Recently I had a chance to redesign a magazine and chose Kepler as the main text and display font. Since Leopard now supports MM fonts, I installed it and used it successfully for the first issue.
For various reasons, now I would like to convert the MM fonts to the OpenType version of Kepler.
But Kepler Std is a MUCH different typface than Kepler MM. Gone are the old serifs, replaced with more traditional modern ball-shaped serifs on the "r" and "a." The lowercase "a" now even sports a full tail, instead of the truncated one found on Kepler MM.
I'm sure I'll continue with the conversion, and will grow to appreciate the new character forms. But I will miss the old Kepler. It was a unique and beautiful typeface.
What happened? Can anyone explain why these two versions of the font would be so different?
-- SB
At the time, I thought it would be useful to write this stuff up. See <http://www.adobe.com/type/opentype/T1_to_OTF_FAQ.htm> for details on compatibility.
Cheers,
T
Thank you for your comments and for the link. I might suggest editing that page to specifically mention the changes to Kepler -- as far as I can tell from the sample sheets, they are significant. At large sizes they may change the entire look and feel of the typeface -- to the extant that, had I been aware of them, I may not have chosen Kepler for this particular project.
Live and learn. Using Multiple Master fonts is not a good practice these days; there are many good reasons to convert to OpenType. I'm sure the revised typeface will work just as well (if not better) once I get used to working with it.
- SB
Also, I'm not at Adobe any longer, so I can't make any changes to that documentation.
Cheers,
T