Dear Abraham,
I have a question to you, but I thought perhaps lilypond-users are also
interested:
When I use smaller glyphs in a score (change clefs, cue clefs, a solo
voice above the piano part, etc.), LilyPond usually uses a different
font such that the font weight harmonizes with the other standard-sized
objects. When I choose one of your fonts, my impression is that this is
not really the case, but the glyphs are just scaled. Perhaps you can see
what I mean in this example:
\version "2.19.21"
%\paper { #(define fonts (set-global-fonts #:music "cadence")) }
{ a \clef treble a \cueClef treble a }
If the \paper line is commented out (using Emmentaler), the smaller
clefs look bolder than with Cadence.
Is that true? Is that intended or is it just a drawback of not using
metafont for the font creation?
Cheers,
Joram
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