Gonestones Font

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Kerby Kolpack

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Aug 5, 2024, 1:01:21 AM8/5/24
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I have seen multiple ebooks display featured fonts in Kindle without me having to download fonts to the device. Furthermore, I have seen other book formatting agencies use specialty fonts via Kindle. So, I'm wondering if leaving the font obfuscated strips the font on my end but maybe it will show in the published (purchased) version? This would be vital information to my clients, so any advice would help.


My sincere recommendation is that e-books, especially to the very closed and controlled Kindle platform, should not use specified fonts. The readers, again especially Kindle, really want full control of font, size, spacing etc. at the user's direction, and trying to impose a print-like format on this model is difficult, unreliable and contrary to the spirit of the medium.


It's not that there is some secret only the pros or commercial houses know, other than an understanding of what's something of a tightrope walk to get the least-glitchy, most-compatible result. At a minimum, it's a careful adaptation of font use to the layout, limiting certain choices and compromising the result, just for the trivial win of using a specific font. And even then, any reader out there may decide its base system font is a better choice.


You can do amazing things with just a serif and sans-serif font, each with four faces, and judicious use of simple graphics and color. Getting bound up on the idea that a specific font or fonts are needed is just... the wrong road for e-books, and making the mistake of viewing a rich medium through the limitations of print.


You say there's a way to do it, and I don't mind learning to wrangle the fussy part if that means my client can feature a fancy chapter header in their epubs. I don't bother with main text, just the chapter headers.



This makes me wonder if subsetting while de-obfuscating the featured chapter header font would be the way to go, then, because that also reduces the file size. Perhaps this is turning more into a legal question since Adobe states "any ebook authoring workflow which requires the user to move the font files themselves is not allowed under the Terms of Use," but I don't ever require my clients to move the font files; I just give them the epub file, and they turn around and publish it.




Adobe Fonts - the subscription service - provide only activated fonts in Windows/Mac, and web fonts via specific HTML (and on Adobe's servers). Nothing else at all. You don't receive any font files (or if you happen to find them, doing anything with them is a breach of the license).


Since the encryption is tied to the document, it's possible that hacking at the doc in Sigil is breaking the connection and leaving the doc unable to decrypt the fonts on the fly, meaning it can't use them.


FWIW, I am strongly against editing EPUBs or workflows that depend on "fixing" an ID export using any post-export tools. If this is indeed Sigil mucking up the embedded fonts... another point to my dislike for the approach.


If you insist on specifying the fonts and don't want to try and fix this licensing/encryption issue at the export stage, you could substitute generic, free-license fonts in place of the Adobe ones. There are close analogues, if not more or less identical ones, for most of the common book fonts.


The issue: embedded, obfuscated fonts in the epub default to KDP's Bookerly font inside of Kindle Previewer. The only way those fonts show as they should is if I completely remove the obfuscation in Sigil and set it to none. Once I do that, the fonts show up beautifully in Kindle Previewer.



I have tested the files in Pagina's Epub Checker, and they all come out valid, even after I've de-obfuscated the featured font.



This is what leads me to question if removing obfuscation is okay to do and to then hand to my clients, since I'm not asking them to "move" or do anything with the font files themselves. I've read subsetting could be a good choice, since it removes unused characters from the file, therefore rendering it useless if the fonts are actually used outside of the epub after I've given it to my clients.


If everything works with the font encryption removed after export... it all comes down to whether you want to respect the Adobe licensing agreement for fonts, which I think most of us here would recommend, but is one solution.

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