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Detroit Metro - Detroit Metro is a 1930's urban classic revival of 12 fonts from Metro light to rough together with the classic Regular styles and weights offering designers a wider range of options.
Rooney Font
1. Number of usersJan Fromm gives you the right to use the enclosed font software on up to five (5) computers. All users must belong to the same company or household purchasing the fonts.
2. Allowed usesYou may use the font software to create images on any surface such as computer screens, paper, web pages, photographs, movie credits, printed material, T-shirts, and other surfaces where the image is a fixed size.You may use the fonts to create EPS files or other scalable drawings provided that such files are only used by the household or company licensing the fonts.You may provide the fonts to a graphic designer, printer or other service bureau that is working on your behalf only if they agree to use the fonts exclusively for your work, agree to the terms of this license, and retain no copies of the fonts on completion of the work.You may not provide the fonts or make it accessible to any other third parties.
3. EmbeddingYou may embed the licensed fonts into any document you send to third parties. Such documents may be viewed and printed (but not edited) by the recipients.You may not under any circumstances embed the fonts into software or hardware products in which the fonts will be used by the purchasers of such products. Such use requires a different license which may be offered by Jan Fromm. Please contact info@janfromm.de for further information.
4. ModificationsYou may import characters from the font software as graphical objects into a drawing program and modify such graphical objects.You may not modify, adapt, translate, reverse engineer, decompile, disassemble, or create derivative works based on the licensed fonts itself.
5. Copyright The licensed font software is copyrighted and contains proprietary information and trade secrets belonging to Jan Fromm. You may not copy the fonts, with the exception of making an unmodified copy for personal archival purposes only.You may be held legally responsible for any infringement of Jan Fromms intellectual property rights that is caused or encouraged by your failure to abide by the terms of this Agreement.
6. WarrantyJan Fromm warrants that the font software will perform as it should for the twenty one (21) day period following your receipt. To make a warranty claim, you must return the software along with a copy of your sales receipt within the twenty one (21) day period. If the sofware does not perform correctly, Jan Fromm or your distributor will either replace the software or refund the license fee you paid for the software. Jan Fromm does not and cannot warrant the performance or results you may obtain by using the software. In no event will Jan Fromm be liable to you for any consequential incidental or special damages, including any lost profits or lost savings.
FontHaus was founded in 1990 by Mark Solsburg and is the first independent font retailer in the US. If you buy from FontHaus, you are buying from one of the largest, most respected and experienced font suppliers in the world and since 1994, was one of the first to sell and deliver fonts online. Read more...
The most common font theme problem is using smart quotes (Hex 201C + 201D, Decimal 8220 + 8221) other than plain straight quotes (Hex 22, Decimal 34). But you can also ruin a font theme by using non-breaking spaces (Hex A0, Decimal 160) instead of regular spaces (Hex 20, Decimal 32). Even though a font theme is encoded in UTF-8, you should only use plain ASCII characters for the text. XML has a low tolerance for non-standard characters.
Our brand uses font XYZ Heavy in uppercase for all headlines (H1), XYZ Bold for in regular casing subheadlines (H2, H3, etc), and then font ABC Light in regular casing for nearly all body text (special exceptions for captions and other needs).
By design, font themes are limited to 2 typefaces. If the foundry has made those 2 fonts the primary font in a font family, then you can actually access up to 8 typefaces: 2 in the original font theme, then 6 others that are accessed by activating the bold and/or italic buttons in the Office program. But this will depend on the family created by the foundry, not on Microsoft programming.
As an example, if XYZ Bold was the primary (roman) font in a font family, with XYZ Heavy being the bold member of that same family, you could spec XYZ Bold as the Headings font for the theme. Then applying the bold weight to the heading styles would get you XYZ Heavy. Your foundry should be able to create custom families, though some will charge exorbitant rates for this service.
Hi John, Did you ever resolve the previous issue of having the spinning wheel under Custom instead of being able to select the theme fonts? I believe I am following your directions correctly (for PPT 2011 for Mac) but when I select the Fonts drop down menu, it behaves as if it is trying to load my custom font.
A Font Theme file is a small XML file that stands alone. In a Windows installation, the default location for this file is C:\Users\YourUserName\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Templates\Document Themes\Theme Fonts. In Office 2011 for Mac, the location is Macintosh HD/Users/YourUserName/Library/Application Support/Microsoft/Office/User Templates/My Themes/Theme Fonts, while in Office 2016 for Mac the file would go in Macintosh HD/Users/YourUserName/Library/Group Containers/UBF8T346G9.Office/User Content/Themes/Theme Fonts. Once you place this file in the correct folder, it will then appear in PowerPoint as another font theme that can be applied to a presentation, template or theme. Please note that default paths may be customized on any computer and that the AppData (windows) and Library (OS X) folders are normally hidden.
Also within the opening tag for both the major and minor font definitions, there is a variable for a panose number. (This variable also is not represented in your simple font theme code.) I left this panose variable unchanged, though I suspect the number would not actually describe my custom font.
I have noticed now that when I try to review the fonts in master slide view, the Custom option briefly shows up and seems to have some entries below it, but before they can display it disappears and I am left with only the Office options.
OMG, this is great! I have so many clients who want to use their brand typeface in PPT decks. This worked for me using Text Edit, in Plain Mode, unchecking Smart Quotes, Smart Dashes and Smart Copy/Paste. I turned those off, copied and pasted code from this website and added my fonts. I saved as UTF-8 with xml extension. I restarted and there it was in my Design/Fonts window!! Thank you so much for this!
Sorry, the font theme only sets the font. To set other attributes, you would specify the font color and size in a style (for Word or Excel) or a text level (for PowerPoint), then distribute the file as a template.
The Font Theme only sets the font, no other characteristics. To set your default letter spacing, choose View>Slide Master, scroll up to the larger thumbnail at the top (the actual slide master) and set the letter spacing for each level of text you are using. In a well-constructed presentation, that letter spacing will ripple through to all your slides.
I understand that much of the content on this site may be too complex for some people to implement. The intended audience is design professionals and programmers who are already familiar with a more challenging way of modifying files by altering their underlying text. For anyone else, we remain available to do the work for you. A simple font theme, as described on this page, is US$30.
My question is now that I got one font theme working, how can I make more? Does it got into the same file, with the same code twice and just different fonts, or do I need to make multiple files, but how should those files be named if there are many?
Each font theme must be a separate file. Once you get a font theme that works, copy and rename it, then replace the font names. I work for many clients, so I usually name the font theme for the client, but naming them for the fonts included in the theme may be better for your situation.
Hey there! I tried adding Ubuntu font on Powerpoint Version 16.52.Code looks all ok and I added to the suggested folder under /Library/Group Containers/UBF8T346G9.Office/User Content/Themes/Theme Fonts
To set the font theme for a presentation, use View>Slide Master>Fonts and select the Test font theme. It should appear at the top of the dropdown in a Custom section. If Test is not appearing there, you have an XML error. The most common problem is using curly or smart quotes instead of straight quotes.
Literata was designed with ebooks in mind: classy, rounded, and scalable. Alegreya Sans is a sans serif font with a special calligraphic flair. This is a friendly-looking, even feminine pair, great for personal, home-themed blogs. 2ff7e9595c
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