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miz123
Participating Frequently
September 1, 2017
Answered

Creating outlines makes line thicker, how to fix it?

  • September 1, 2017
  • 5 replies
  • 25211 views

In Illustrator, I created outlines for small body types and now everything looks so thick and bold.

I've learned that once you create outline, you will loose the hinting information so that everything will become thicker.

I'm creating menu for this restaurant but they don't have AI on their computer so I HAVE to create outlines for them..

is there any way to fix or tricks that I can do??

Thanks, Mindy

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer AvionD

I have had the same problem but found an answer at https://pixelportal.com.au/pixel-portal-blog/adobe_acrobat_showing_thick_l_and_i_characters

5 replies

AvionDCorrect answer
New Participant
February 15, 2023
Known Participant
April 24, 2024

I've been looking for the answer to this issue for at least 5 years. 
Thank you! 

Community Manager
May 3, 2024

Hello @toadlyrad,

We understand that encountering technical issues can be frustrating. Would you mind sharing more details, like the OS/Illustrator version, whether Illustrator behaves this way with all files, if it happens when using a particular font, and public links to sample Ai files before and after creating outlines after uploading them to Dropbox/Google Drive/etc., so we can investigate this further?

Looking forward to hearing from you.

 

Thanks,

Anubhav

New Participant
June 10, 2019

I am saving files that must not be editable, therefore have to be saved as outline. Can anyone recommend a professional quality vector graphics software that can handle fonts correctly? Thanks.

Btw, when the file is saved Illustrator still displays the text as should appear instead of how it will actually appear. Once the file is closed the irreversible change to outlined fonts has been made. This has wasted a huge amount of time.

Monika Gause
Community Expert
June 10, 2019

paulo461  schrieb

I am saving files that must not be editable, therefore have to be saved as outline. Can anyone recommend a professional quality vector graphics software that can handle fonts correctly? Thanks.

Illustrator is a professional vector graphics software.

What you're seeing with the tet getting fatter is about how *all* software handles fonts compared to how all software handles graphics.

New Participant
June 10, 2019

OK, thanks. Seems odd that no vector graphics software can save fonts correctly. It would be less problematic if the display was refreshed after saving so that Illustrator displayed the fonts as they will actually appear. At least you would have a chance to undo the changes and save again before closing the program.

Fortunately the font I am using has a light version so I have managed to get a very similar appearance by using that, then adding a 0.1px stroke.

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
September 1, 2017

miz,

Undoubtedly, the restaurant owner(s) will be best helped with a PDF, so just keep the live (unoutlined) Type and Save a Copy As PDF (or print to PDF) so you have embedding of the fonts and no thickening.

Make sure you keep the original artwork in its AI document.

michelew83603738
Community Expert
September 1, 2017

So are you creating the outlines just so that they can look at it or do they need the working Illustrator file? You could just hand off a pdf and embed the fonts there so that they will see what the fonts look like there and you will not have this issue. If you need a file to be printed and can't embed the fonts, you can get rid of the fonts in Acrobat and the same sort of thickening won't occur as when you create outlines in Illustrator. So there may be workarounds depending on what your purposes are.

Monika Gause
Community Expert
September 1, 2017

The thickening will occur no matter where you outline the type.

Bill Silbert
Community Expert
September 1, 2017

No, not really. This is one of the reasons that converting type to outlines is usually discouraged. You may also notice some letters that look slightly taller than the rest of the letters in the outlined text. On the other hand if you have to do it, as in your case, it is usually in a situation where absolute type fidelity is not the client's major concern.

New Participant
May 1, 2023

I'm facing similar problem but mine is types are looking thinner. I have to change the outlines. I'm creating a logo design. how can I do it please help

 

 

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
May 1, 2023

San,

 

Maybe you can make it look right if you add a stroke (which will have half its width outside the current outline (the spine) with the default centred stroke).

 

You can try different values of the Stroke Weight (you can set it exactly as you wish by inserting the value).