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Participant
December 4, 2008
Question

Is there a way to convert outlined text back into live text?

  • December 4, 2008
  • 12 replies
  • 93706 views
I have an Illustrator CS3 doc in which all text has been converted to outlines. (I wish I had an intelligent answer to the question of why I don't have the original doc with live text, but...) I remember seeing a post some time ago that explained how to change the outlines back into live text, which may have involved making a pdf or something, but I can't find that post anywhere in the Adobe forums. Does anyone know how to do this, if it can even be done? Thanks!
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12 replies

DESTINK
Inspiring
April 11, 2021

If you know the font, you need to retype it, or if it is a pdf file, open in acrobat in highlight the text, and paste and arrrange according to your sample pdf. 

 

JoshuaLeeClark
Known Participant
April 6, 2021

Sweet Christmas! Please stop spamming the same comment again and again.

 

As I tell my seven year old: just because you keep repeating what you want to be does not make it so. I can relate to "needing my text back". It happens to everyone from time to time (often in my 25 years of design). But sometimes you must find the font and retype. It's terrible but such is the nature of graphic design.

 

Adobe Retype has only been in the Sneak from Adobe Max so far.

 

Good luck and remember to please be considerate to your fellow users. You may find sympathy even without a solution if you are kind and reasonable to others.

Monika Gause
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 17, 2021

Please continue in the other thread you hijacked: https://community.adobe.com/t5/illustrator/how-change-outlines-back-to-original-font/m-p/11903567#M268101

 

In this forum if you want fast answers and get maximum attention, don't post to old threads. Many people don't see your post when you do.

March 17, 2021

I need all my text back

 

Inspiring
April 6, 2021
Participant
May 6, 2021

I downloaded the free trial and tried to use the Outline-to-text tool inside Illustrator, but it doesn't seem to affect any of the outlined text in the document (and there's a lot of it). DO you have any idea why this happens?

The original file is a PDF, haven't tried with EPS or other formats so far.

Participant
December 3, 2018

Hello, I just want to bring some update to this topic.

You can recreate your text back as editable object directly within Adobe Illustrator using recently published extension - Krasbit Recognition. It includes text recognition feature and is available at Adobe Exchange for free! Using the service also is free when you configure Google's API connection Key on your own. Otherwise you can use alternative connection API via trial or cheap prepaid codes.

https://www.adobeexchange.com/creativecloud.details.101113.html

See how it works at YouTube, starting 1':50"

https://youtu.be/DFDAiCFFWYg

Participant
December 5, 2008
No, Illustrator was the way to go for this particular brochure. It's got lots of vector art in it with rich backgrounds. Maybe "text-heavy" was an overstatement, but there is still a lot of copy in there. I did win a design award for it, so it came out pretty good! :)
Nini Tjader
Participating Frequently
December 5, 2008
text-heavy?
sounds like you are doing the work in the wrong application (unless you are doing packaging) ;)
Participant
December 4, 2008
I was able to use the OCR feature in Acrobat Pro, and it worked pretty well. Just a little retyping to do, which is nothing compared to having to retype the entire text-heavy thing. Thank you all for your help!
OldBob1957
Inspiring
December 4, 2008
>The text will be editable, but broken into individual words.

For that, see this thread, especially post #6;

http://www.adobeforums.com/webx/.59b6f588/5
rcraighead
Legend
December 4, 2008
I had to test it. Yes, you can use Acrobat Pro to OCR the text. First you'll need to rasterize the outlined text in AI (at 300dpi bitmap) and save as PDF. Then open in Acrobat and go to "Documents>OCR Text Recognition" to convert the image to text. Click "Edit" in the "Recognize Text dialog window and select "Formatted Text & Graphics" to view only the text in Acrobat. Save and re-open in AI. The text will be editable, but broken into individual words. You can cut multiple words to the clipboard then click with the text tool and paste, to merge the text into a contiguous sentence, but you'll lose the spaces. Exporting as text from Acrobat may be a better route.