For those who may have use for such things, there is a $1 sale on a bunch of monoline fonts ending today:
I am not familiar with the vendor.
For those who may have use for such things, there is a $1 sale on a bunch of monoline fonts ending today:
I am not familiar with the vendor.
Huh, interesting. Not clear if they are single stroke open paths though. I guess I could spend a buck and find out for us.
Letâs see, which one looks good⌠Rogue one isnât bad.
Unfortunately, on typing, itâs not a single stroke font, itâs a typical outline font, at least in TTF.
First thing: the legs on the yâs are truncated. Strange, I tried resizing the bounding box, no luck.
Even breaking the line didnât help that. I wonder if it would print incorrectly?
Anyway, I forge ahead. I converted it to a path, then set a very thin stroke and removed the fill. This revealed a few artifacts, typical font conversion warnings. Problem areas circled in red.
Overall not bad. Youâd need to merge the shapes to get a single object, of course, but not bad.
Donât love this comma, though itâs âcorrectâ.
Slight mismatch on the overlap here.
Leg on the Y is fine. Must be some sort of weird inkscape clipping thing, probably a way to fix it in some deep setting.
Another mismatch, and a total trainwreck on the swash of the K. That path would need to be repaired.
So, yeah there you go.
Oh dangit! I am. I do not need more fonts.
(She said as she opened her wallet with a sigh.)
Ah! Thank you. I probably should have bought and looked at one before posting instead of assuming the person who shared it knew what they were talking about.
P.S. â Good choice of pangrams for testing!
Wiki has a few good ones.
As far as I can tellâand please someone correct me if I am wrongâTTF/OTF fonts cannot be true single lines, i.e. open paths.
Iâve downloaded a couple of free font editors and tried to make a single-line font test⌠like, just a 2-node line, as a test glyph. The path is always closed automatically. And I didnât like that answer so I googled all over and didnât find any better news.
I feel like I have downloaded every âsingle lineâ font out there and when you do âconvert to outlinesâ or equivalent in your editor, they all misbehave.
The only way I have found to make true single line text that behaves in normal vector editing software is that Inkscape plugin.
Previously:
Yeah I remembered that thread at the time and chose it because you reminded me.
That is my understanding, too and, I have tried with professional font-making software, though not recently.
Hmmmm. Thanks for the heads up @evermorian and for the testing @evansd2, but since they are not true single line fonts I think Iâll take a pass. I have too darn many fonts as it is.
But if you ever do run across a single line font that behaves properly in Illustrator Iâd love to know about it.
What about WOFF?
I never used one before, and itâs one of the options. TBH I didnât even google that type of font yet to even have a slight clue.
OK, googled.
https://creativemarket.com/blog/the-missing-guide-to-font-formats
Doesnât sound promising:
WOFF is basically OTF or TTF with metadata and compression supported by all major browsers. It was created to live on the web. It is the result of collaboration by the Mozilla Foundation, Microsoft, and Opera Software. Because fonts are compressed, they load faster. Metadata allows for the inclusion of license data within the font file to address copyright issues. It is a World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation and is clearly the future of font formats.
WOFF2 is the next generation of WOFF. The WOFF2 format offers a 30% average compression gain over the original WOFF. Because it still just a recommended upgrade, it does not have the wide support of WOFF.
Listen, yâall be careful grabbing fonts from Design Bundle and Font Bundle. Very easy to grab fonts you already have again. (They donât limit the fonts shown to the ones that you donât already have.)
I did a little casual research out of curiosity. In case it is useful to anyone else:
it seems like one of the ways this can be handled is to make a single-line font in an outline font format like TTF. It renders strangely and, sometimes has extra lines added to close a shape. There are tools to fix those (like Inkscape extensions). I played with this a little in TypeTool.
For outline fonts that are of constant width, there are also tools to render the text into single-line vectors.
This person did some useful work on this in 2013:
Lindsay Robert Wilson has this summary of available single-line fonts from a few years ago:
http://imajeenyus.com/computer/20150110_single_line_fonts/index.shtml
Of course, most people at all interested in this are familiar with the Hershey Text Inkscape extension:
https://www.evilmadscientist.com/2011/hershey-text-an-inkscape-extension-for-engraving-fonts/
These people make some commercial single-line fonts that work in a list of applications at the bottom of the main page:
I did a little research on single line fonts a couple years ago.
Ahem. yep
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