Image Generator is a service that allows you to fully customize your texts andvisualize them in various formats. This user-friendly tool enables you to adjustfont style, font size, background color, font color, and your text content.
Image Generator enables you to customize the background and font colors to makeyourtexts visually appealing. You can choose your preferred colors or utilize colorpalettes to achieve specific color harmonies. This allows you to adjust yourtextsto reflect the identity of your projects or brand.
Now I would like to set Frutiger as the font for headings (sections and subsections, maybe subsubsections too) and Computer Modern as the font for anything else (text, captions, table of contents, etc.)
Frutiger is a sans-serif typeface by the Swiss type designer Adrian Frutiger. It is the text version of Frutiger's earlier typeface Roissy, commissioned in 1970/71[6] by the newly built Charles de Gaulle Airport at Roissy, France, which needed a new directional sign system, which itself was based on Concorde, a font Frutiger had created in the early 1960s.
The beginning of Frutiger starts from Concorde, a sans-serif font Frutiger was commissioned to design in 1961-4 by the minor metal type company Sofratype. Frutiger was asked to create a design that would not be too similar to his previous Univers, a reinvention of classic 19th-century typefaces. In practice the design was drawn by his colleague (and fellow Swiss in Paris) André Gürtler as Frutiger was busy. Frutiger wrote of it: "I felt I was on the right track with this grotesque; it was a truly novel typeface." Gürtler too wrote of feeling that the design was innovative: "this style didn't exist in grotesques at the time, except for Gill Sans." Despite Frutiger and Gürtler's enthusiasm, the design failed to sell well and was discontinued with the end of the metal type period: Frutiger wrote that Linotype, who bought Sofratype, "weren't aware of the fact that with Concorde they had a totally up-to-date typeface."
This is a version of the original Frutiger font family licensed to Microsoft. This family consists of Frutiger 55, 56, 65, and 66. It does not include OpenType features or kerning, but it adds support to Latin Extended-B and Greek characters, with Frutiger 55 supporting extra IPA characters and spacing modifier letters. Unlike most Frutiger variants, Frutiger Linotype features old-style figures as the default numeral style.
This is a variant of Frutiger used by ASTRA (acronym of the Amt für Strassen, the Swiss Federal Road Office) as the new font for traffic signs, replacing VSS in 2003.[12] It is based on Frutiger 57 Condensed, but with widening ascenders and descenders, which are intended to give the eye a better hold than the earlier version did.
This is a font family designed by Lebanese designer Nadine Chahine as a companion to Frutiger in consultation with Adrian Frutiger. It is based on the Kufic style, but incorporates aspects of Ruqʿah script and Naskh in the letter form designs, resulting in what Linotype called "humanist Kufi". The fonts consist of Basic Latin and ISO-Latin characters derived from the original Frutiger family, with Arabic characters supporting presentation forms A and B. Four font weights were produced.
This is a serif font family designed by Adrian Frutiger and Akira Kobayashi. It is a re-envisioning of the metal type version of Meridien, a typeface first released by Deberny & Peignot during the 1950s.
Initial release of the family has twenty fonts in ten weights and one width, returning to complementary obliques. It supports ISO Adobe, Adobe CE, and Latin Extended characters. OpenType features include subscript and superscript.
On April 7, 2010, Monotype Imaging Holdings announced condensed versions of the Neue Frutiger fonts. Designed by Akira Kobayashi, the expansion of the family includes twenty fonts in the same weight and style combination as the original release, in OpenType Pro font format.[14][15]
This is a family of casual fonts inspired by natural elements. Using polished pebbles as the boundary, the family consists of regular, positive, and negative fonts. Frutiger Stones Positive is Regular without the stone outline, while Negative is a reverse fill of the Regular.
This is a family of casual fonts that consists of regular, outline, and signs fonts. Frutiger Capitalis Outline is the outline version of Frutiger Capitalis Regular. Frutiger Capitalis contains ornamental glyphs of religions, hand signs, and astrological signs.
If you can get your hands on a copy of the font, installing it is really easy. If only you want to use it, just copy the files (they'll usually be .ttf or .otf files) into the .fonts folder in your home directory. If the folder doesn't exist yet, just go ahead and create it. Or just follow these directions:
If you have multiple accounts on your computer and want everybody to be able to use the font, you'll need to copy the files to /usr/share/fonts/truetype/. You'll probably need root privileges to do this (try running sudo nautilus).
Adobe no longer licenses the Type 1 version of Frutiger that you licensed over 30 years ago and in fact doesn't license any Type 1 fonts anymore. An OpenType CFF version of the Frutiger family is available on the Adobe FontFolio 11.1 DVD, but Adobe hasn't licensed that font individually for a number of years now. Note that since Adobe licensed Frutiger from Linotype, Adobe isn't free to give away such fonts gratis.
I'm trying to edit a PDF document in Acrobat XI Pro and the font of the next is frutiger. However, I don't have frutiger in my selections of fonts. So my problem is that I can't add or edit text in the same font as the original text, and it ends up looking bad. Obviously, it knows what frutiger text is since it is able to display it, but I'm not sure where it's getting it from. It could be some folder on my harddrive other than the default font folder (C:\Windows\Fonts) or it could be imbedded in the file itself. I'm not sure.
In any case, I need the same frutiger font to be available to me in the font drop down menu. How can I get this font? Can I download it? Is there some folder it is likely to be in? Is there a way to extract it from the file itself?
Webfonts can be used on a single domain. Agencies responsible for multiple websites, for example web design agencies or hosting providers, may not share a single webfont license across multiple websites.
Every time the webpage using the webfont kit is loaded (i.e, the webfont kit CSS which holds the @font-face rule is called) the counting system counts a single pageview for each webfont within the webfont kit.
An Electronic Doc license is based on the number of publications in which the font is used. Each issue counts as a separate publication. Regional or format variations don't count as separate publications.
We'll supply a kit containing webfonts that can be used within digital ads, such as banner ads. This kit may be shared with third parties who are working on your behalf to produce the ad creatives, however you are wholly responsible for it.
As for the law...it's...vague and messy, at best. And highly dependent on your region. Wikipedia has a decent high level overview of the topic. In the US, the general rule is that the actual letter forms' shape is not copyrightable design. However, the code (ie, the font itself) can be copyrighted as software code. In addition, the name of the typeface can be copyrighted as well.
Like DA01 said, in the US the design of a font cannot be copyrighted, but the font software (ie, the particular curves and lines in digitally packaged format) are. So assuming the original Frutiger design is in the public domain, if you want to use it in your computer, you'd have to digitalize it and build the font yourself. You cannot claim that Adobe's or Linotype's version of Frutiger is in the public domain.
This is impacting client files and while I have a workaround, I am concerned the problem will occur with other fonts where I don't have a viable solution. (I have another foundry version of that particular font.)
Did any of you guys find a solution to this? I am experiencing the same after I updated InDesign and deleted cash. 2 of my fonts disappeared from Indesign, though they show up in Illustrator.
The support doesn't seem to be able to help, I've been redirected from one agent to the other (7 people), and waiting for a call back for more than an hour.
I think it will be easier to find a solution from the community.
Thanks.
I purchased a font and installed it using FontBook. It displays and loads properly in Illustrator, but InDesign is being a problem. First, the font family name appears twice, and there are no options shown in the drop down menu for a typeface with a lot of variants. InDesign highlights the words set in this in pink and says it's missing.
I open a file and find not even Arial is listed as an installed font - this is ridiculous - clearly Adobe InDesign CC team have not sorted this issue... this is supposed to be a flagship programme! Workarounds, and retrograde versions - while those spending a lot on the software are suffering!!! I'm Windows 10 and latest CC InDesign. Come on get it sorted please.
I have the same issue, with "Miller Text Roman" and "Minion Pro Regular". After a while, Indesign seems to misplace the font and you have to rely on some old cache, which frequently renders the text completely garbled.
The core NHS font is Frutiger and the secondary font is Arial. These fonts should be used for all NHS communications. No other fonts should be used, even if your NHS communications are aimed at a specific target audience (e.g. children). The consistent use of permitted fonts achieves the unified and uniform approach that our patients and public want from the NHS. The only exception is foreign language fonts.
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