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183 posts    Identified fonts

Posts by Jaynz


Feb 14, 2012 at 07:42  [reply]  DELETE my font PLIS

Then, wouldn't it be easier to just replace it with a newer version? I update my fonts all the time.


Feb 13, 2012 at 23:50  [reply]  DELETE my font PLIS

Was it a bad version or something?


Jan 30, 2012 at 19:40  [reply]  futuristic fixed width

Looks like they require a commercial license, but have effectively folded their business operations. You'll have to find a clone, unfortunately. :(


Jan 26, 2012 at 06:42  [reply]  4EDings Conflict

Permissions from WOTC, at least on my end, were given out when I put the font on WOTC's forums. That's not an issue in this case, fortunately.


Jan 25, 2012 at 21:52  [reply]  4EDings Conflict

Not quite. I printed out the PDF and remade the glyphs by hand. I didn't (at the time) have any utilties for taking glyphs or fonts from PDFs. (On the downside, it's also why I had to revise the font a few times. The early versions weren't exactly great quality.)


Jan 25, 2012 at 16:11  [initial post]  4EDings Conflict

Not sure what the best advice is for this, but here goes...

A few years back there was a preliminary set of PDF manuals for the then-upcoming Dungeons and Dragons 4E game. I had quickly made a font of the special characters from those PDFs and made it available for free online as a courtesy to other Dungeons and Dragons players. Apparently, someone else did as well.

Recently I had gone ahead and put the font up on here as part of my 'update the hell out of everything' run. The font has added some new glyphs based on other games and has had some tweaking and cleaning over the years. Now, my 'competition' is openly and publically accusing me of theft of his font, based on nothing more than that the glyphs are similar to the ones he lifted from WOTC's PDF in the first place.

I've told him that his attorney is free to contact me, or that I would gladly contact his attorney, but I would really like to not have to come to www.dafont.com just to deal with his libel. Is there anything that can be done about this?


Aug 18, 2011 at 15:45  [reply]  Relentless Energy Drink Suggestion?

If you really want some help, CFerry, then post an image in 'font identification'. That's why it's there.


Aug 09, 2011 at 03:31  [reply]  Anyone else having trouble?

What happens when you try to open the archive without extracting it?


Aug 08, 2011 at 16:48  [reply]  Sheld rake JNL donation

Oh, so you're going to go to a forum where font-makers hang out and display their works, and openly ask how to rip them off because you're too cheap to spend $25 -and- too lazy to look for a suitable freeware clone. Got it.


Aug 08, 2011 at 16:41  [reply]  Sheld rake JNL donation

You want someone to buy you a $25.00 license because you're too cheap to do it yourself, or maybe find you an illegal copy? Damn, where do I sign up?!


Aug 08, 2011 at 05:20  [reply]  Font software

A... social aspect?



Meaning that Open Type fonts do not group into families in the way that True Type fonts do. Taht's why you see all the variations in the drop list.


Aug 05, 2011 at 01:36  [reply]  Help! I can't do this. :(

You have a virus.


Aug 03, 2011 at 19:36  [reply]  Number sizes in Scala Sans caps

Going to agree with Judgemental Kat here. Looking at your three examples, the first one is the most readable of them. Long runs of nearly-identical spacing and height gets very hard on the eyes very quickly. All-caps should be no more than three or four words in a title or header, and even then there are probably better ways to highlight your text.



You're using SOMETHING to show your calculations and prose to the class? If it's just a web-page you should seriously consider using a CSS script for this purpose. At this point, though, I've given all the advice that I can.


Aug 01, 2011 at 20:59  [reply]  Free For personal use and Gaia

Sorry, I just wanted to indicate that money did not have to change hands. That's something MANY people don't understand. "So long as it's free, I'm not violating copyright!" And we both know that's completely untrue.



Do yourself a favor and get used to the formatting tools on any major word processor/document editor. You can select an area as 'equation' from then map that to whatever font or style you'll need from then on. (So if you find, say, you want to make the equations larger, or in a new color, you can simply change the style rather on the fly). The approach you're taking, in all honesty, will probably backfire on you in the long run.


Aug 01, 2011 at 20:38  [reply]  Free For personal use and Gaia

What Koeiekat is trying to say that "Commercial Use" means WHENEVER you're providing work for someone else, regardless if you're requesting or receiving payment. Since you're engaged in a commercial activity for someone else (IE, you're providing them a service with these fonts), you've broken out of 'personal use'.

Each font should have a license, but if you're making something for other people, the font will generally need to be explicitly 'Free'.



Honestly, and forgive me if I'm seeing obtuse here, but why aren't you just using two fonts? Since you are seeming to seperate them out between your prose and equations, wouldn't that be the most logical option?


Jul 30, 2011 at 04:11  [reply]  Free For personal use and Gaia

Depends on the font. For anything from me, yes, you can do that - though I would love for you to hit my paypal tip jar.



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