On 09/05/2011 02:22 AM, Tom Browder wrote:
On Sat, Sep 3, 2011 at 08:09, webmaster for Kracked Press Productions
<[email protected]> wrote:
I Google-ed the name. There are galleries showing the font in Unicode
fonts.
Is the font just Hangul? or does it contain others as well. Usually it is a
Unicode font.
I would choose the fonts you like from the gallery display and see if you
can get it free. Some of then seem to be free.
Here is the gallery I am looking at.
http://www.wazu.jp/gallery/Fonts_Korean.html
I have been to that site before and many of the links are dead--but
others are good.
Thanks.
-Tom
Yes, some/many are dead, but you can see the look and "feel" of the
fonts and then Google the font names to download them.
To be honest, Arial Unicode seems to have the most glyphs. Having a
dedicated Korean font would be great, but it can be hard do decide which
one is best without some viewing software [FontForge on Ubuntu] that
will show the characters. LibreOffice has a Insert Special Characters
option that allow you to go to the different subsets - like Hangul.
Actually Arial Unicode has 12+ different Hangul subsets.
Do you know what the font name your friend or business associate uses on
his system? It would be nice to know that. Otherwise, you will need to
find as many Korean fonts, or Unicode ones with Hangul/Korean glyphs in it.
"UnBatang" was the free font that was listed in a Wiki page for Korean
Fonts. Microsoft's version is "Batang".
See if this image has the glyphs "style" you want.
http://libreoffice-na.us/other/UnBatang-Hangul.png
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