Thanks for both of your answers. I tried typing in Arial and converting to an open type format copy of Officina, which worked. The Cyrillic characters still aren't showing up in glyphs, and they show up as squares if I type in Officina, but converting from Arial seems to work.
ms43057373 wrote Thanks for both of your answers. I tried typing in Arial and converting to an open type format copy of Officina, which worked. The Cyrillic characters still aren't showing up in glyphs, and they show up as squares if I type in Officina, but converting from Arial seems to work. |
If you want to fix an existing font, converting it won't solve the problem. Though I'm not sure what you mean by converting: which exactly convertor you used. 15+ years ago I tested about a dozen of them trying to fix Cyrillic fonts and none of them worked for me.
Our designers are crazy about using fonts of doubtful provenance which usually don't have all the necessary characters (glyphs), or don’t print on a laser printer, or which RIP fails to process, etc.
I use the following approach which always works no matter how bad a font is:
- I import the problematic font into FontLab 4.6/5.2
- Then I create a brand-new font, choose a Cyrillic encoding (Mac/Windows) and copy all the font properties from the ‘bad’ font. There is button which allows to do this in one step.
- After that I copy ranges of glyphs into correct cells.
- Finally, I export the font to OpenType keeping the original format: PostScript or TrueType.
— Kas