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Participant
August 15, 2021
Answered

Changing type 1 fonts to Opentype

  • August 15, 2021
  • 4 replies
  • 15479 views

I have activated fonts on CC for the ones in my documents that are Type 1.  How do I change the Type 1's, it does not seem to be done autmatically since a listing from the PDF shows that that they are still Type 1.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Test Screen Name

Fonts are often converted to type 1 when a PDF is made. This is normal and will still work. You CANNOT use a PDF to find whether your installed fonts are type 1...

4 replies

Participant
December 22, 2021

I have lots of old rohects clients reuse - and now I'll have to redo them all becuase of this change - and hope the hours spent kerning and leading  for specific projects "just work"  Something is wrong here....

 

rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
December 22, 2021
Bevi Chagnon - PubCom.com
Legend
December 23, 2021

@rob day 

Do you know how well Font Lab converts to Unicode?

We've heard of some problems with mapping to the correct Unicode codepoint for some glyphs. Of course, this affects accessibility and all machine reading of the text.

And are the original PS font's kerning pairs inherited into the new OpenType version?

 

|    Bevi Chagnon   |  Designer, Trainer, & Technologist for Accessible Documents ||    PubCom |    Classes & Books for Accessible InDesign, PDFs & MS Office |
Test Screen NameCorrect answer
Legend
August 16, 2021

Fonts are often converted to type 1 when a PDF is made. This is normal and will still work. You CANNOT use a PDF to find whether your installed fonts are type 1...

Gunnel1Author
Participant
August 16, 2021

Thanks much, I didn't know that.  One wonders: if Type 1 is so old and rusty, why does PDF still conert to them (secretly 🙂  )

Peter Spier
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 16, 2021

PDF is now an international standard, not just an Adobe proprietary format, so there are lots of legacy requirements, and the OTF format is really, as I understand things, a wrapper for either underlying True-Type or Type1 format fonts.

Peter Spier
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 15, 2021

If you mean you now have both T1 and OTF versions of the font and want to use the OTF version, go to Type > Find Font and change them there.

 

Acrobat will continu to show postscript flavored OTF fonts as Type 1 in the font properties, butif the font name is correct (presumably Std or Pro), the the correct font is being used.

Gunnel1Author
Participant
August 16, 2021

Yes, I meant that. But it seems that when I activated CC fonts, the Type 1 ones disappeared from the Find Font dialog.   I assume this means that the occurences of Type 1's were replaced automatically?

Peter Spier
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 16, 2021

Fonts are never replaced automatically in InDesign (unlike some other apps which will make substitutions without even telling you).

Willi Adelberger
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 15, 2021

There are specific programs which can do that, but often it is not covered by the license agreement and often it might change the font.

But OTF can contain up to 65.000 glyphs, T1 only 255, so it is worthy to license new OTF.

biowizard
Participating Frequently
December 16, 2023

I don't need 65,000 glyphs in (say) Cloister Black, Sonata or Cheq! I just need to be open existing documents for editing or adaptation, and my original set of 200-plus glyphs will be all I need! Mediaeval Monks didn't write in Unicode, and last time I checked, most Classical Music uses only a few Scores of Shapes and Symbols, while a Chess Set only contains 6 Types of Piece, in one of two colours, each of which may be on one of two colours of Square. 🙂

BobLevine
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 5, 2024
quote

Windows 11? 


By @BobLevine

C'mon. You know me better than that. Win 10.


Well, I was expecting you to tell me you were hanging on to Windows 7. 🙂

 

Seriously, though, I don't think you'd even be able to install that in Windows 11.