Choose File > New Smart Collection to open the Smart Collection dialog.Launch Font Book from your Applications folder. You can do this easily in Font Book by creating a smart collection that selects fonts by kind: However, Mac users whose careers stretch back to the 1990s and earlier likely still have Type 1 fonts kicking around-who would toss a Type 1 font that worked perfectly well? Now’s the time to think about dealing with those ancient fonts.įirst, however, it’s worth a quick trip to Font Book (or whatever font utility you use) to determine which of your fonts are Type 1 fonts. Worse, Type 1 fonts don’t support Unicode, limiting their ability to support extended language character sets. Although some operating systems still support Type 1 fonts, Web browsers and mobile operating systems don’t. Adobe introduced Type 1 fonts at the dawn of the Macintosh age back in 1984, started collaborating with Microsoft on the more versatile OpenType fonts in 1996, and stopped developing Type 1 fonts in 1999. This announcement shouldn’t come as a surprise. All Adobe apps will stop allowing users to author content using Type 1 fonts beginning January 2023. PostScript Type 1 Fonts Are Dead-Here’s What to Doįor you graphic designers out there, Adobe has announced that it will be ending support for PostScript Type 1 fonts starting with Photoshop in 2021.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |