107
-
- Scholar's Press : (Mac)
- P.O. Box 15399 : 2 Greek fonts
- Atlanta, GA 30333-0399
- (404) 727-2320
- FAX: (404) 727-2348
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994
-
- SoftCraft, Inc.
- 16 North Carrol St., Suite 220
- Madison, WI 53703
- (608) 257-3300
- FAX: (608) 257-6733
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994
-
- Software Complement : (TrueType, Type 1) (Mac, IBM, Next)
- 8 Penn Ave. : Designer of fonts for Cassidy & Greene
- Metamoras, PA 18336 : Custom logos and signatures.
- (717) 491-2492
- FAX: (717) 491-2443
- Applelink: SOFTCOMP
- CompuServe: 70244,3214
- Verified: 16 Feb 1994
-
- Straightforward : ZFont (HP/IBM)
- 15000 Halldale Ave.
- Gardena, CA 90249
- (310) 324-8827
-
- SWFTE International (HP/IBM)
- Box 5773
- Wilmington, DE 19808
- (800) 237-9383
-
- SystemSoft America, Inc. : Kanji
- P.O. Box 4260
- Vero Beach, FL 32964
-
- Trilithon Software, : (Type 1) NeXT
- Two Ohlone, : Resells Adobe fonts in NeXT
- Portola Valley, CA 94028
- (415) 325 0767.
- info@trilithon.com
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994
-
- Typographics Ltd. : Typo
- 46, Hehalutz St.
- Jerusalem 96222
- Israel
-
- U-Design, Inc. : TrueType, Type1 (Mac & PC)
- 270 Farmington Avenue : Originals, licensed designs clones
- Hartford, CT 06105
- (203) 278-3648
- BBS: (203) 525-5117
- FAX: (203) 278-3003
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994
-
- The Underground Phont Archive (TrueType,Shareware)
- 395 Kaymar Dr.
- Amherst, NY 14228
- USA.
-
- Varityper, Inc. : (Mac)
- 11 Mt. Pleasant Ave.
- East Hanover, NJ 07936
- (800) 631-8134 (US except NJ)
- (201) 887-8000 ext. 999 (NJ)
-
- VS Software : HP Bitmaps (PC)
- P.O. Box 6158 : CG, ITC and original fonts
- Little Rock, AR 72216
- (501) 376-2083
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994
-
- Weaver Graphics : HP Bitmaps (PC only),
- 5165 S. Hwy A1A : Adobe Type 1, Truetype (PC and Mac)
- Melbourne Beach, FL 32951 : Mostly clone fonts, some originals
- (407) 728-4000
- Fax: (407) 728-5978
- Verified: 9 Feb 1994
-
- Wu Corp. : FeiMa (Mac) Chinese wordprocessor
- 46 West Avon Rd.
- Avon, CT 06001
- (203) 673-4796
-
- Y&Y, Inc. : Type 1 format, Mac, PC, Unix
- 45 Walden Street : Computer Modern, Lucida Bright
- Concord, MA 01742 : AMS, LaTeX/SliTeX, MathTime
- (800) 742-4059 : Lucida Sans Typewriter etc
- (508) 371-3286
- Fax: (508) 371-2004
- 71172.524@compuserve.com
-
- ZSoft Corp. : Soft Type
- 450 Franklin Rd. Suite 100
- Marietta, GA 30067
- (404) 428-0008
- Fax: (404) 427-1150
-
- Clip Art Vendors
- ================
-
- This section was submitted by Dmitry S. Simanenkov in Aug, 1993.
-
- Although not directly related to type, a list of clip art vendors seems
- to compliment the list of type/font vendors.
-
- 3G Graphics, Inc. eps borders, simbols for MAC
- 114 Second Ave.South, Suite 104
- Edmonds, WA 98020
- (206) 774-3518
- (206) 771-8975
-
- ArtBytes Hi-Fi Borders for security
- Ozerkova 51-2-13 paper, stock, certificate etc.
- Peterburg bitmap & eps, CorelDraw
- 198903 IBM & MAC
- Russia
- simon@dc1.phys.samson.spb.su
-
- ArtBeats
- 20083
- San Bernardino, CA, 92406
- (800) 444-9392
- (714) 881-1200
-
- Best Impression
- 3844 W. Channel Islands Blvd.
- Suite. 234
- Oxnard, CA 93035
- (805) 984-9748
-
- Dynamic Graphics, Inc.
- Designers Club, Creative Art
- 6000 N. Forest Park Dr.
- Peoria, IL 61656-1901
- (800) 255-8800
- (309) 688-8800
- (309) 688-5873
-
- FM Waves
- 70 Derby Alley
- San Francisco, CA 94102
- (800) 487-1234
- (415) 474-7464
-
- Grafx Associates Borders
- 12811
- Tucson, AZ 85732-2811
- (800) 628-2149
-
- Kinetic Presentation, Inc.
- 250 Distillery Commons
- Louisville, KY 40206
- (502) 583-1679
-
- Metro Image Base, Inc.
- 18623 Ventura Blvd
- Suite 210
- Tarzana, CA 91356
- (800) 525-1552
- (818) 881-1997
-
- Micrografx, Inc.
- 1303 Arapaho Rd.
- Richardson, TX 75081
- (800) 733-3729
- (214) 234-1769
-
- Migraph, Inc.
- 200 S.333 Rd. Suite 220
- Federal Way, WA 98003
- (800) 223-3729
- (206) 838-4677
-
- Multi-Ad Service, Inc.
- 1720 W. Detweiller Dr.
- Peoria, IL 61615
- (800) 447-1950
- (309) 692-1530
-
- Qualitas Trading Co.
- 6907 Norfolk Rd.
- Berkley, CA 94705
- (510) 848-8080
-
- RT Computer Graphics
- 2257 Calle Cacique
- Santa Fe, NM 87505
-
- Stephen & Associates
- 8681 N. Magnolia Ave Suite E
- Santee, CA 92071-4456
- (619) 562-5803
-
- Studio Advertising Art
- 43912
- Las Vegas, NV 89116
- (800) 453-1860
- (702) 641-7041
-
- Sun Shine CD-ROM, Visual Delights
- 4351
- Austin, TX 78765
- (512) 453-2334
-
-