![]() In a way, I like the result, but it is clear that you cannot work this way. Again, I don’t know what to make of it. Importing an Affinity Designer document showing a simple cross will end up with the result shown below. Secondly, when the import works, the result looks incredibly strange. I think it has to do with the relative coordinates, but I don’t know. “Save for Print” creates an EPS file that is recognised, whereas “Save for Export” doesn’t work. Firstly, not all of the export options will produce an EPS file that is recognised by FontLab. Unfortunately, the results are somewhat odd, and I don’t know what to make of it. Unfortunately, that doesn’t currently seem to work, or rather, drawings are pasted as pixel images to the FontLab sketchboard, regardless of selecting “Copy images as SVG” or not.īut then there is the option of saving a drawing to EPS and importing it to the FontLab sketchboard. will take all the glyphs in your font ending in. will be slightly different in each of the two modes, but most of the glyphs will be in. Go to your Applications folder in Finder. Last week I wrote about posting five FontLab encoding files for Adobe. These files are ofthe following type: FONTLAB CODEPAGE: 0xff. dmg and drag FontLab 7 to your Applications folder. Install FontLab 7 on macOS Double-click the downloaded. You can paste drawings directly from Illustrator to the FontLab sketchboard. When the installation is complete, run FontLab 7 from your Start menu. Theoretically, I would expect that things would work like in this video (have a look at 1:32 onwards): I am experiencing quite a few problems to get my designs from Affinity Designer to FontLab.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |