A lot of online magazines are apparently having trouble with Scribus's lack of 
embedding options for OpenType. If you have to outline the font, it becomes 
kind of worthless for onscreen viewing.

In addition, some people have expressed the desire to use Smallcaps and 
OldStyle Figures in an easier way than choosing them from the palette.

Until these features become available in Scribus, and I assume that they still 
aren't, there are a couple ways to workaround them using FontForge, (which is 
like an opensource Fontographer with OpenType support): You could use any font 
editor, sure, but I just wanted to point out FontForge, since it is free and 
opensource.

I assume you own, as you need to have if you are going to do any good 
typography, one or two full featured fonts that you know how to use well. If 
you don't know how to use a full-featured typeface, please read Robert 
Bringhurst's The Elements of Typographic Style, and you will understand what 
it's all about. 

-If you have to do a lot of SC titling or if there are a lot of words made of 
caps in your text, and would rather type or import and then simply choose 
"smallcaps" rather than choose individual glyphs, you can make a new font (for 
example. SabonSCoF), which includes small caps and oldstyle figures. Don't use 
fake small caps if you have real ones; it won't look good. 

-You might also want to paste the old style figures into where the "aligning" 
figures are in the original font file, and generate a new file. Old Style 
figures are the numbers that go above and below the baseline, which should be 
used in text, much more often than the lining figures, which should be used in 
charts or . You could also use that opportunity to switch to typographer's 
quotes instead of inches, because I don't think Scribus has auto typographers' 
quotes, and you might want to type " instead of choosing glyphs. 

-Ligatures can be Search/Replaced, but if you're not doing ragged right, you 
may want to double check hyphenation.

-Finally, Online Magazines depend on NOT having their type outlined, which 
renders poorly in most viewers and is also not efficient when Acrobat Reader 
has to do a lot of smoothing for you. FontForge can be used to convert your 
Opentype fonts into embeddable TTFs. You may lose some of the extended 
character set in doing this, but you will have everything you need and you will 
have your small caps in a separate file, where you could put other glyphs you 
need as well. Just make sure to get rid of all the traces of OpenType, because 
otherwise Scribus will still think it is OpenType and refuse to embed it.

If some professional designer/typographer has any problems with these 
solutions, if there is some unseen problem with these workarounds, please 
inform me. I know it involves creating some screwy font files, but I think it 
should work, nevertheless. 

It's not like the font files need to be kept pure for anyone but you and your 
job; nobody is allowed to take them anyway, usually. I don't know of any good 
full featured fonts that are open. Maybe we should make some.

Otherwise, at the moment it seems to be solving a lot of my problems in trying 
to make full use of my .otf Sabon with Scribus in PCLinuxOS. I'm challenging 
myself to work in Linux, not really because I dislike Adobe or even Windows, 
but because its a great way to learn.

Tom Gleason


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