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Does anyone know of an all lowercase font with no uppercase letters? I've only founs one, 'twenty-one', surely there must be more. I've searched Adobe, 1001 fonts, and dafont. Usually, I can copy and paste to Word and change there but I am using a program that outputs content ad a png with no overide.
Thanks,
Jim
The search term you might want to use is "unicase." There is a decent number of unicase fonts out there, both free and commercially sold. Some typefaces have expanded OpenType character sets that sometimes include unicase characters. For instance, the default Arial fonts in Windows have a unicase character set.
Most unicase fonts are going to include glyphs that still look like capital letters, but the lowercase looking letters are sized like capital letters. Delius Unicase (Google) is one exa
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in the future, to find the best place to post your message, use the list here, https://community.adobe.com/
p.s. i don't think the adobe website, and forums in particular, are easy to navigate, so don't spend a lot of time searching that forum list. do your best and we'll move the post (like this one has already been moved) if it helps you get responses.
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The search term you might want to use is "unicase." There is a decent number of unicase fonts out there, both free and commercially sold. Some typefaces have expanded OpenType character sets that sometimes include unicase characters. For instance, the default Arial fonts in Windows have a unicase character set.
Most unicase fonts are going to include glyphs that still look like capital letters, but the lowercase looking letters are sized like capital letters. Delius Unicase (Google) is one example of this.
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It's a strange situation. I am working with a program called 'Word Search Construction Kit'. When the program creates the answer key, it prints in all caps. When I install a lower-case font (unicase) and try to print the answer key with it, it prints blank. Switch back to any other font, it prints all cap. I'll try out some more of the font you mentioned and report back. And a final note, some fonts I have looked at have 20-23 lowercase fonts the other uppercase mixed in for aesthetics. However, with EFL students, characters can’t be mixed and matched.
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I'm not familiar at all with the application you described. It does sound very primitive for wanting only to print an all-caps character set. It's easy enough to perform a case change to a text string in Adobe Illustrator or InDesign, making the string all-caps, all-lowercase, title case or sentence case. An app hard-wired to see only uppercase characters might only work predictably with a font that has a very limited character set.
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