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Details:
Problem:
Any ideas? TIA.
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One thing you didn't tell us is if you installed these fonts on your computer from Google Fonts before you made the edits. Google has also made Montserrat available through Adobe Fonts.
https://fonts.adobe.com/search?query=Monserrat
Jane
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Oops, sorry that wasn't explicit — I was assuming that "the text reverts to Montserrat Regular" would have implied that I do, indeed, have the whole Montserrat family installed.
I was also assuming that since it's a Google font, there wouldn't BE different versions — unlike, say, Garamond, Helvetica, and all of the other typefaces that have a ton of different licensees. I'll check to see if there's a difference between the Adobe licensed version is different than the direct download from Google... which would be ridiculous but I won't put anything past Adobe OR Google, lol
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@scabbot610 wrote:
Oops, sorry that wasn't explicit...
...so I picked the most common reason (sorry!) If you didn't have the bold version, for instance, it might revert to regular.
Several foundries have put their fonts on Adobe Fonts, and Montserrat says it's from Google. Adobe Fonts says there are 36 weights. Do you have all of them installed?
There are two other forums that might be able to give you a better answer, and we can move your post if you want us to.
Adobe Fonts https://community.adobe.com/t5/adobe-fonts/ct-p/ct-fonts
Type and Typography. https://community.adobe.com/t5/type-typography/ct-p/ct-type-and-typography
Jane
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Thanks Jane, that’s why I marked your answer as “Helpful” — it probably will be to someone else! And it made me clarify my question, always a good thing.
Assuming that this isn’t just a Photoshop thing, if you can move this into Adobe Fonts I think that would be best. The Type & Typography folks can be a little... eccentric. And I say that as one of them (irl, if not on the forum). Thanks again!
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@scabbot610 wrote:
if you can move this into Adobe Fonts I think that would be best.
I've moved your thread to Adobe Fonts, @scabbot610 .
Jane
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(btw, for anyone who comes across this later, there are 18 styles of Monserrat and an additional 18 styles of Montserrat (alternates), which would (presumably) be flagged as missing.
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Artwork created by other people does NOT contain the fonts unless type layers are flattened before they hand-off to you. But once type is flattened, it cannot be edited again. You would need to create a new type layer with fonts that you have installed on your machine.
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Sorry, neglected to mention that I've been in design for 30 years. So thanks — but you're preaching to the choir.
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They probably have a different version of the fonts installed on their system.
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Thanks — I did think of that but as I just posted in my first reply to Jane-e, it would be ridiculous for there to be more than one version of Montserrat. Not impossible, mind you, and I will check on that.
The original creators are professionals so even if someone HAS made a knock-off of Montserrat (why?) I strongly doubt they'd be using anything except the official version.
Also — if that was the case (a different version) wouldn't it be listed as a missing font?
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Also — if (a different version) wouldn't it be listed as a missing font?
=======
No.
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So, to clarify: if I have Tasteful Font Name Here installed, and my colleage has a free knock-off of Tasteful Font Name Here, Photoshop will assume that they’re the same thing, not flag it as missing, but revert to a different weight of my own copy? Well — to Adobe, not you — that’s not helpful at all.
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How is software supposed to be aware of slight differences in fonts that come from 3rd parties and reside on different machines? If you think about it, that's too much to expect. Especially since font rendering varies between applications too -- i.e. Photoshop, Illustrator, Acrobat & InDesign may use the same font & styles but produce slightly different results on screen and in print.
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Why assume they're "slight" differences — how is software aware of ANY differerences between fonts? Adobe can't base a decision about substitution on name only, can it? By that logic I could just make a bunch of free fonts, all of them named "Adobe Garamond" and, with sufficient distribution, cause chaos.
We've strayed a bit far from my point: two people, using the SAME font from ONE source (Google) should not experience a substitution — if they do, then the software KNOWS that the fonts are different and therefore should identify the missing style.