At 05:56 AM 12/3/2003, Philippe Verdy wrote:

Just visit the impressive resource references collected on:
http://www.nongnu.org/freefont/

...
There's no magic behind fonts. In fact, in a near future, most
Unicode-supported scripts will be easily accessible to users,
because there will be large collections of OpenType fonts
supporting them and created with open-sourced licenses.

Well, so far they have a Courier clone, a Times clone and a Helvetica clone, all based on old URW data. And typical of this sort of project, it is easy to spot the freshly made glyphs that have been added by the well-meaning amateurs, which even when copied from existing typefaces (e.g. the Hebrew in the 'Free Sans' font: an obvious copy of Ismar David's eponymous classic) are badly drawn, crudely digitised and technically non-conformant.


You're right about one thing though: there is no magic behind fonts. There is a huge amount of skill, expertise and experience, and a *lot* of work.

John Hudson

Tiro Typeworks          www.tiro.com
Vancouver, BC           [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Theory set out to produce texts that could not be processed successfully
by the commonsensical assumptions that ordinary language puts into play.
There are texts of theory that resist meaning so powerfully ... that the
very process of failing to comprehend the text is part of what it has to offer
            - Lentricchia & Mclaughlin, _Critical terms for literary study_




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