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986 posts    Identified fonts

Posts by toto@k22


Apr 30, 2019 at 13:09  [reply]  please help me

Identified font: Al Fresco


Apr 26, 2019 at 19:43  [reply]  What is this font?

Identified font: 1952 Rheinmetall


Apr 24, 2019 at 20:46  [reply]  Upwork font?

Identified font: Caros Medium


Apr 24, 2019 at 18:38  [reply]  Help please

Identified font: Agency Black Condensed


Apr 24, 2019 at 05:38  [reply]  identify please

KINGSVILLE, TEXAS is Copperplate Gothic. If you have any of the programs listed at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/font-list/copperplate-gothic you will likely find the font already installed in your Windows

Identified font: Copperplate Gothic


Apr 24, 2019 at 05:18  [reply]  identify please

SENDERO is Colonna MT, which is bundled with some Microsoft software luike Office. See if you have at least one of the programs listed at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/font-list/colonna-mt If you do, you already have Colonna MT installed in your PC

Identified font: Colonna


Apr 22, 2019 at 05:21  [reply]  ME AYUDAN CON LA FUENTE PORFA

Free font version

Suggested font: Mexico 2019/2020  (Already suggested here)


Apr 22, 2019 at 05:17  [reply]  The Mike Douglas Show

See also Opti Neil Bold, which is similar to Opti Natty. Opti Neil Bold is also available on the linked page

Identified font: Natty


Apr 20, 2019 at 16:50  [reply]  font?

That's the SSC Napoli 2018/2019 font. They call it SSCN18. It's a custom font but you can always ask SSC Napoli (http://www.sscnapoli.it/) where you can get their font.

Also try to search the internet for the SSC Napoli font. Who knows, you might just be lucky and find find one.

Identified font: SSCN18


Apr 19, 2019 at 17:04  [reply]  Samatha font

If you're referring to Samantha, Charmap will be a lot of help. However, if your program/s have a feature to access OT alternates on their own, better use those features. You mentioned Excel and Illustrator and both can access the alternates. I've shown you above how it is done in Illustrator. For Excel, use its insert symbol feature. Click on Insert and click on the symbol icon (Greek letter Omega). That's about the same way to access alternates in other MS Office programs.


Apr 19, 2019 at 08:08  [reply]  its a flex font please



Apr 18, 2019 at 16:37  [reply]  Samatha font

You were using a PC with Windows 7 when you posted the first message so I assume you were on Win7.

The first a-z characters are the ones with lines to the right. The next a-z characters are the ones with lines to the left. The other characters after that are the ligatures.



There's no reason why Illustrator can't access the alternate since these are Unicode mapped. Anyway, I did a copy from Charmap and pasted it into a document in Illustrator and the following image is how it looks. Remember that you should Samantha as the font in the document you are pasting to. Otherwise you will only see a blank page as the Private Use Area are unused in most fonts.



You can access the alternates from within Illustrator - click on Type then click on Glyph. Select ss01 for letters with lines to the right and ss02 for lines to the left. The process is different in Photoshop



Apr 18, 2019 at 12:03  [reply]  Samatha font

Different programs have different ways of doing it. Since you are in Windows 7, the easiest way to access those characters is through the Character Map program that comes with Windows. Click on Start and type charmap on the box and press the Enter key. Select Samantha in the font menu. Then set Character set to Unicode and set Group by to Unicode Subrange. A new menu box will appear, scroll down to the end of the list and choose Private Use Characters. You will then see the alternates that are Unicode mapped to the Private Use Area. Select what you need, then copy and paste it to the document you are working on in your program. For this to work, you need to set Samantha as the font in the program where you are going to paste to.

Charmap is only good for characters that are Unicode mapped. If the alternates are not Unicode mapped, you will need a program that are OT feature aware. I think Microsoft Word can access the alternates through its insert symbol.


Apr 14, 2019 at 06:02  [reply]  Samatha font

I assume you are referring to this font - https://www.dafont.com/samantha-4.font

The letters with the "decorative lines" are stylistic alternates of the regular lowercase letters. The letters with the lines on the right is Stylistic Set 1 (ss01) and the ones to the left is Stylistic Set 2 (ss02). Not all programs support OT features. So if your program is one of those, then you will have to insert those characters manually through your programs glyph palette or insert symbol or whatever your program calls it. The letters with the "decorative lines" is Unicode mapped to the Private Use Area (PUA)


Apr 13, 2019 at 16:32  [reply]  Estilista

Identified font: Foglihten No07


Apr 13, 2019 at 06:52  [reply]  Please help

Identified font: Big Limbo BT


Apr 12, 2019 at 21:02  [reply]  Kassa (BNNVARA)



Apr 12, 2019 at 20:48  [reply]  Milkshake font

The a and s are stylistic alternates
The e is the normal e rotated by a bit.

Identified font: Lust


Apr 12, 2019 at 20:04  [reply]  Anyone know this font?

The highlight might have been just added in a program

Identified font: Tipsy


Apr 11, 2019 at 13:43  [reply]  Font Name?

Identified font: Azuki



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