This SHOULDN'T happen with 'ek' and 'eh', but try turning off ligatures and see if you have some odd-ball language option enabled for inDesign.
I think that this one is actually a little closer to "Hauser Oblique", judging from the thickness of some of the letters. It's heavily modified in Photoshop either way, though.
The original marquee was a hand-cut stencil. I did make a font based on it, however.
Erm... the text tool, maybe?
That should be fine, yes, so long as you're not collecting fees, etc. on your web site, nor are you re-releasing the font through the site.
Repeat after me: "I will not ask for a font for something that's clearly handwriten"
Thank you very muchly! This will help me get things organized over here.

Not a font. Some of the letters seem to be Impact or some other basic font heavily (and I mean HEAVILY) modified and played with in Photoshop.
Just wondering if we could have a 'last modified' field added to the 'account info' display down the list of fonts. I've been trying to see what is here that is current or needs updated, but it's a pain to go through over 100 fonts to check their dates.. one at a time. Displaying and sorting by that field would help immensely.
I.. what?
I've been using Windows 64-Bit since it's release, effectively, and I've NEVER run into a compatibility issue for Photoshop, Illustrator, or Microsoft Office. Fonts are just data-files, the 'number of bits' in the OS shouldn't make a difference to loading them.
The only exceptions to this are when there's something wrong with the font file itself and the specific software can't handle displaying it for some reason. In this case, you really need to say WHAT fonts you downloaded and specifically what programs you were trying to use them in.
Is there a point to actually answering your questions?
IT's definately a Eurostile deriviative. You could try my "Probert" font on here and see if it matches up for for you. There are a few generics in Star Trek packages as well that may be closer.
Okay, I can't help you because you're not paying me money to teach you the basics of photoshop layering, and this is NOT a Photoshop site, as already explained. Google 'photoshop text layer' and knock yourself out.
I... if you don't know about Photoshop and anti-aliasing, I'm not sure how much we can help you. I strongly recommend that you learn more about Photoshop, since this is much more about that than it is about the font itself.
Change the method of your anti-aliasing, along with turning smoothing off. You also might check to see how your 'stroke' is being drawn in your layer settings. Without pics to see exactly what you're doing, it's really hard to know for sure how severe the problem is, or what is the best way to go about fixing it.
Trust me on this one. The 'e' only goes straight across in the mid-line on my old font. It slopes down on the marquee. I hate to admit it, but that tell is there just 'cause I screwed up in the first place.
The 'tell' is the small 'e'. I had it wrong in my original version of the font (when compared to the movie posters) and corrected it later, and the 'wrongness' is evident even in this muddled version. Occhino had it right all along.
Actually, this one's mine.
http://www.dafont.com/adventure-subtitles.font
Based on the same source material. This is an old version of the font, as some of the lines betray that they haven't been cleaned yet. The newer version is
http://www.dafont.com/labouf.font , which has a slightly thinner weight and a cleaner look.
It's one of mine.. "Skir", though it's an older version. (Probably from when I just had the font called "Beast Machines", judging from the spacing).
DaFont doesn't usually reply with rejections unless you directly ask them. Most of the time, it's due to the font having errors in it for some reason (bad kerning, recursion, overlapping countours, etc.) It can also be due to the submitter is not the person who created the font, if there's some question involving licensing, etc.
As for the 'hollow' version, I stopped making and supporting hollow versions of my fonts (such as Powerpuff) for two reasons. First, most art programs will do it automatically with a 'stroke' option, which will get the 'hollow' effect simply by turning off the fill and leaving just the stroke. Second, they usually look horrible in desktop publishing as regular text and don't get much use, accordingly.
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