Typblography, the Phinney-us Blogg

December 13, 2005

Quality in Typefaces & Fonts

What makes for quality type? What's the difference between typeface quality and font quality? Who makes quality typefaces/fonts? Today's post is partly an education for the beginner, but also a plea to my colleagues at other companies for more testing.

One of the things that attracted me to work in the type group at Adobe, when I was dreaming of such things a decade or more ago, was my belief that Adobe made the best fonts. Now, of course, I didn't know all the world's type foundries then - and with the ever-growing number of font vendors out there, I still don't. However, Adobe certainly makes very good fonts, and my concern with quality has continued to this day....

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11:49 PM | Permalink | Comments [5] | TrackBacks [10]

December 02, 2005

Type 1 to OpenType compatibility

One of the things we had kind of left behind in the migration to OpenType was compatibility. More specifically, we renamed all our fonts so that people could use the OpenType versions alongside the old Type 1 versions. Making them deliberately not compatible then freed us to extend kerning, expand the character set a bit, and make other fixes and changes of varying degrees.

But still, people want to know which OpenType fonts match which Type 1 fonts, and what will happen if they take existing documents and replace the old fonts with the new ones (which of course means changing style definitions or using search and replace). Will they get reflow, and how much? First, we did documents about mapping from Type 1 (including multiple master) fonts to OpenType: a short HTML doc for MM to OpenType, and a huge PDF for regular Type 1 to OpenType.

Then, just a couple of weeks ago I finished a long and complicated migration FAQ on compatibility, reflow, and what exactly we changed. I've been working on this on and off for months, just as a background task, adding more things as I thought of them. It's still not perfect - for example, I left out explanations about pi fonts, or at least linking to the pi font readme, which I should have done.

So, I expect I will continue to evolve the migation/compatibility FAQ for a year or two, and I welcome feedback for future revisions. Feel free to post your comments here.

(BTW, everything is linked from our main OpenType page.)

07:52 PM | Permalink | Comments [1] | TrackBacks [7]