Skip to main content
Participant
February 1, 2005
Question

OpenType problems at the printer

  • February 1, 2005
  • 2 replies
  • 728 views
Hi! Have a small question if any one knows about this problem, we are using OpenType fonts and we are about to change printer. More or less accidental i found a PDF on their Webpage... and guess what, they say they can't print OTF, hmmm. The most frustrating is that they say they can't check the PDfs and see if there problem will occur

Is this just to accept and change the printer or is there a solution? When I try to talk to them their attitude are more or less... "we can´t help you, change the font or get missing letters"... (we work in many different languages so this is not an option)

hope some one knows...
Åsa
This topic has been closed for replies.

2 replies

Participating Frequently
February 13, 2005
If they can't print OpenType, it must mean they have old, out of date
equipment and aren't willing to pay to update.

If they can't check for this they either haven't heard of
pre-flighting, or won't pay for it. Or don't know how to set it up.

Frankly, it would not fill me with confidence. If you don't choose
them, you should let them know why, it might enourage them to deal
with their issues.

Aandi Inston
Inspiring
February 4, 2005
It's complete nonsense for them to say they can't print PDFs with OpenType fonts in them, if they can print PDFs with Type 1 fonts in them. Type 1 and OpenType fonts are stored the exact same way in PDF, and you literally can't tell which kind it is, except by the name.

Now, there are ways of making PDFs that may give problems to some PostScript "clone" RIPs, and other issues like that. But they are largely independent of font format going into the PDF.

If you present them with this information, and they still won't budge, I suggest you change printers.

Regards,

T

Thomas Phinney
Program Manager
Fonts & Core Technologies
Adobe Systems