![]() ![]() Then converting each SVG font into a, separating the paths, then importing that entire SVG "sprite sheet" into Illustrator. One other solution I am thinking is taking this library and generating an SVG font out of it. I can't possibly copy/paste those one at a time from FontLab into Illustrator like I'm doing now, there's gotta be a better way :) of correctly inserting metric and kerning for each single glyph. What do you recommend to do this? I want to do this for the Chinese/CJK font, which has 65,000 individual glyphs, so 65k shapes/objects. FontLab Studio is a font editing tool with separate applications for both Windows and. Any approach at all, to take an OTF/TTF font file and layout every single glyph in Illustrator. Wondering if there is any way to do this differently. It didn't copy the actual vector data of each glyph at all. ![]() #FONTLAB VI ADD GLYPHS FROM ANOTHER FILE FREE#I tried just going to the zoomed-out grid view of the whole font in FontLab, and selecting a bunch of glyphs at once, and copy/pasting it like that into Illustrator, but all it "copied" to illustrator was the textual name of the glyph lol. Many functions aren't included, they come as free or paid plugins including the aforementioned curve correction (if you mean Harmonize) Fontlab 7: Has a shit-ton of functions, some of which aren't available in Glyphs, even with plugins, BUT. Currently what I have to do is open up a font file (OTF/TTF) in FontLab, then click on a specific glyph, then select the actual glyph in that window, then copy/paste it from FontLab into Illustrator. ![]()
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