I like Eurostile a lot (bought it from Adobe for myself decades ago and loved
the squarish look, particularly Eurostile Wide for some uses).
Google recommends Orbitron as "similar" to Eurostile. However, I have not used
that one yet, so please check it out yourself.
In my current company, we
OK, this list just rocks. Thank you for all the font information and seeing as
how Roboto is a free Google font, I am sticking with it.
TVB
Tammy Van Boening
Tammy dot vanboening at spectrumwritingllc dot com
www.spectrumwritingllc.com
> -Original Message-
> From: Framers
Thank you!
Tammy Van Boening
Principal/Owner
Spectrum Writing, LLC
www.spectrumwritingllc.com
303-840-1755
> -Original Message-
> From: Framers bounces+tammyvb=spectrumwritingllc@lists.frameusers.com> On Behalf
> Of Tori Muir
> Sent: Thursday, March 21, 2024 1:56 PM
> To:
We use google fonts almost exclusively these days -- Free, many have a wide
range of weights, and they read well on screen. Added bonus: none of the wonky
"available in application X but not in application Y" issues that Adobe fonts
seem to be plagued by (on MacOS at least).
Tori Muir
You could use something like Adobe's Source Sans that has a ton of variants:
https://fonts.adobe.com/fonts/source-sans
See the Licensing tab on this page.
Best,
Patrick
Patrick H. Edwards * Supervisor of Production
International Ocean Discovery Program * JOIDES Resolution Science Operator
Texas
Hello Tammy,
"Standard" with Windows? I find that Microsoft will make changes to
their Windows and Office offerings as they want to, and Adobe tends to
supply few and fewer fonts with every product release. For example,
Microsoft recently changed the default Office font from Calibri to
OK all,
I am doing a major overhaul on an existing template for a client. I very much
like the San serif fonts of Eurostile or Roboto, but I really don’t want to
break my cardinal rule of using proprietary fonts that have to be embedded in
the final PDF. I really would like to be able to use a