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1995-07-06
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This is a very fanciful, uppercase only font for your laser printer. The
accompanying screen font file contains 24, 36, and 48 point sizes. This
PostScript Font package is released to the public domain.
Copyright © 1988, Dennis M. Walsak
All Rights Reserved
A products catalog is available by writing to:
Modular Graphics
611 South Front Street
Wilmington, N.C. 28401
(919)763-2012
FONT INSTALLATION CHECKLIST
This checklist summarizes how to set up and use this typeface package. Before
you can use PostScript fonts you must first install them in your System using
the Font/DA Mover and make the Printer Font files available for Automatic
Downloading by putting them in the System Folder.
SET-UP: Installing the fonts - follow these simple steps.
1. Start up your Macintosh and open the Screen Fonts file (the Font/DA Mover
must be available to do this).
2. Click on the Open button of the Font/DA mover's window with no files open
(and on the Drive button if necessary) to get to the System folder. Open the
System folder and then Open the System file in the System Folder.
Provided you opened directly from the Screen Fonts file as described in step 1
there will be the new fonts from the Screen Fonts file on one side of the
Font/DA mover's window and the existing System fonts (already in the current
system) on the other.
3. Select the point sizes you want to install from the Screen Fonts file, and
click on the <<Copy>> button to install them into the System.
To continue installing other typefaces click on the Open button on the Screen
Fonts side of the Font/DA's window. Locate the other screen font file you wish
to install from. Select the typefaces and point sizes you want to install, and
click on the <<Copy>> button.
4. Quit from the Font/DA Mover.
5. INSTALL THE PRINTER FONTS by copying the Printer Font files to your System
Folder. Leave the files loose in your System Folder. DO NOT PUT THEM IN A
FOLDER WITHIN THE SYSTEM FOLDER.
DOWNLOADING THE FONTS
Now you are ready to use your new typeface. Select your printer using Chooser
from the Apple menu, check that your Printer Font files are in the System
Folder, then download your fonts using one of the following methods:
Automatic Downloading
1. Make sure the fields containing the Printer Fonts are stored loose (not in
folders) in your System Folder.
2. Prepare your document, selecting fonts from your application's pull-down
menus (Type Specs).
3. Print your document.
Your fonts are automatically downloaded as needed and then deleted from the
printer at the end of the document or, for some applications, at the end of
the textblock.
Manual Downloading (typical method)
1. Using Adobe's Font Downloader - Open from the File Menu.
2. Select Download Font from the File menu. Select a font from the scroll box,
and click on the Download button, then on the OK button. This font will remain
in the printer until the printer is turned off.
3. Repeat step 2 for each printer font you want to download. Choose Quit form
the File menu when you have finished.
REFERENCE
¥ You do not need to install all the point sizes of the Screen Fonts supplied
with this font package in order to access the Printer Font. One is all it
takes. In general, the more point sizes of each screen font you install, the
greater the clarity and accuracy of the screen display. However, for space
considerations, especially on a two-disk system, you may want to install only
some Screen Fonts. Keep in mind that each point size of a Screen Font occupies
from 3K to 12K on your System Disk - the Font D/A M over tells you the exact
number of bytes. If you are installing to a hard disk this should not present
a problem.
You may not be able to install all your Screen Fonts on the System Disk. If
your disk is becoming full, install only one or two point sizes of each Screen
Font. Your Macintosh can compute any other size it needs from whatever you have
installed, but computed fonts may not be as clear on the screen and may change
the width of text lines. The more point sizes you install, the more accurate
the relationship between the screen and the printed document.
¥ DOWNLOADING - the differences between manual downloading and automatic
downloading of printer fonts:
Downloading a printer font means copying the font from your Macintosh to a
POSTSCRIPT printer so that the printer has the information needed to draw the
characters. MANUAL download refers to using a Font Downloader application to
copy the printer font files to your printer. AUTOMATIC downloading takes place
when you choose Print from the File menu in a Macintosh application.
Most Macintosh applications automatically download fonts to the printer's
memory as they are needed. Whenever such a program needs a font that is not
already in the printer, it searches for a file containing that font and
downloads it. When automatically downloaded, a font is deleted from the
printer's memory at the end of the document. For some applications, the
deletion occurs at the end of a text block.
Even if your application supports automatic downloading, you may be able to
reduce printing time by manually downloading printer fonts-all the documents
that use these fonts can then be printed without downloading them. Fonts
manually downloaded to memory remain in the printer until it is turned off or
restarted.
¥ Put fonts where the System can find them.
Your application looks to find the Printer Font files in the System Folder on
your disk. Make sure to leave the Printer Font files "loose" in the System
Folder - don't put them in a Folder within the System Folder.
_____________________________________
PostScript and Font Downloader are
trademarks of Adobe Systems, Inc.
HyperCard, Macintosh and Stackware are
trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.