Of course because of the order of the lookups the font always starts with the INITIAL_L lookup. SO I was wondering how could I make the font engine to loop between the two lookups? So one would get choosen each time you start to type.

Or am I going in totally the wrong direction?

It might not be quite the font you are looking for but a good example of how some people have tried to solve this is during the development of Liza (Explained really well here: -studies/random-vs-clever/)


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Luc Devroye has the best list I've ever seen of "random" fonts. I remember reading his paper Random fonts for the simulation of handwriting several years ago and being fascinated. In fact, I was searching for that paper when I found this question.

Now for purchasing/licensing a suitable font, here is just an example from myfonts.com:Use advanced search and use two lines:tags include "handwritten" ANDOpenType features include "Randomize"

Please also look at "Interconnected" and read the description to learn more ideas about simulating handwriting without using actual randomization (this goes beyond your actual question, but I believe you are more interested in the visual results than the technology "randomization"):

It began as a way for me to address a need for a project I was working on, something designed to look like a scrapbook. I was using the "Journal" typeface designed by Fontourist ( ), which gave me a good balance of readability and organic feel, but of course it had the same issues as all other fonts of its ilk.

To address that I wrote a script to trawl the taxt frames in a specified CS5 INDD document, looking fist to see if they had that font as their active one, after which the script shifts each glyph up or down the baseline by a random amount, gives each glyph a random stroke weight change, and finally tints each glyph a random amount off of its basic tint.

Each of these changes is very subtle, with the result being something that looks considerably more organic and hand-made than the font did out of the can. The script should be easily modified by anyone who wants to run it using a different font instead of "Journal". Here it is. Enjoy!

I need to do something similar to this - but need to vary the size and font. I need to have a script assign random fonts to words (I'd have a set of three or four fonts I'd want the script to choose from).

For the fonts, the really cheap and dirty method would probably be to load the names of the fonts you want to use into an array variable in the AppleScript, then get a random index count to grab one of the font names out of that array.

The script as it exists now goes character by character - you'd want to revise it so it went word by word instead, or else you'd end up setting each word's character to one of your random font choices. Instead of

The curly braces are necessary, as it appears that AppleScript supports lists rather than arrays (a minor but not entirely unimportant detail). Anyway, from there, you'd grab one font at a time, randomly, probably like this:

You do the first line to get a random number based on the number of items in your list of fonts. You subtract 1 from it because the count on the actual list begins at 0 rather than 1, which means that sometimes you'll get a random number that's actually 1 larger than the number of items in the list, and you'll never see the first item (which is at position 0). This is a very old-school gotcha when working with arrays and lists - a ten-item list will count from 0 to 9, not 1 to 10.

From there, you'd set the given word in your text frame's font to the name of the font you pulled out of the myFontArray variable. You'll want to make sure that the font names you load into your list are the actual names of the fonts you're working with - the examples I used here probably won't work.

For a little change, I'm going for a font that looks like handwriting. Can some of the expert CSS folks here suggest what would be some of the safest fonts (most widely available in most browsers) that look like handwriting?

There is no handwriting font that would be reliably available in most browsers across all platforms. There are subsets like the fonts that come with Windows Vista or 7 but if you want to achieve any serious reliable coverage, it's likely that you'll have to resort to delivering the font alongside the web page - which, sadly, makes things complicated.

I suppose Comic Sans or Lucida handwriting would be some of the most widely available 'handwriting' fonts, although they're not great fonts. You might be better served by looking into some of the font embeding options, either using fancy-smancy html 5 stuff: -links.com/2009/05/28/exciting-times-html-5-web-fonts/ which won't be entirely supported, or using sIFR which is flash based: , or some combination of these solutions to reach all users.

There's an alternative.If you're familiar with Javscript or Jquery.There's a very nice script called "Cufon" that does a thing called "Font Replacement".With this simple to use script, you can use ANY font you want on your website.I suggest you start by checking it's documentation, then create the cufon-js version of the font and then use it !

Hi, I just purchased a handwiting font "LiebeHeide" by LiebeFonts and it looks like that it isn't working (it is invisible, no color) in Publisher. The font uses contextual alternates to get a more realistic outcome.

I'm afraid I don't remember if there's been a commitment by Serif or not to include color font support in a later version or not. There's at least two longish threads on the subject that I haven't read in quite a while so a "commitment statement" may have been made.

That said, it will likely be some time before it happens. I also have that font--I haven't found the right project for it specifically but have used a couple of other color fonts in jobs. With no means of altering the colors easily, they are not something I even bring to a client's attention as an option.

I've seen a desire for this type of font historically in the group, so I made one. It's free for personal use, and please note that since it was made in calligraphr.com with a free account, there are some special characters missing. The image shows what's included. As an example, I don't use exclamation points when I write notes, so I nixed it in favor of the question mark and mathematical symbols instead.

The options that you have depend on what it is needed for. If it is just for headings or very short inserts, you could use images or sIFR. If it is for one particular page, it might be better to get a really good font yourself and create that page as a PDF.

If it is for body text throughout the site, then my advice would be to do a Nancy Reagan. There is a good reason why most websites use only a very small number of fonts, and that is that there is only a very small number of fonts that are suitable for reading body text on screen at the font size typically found on websites. A handwriting font, even a really good one that is great for print, is unlikely to be good to read on screen - particularly without anti-aliasing or Cleartype (or similar).

Utilising free handwriting fonts is a great way to give your design projects an authentic, personal feel, and the good news is there are many fonts available for free online. Whether you use an elegant script to create a sophisticated feel or ragged scrawl that conveys a sense of energy and urgency, be sure that we have plenty of options below.

Buy fonts from myfonts.com

As well as the fonts below, we highly recommend myfonts.com by Monotype to find fonts for all kinds of projects. It has over 130,000 fonts, from brush fonts to display, and more than 900 of them are completely free.

Dear Emily,You have an amazing God given talent,hon and part of that talent includes making others happy!

 Emily,I have a Mac and I would really appreciate it if I could down load your Emily font.How might I do it??

 Enjoy your holidays with your family and make special memories! Be well, one of your many admirers! Elaine

I'm so excited to share a fun and easy method to create fonts with my own handwriting! I used an app called iFontMaker on the iPad and made my first font in about 30 minutes. ? It was super fun and self-explanatory. Here's how it works: There are some standard fonts to choose from. You choose a font and then the app guides you through the entire alphabet (uppercase, lowercase, symbols), you draw each letter using the font as a guide for size and shape. It's so fun, Jeremy even made one! The stylus I used was the Bamboo Stylus for iPad. I hope some of you get a chance to try it (and the app too). I highly recommed them.

I like this font when I want to simulate a cozy feel in materials. I also enjoy using it on my iPad in Goodnotes to make my notes look handwritten but still clean and readable. The font works on all devices, including Windows, Mac, iOS, and Android.

You can use the font as part of mail merges as well. So if you need to send a bunch of letters out to clients, you could write a standard letter in a normal font and then add a handwritten looking note at the bottom in blue ink.

I want to add some cursive fonts to cc can someone tell me how to do that. Also the fonts that are in cc are are they the same ones on my computer in windows 10? If not how do I get to the ones in windows 10 and use them also

I am working on a Processing project for fun and I wanted to use the cursive font that is usually called in HTML and everything else, "cursive" or "Cursive," but in Processing it does the default sans-serif (Arial I think). Does anyone know what the actual name of this font is? "Times" and "Marker Felt" do work, but "monospace" also doesn't.

I changed my handwriting font years ago for precisely this purpose, and I have continued to tweak my letterforms over the years, using the algorithm of changing the form of whichever letters seem to generate the most confusion. Here is my current font: 006ab0faaa

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