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Hi there, I have problem with Figma not syncing previously activated adobe font in an already existing project. I signed in adobe creative cloud and also in adobe profile on adobe.com, restarted Mac several times and it is still to working. Is there anything else I can do? Does anyone have the same issue with font sincing? Thanks


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Hey there. Make sure the fonts are activated in the Creative Cloud App. If they were not used for a certain amount of time, Adobe requires you to redownload the fonts to properly sync them with your system.

When you add fonts from Adobe Fonts, they will appear in the font menus of all your desktop applications, such as Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Microsoft Office, and iWork. Use these fonts for print design, website mockups, word processing, and more.

Add tags or filters to refine the list of fonts. Use our natural language search tags to browse fonts that fit the mood of your project, or you can filter by classification (such as serif or sans serif), properties (x-height, width, or weight), or language.


Once the fonts are added, they will appear in the font menu of each application, alongside all of your locally installed fonts. They will be immediately available in most programs, but a few need to be restarted to add new fonts to the menu (for example, Adobe Acrobat and Microsoft Office).


You can add as many fonts as you'd like, but we recommend keeping your added fonts list short to optimize performance. Every font you remove is tracked in your Previously Added tab, so you can easily add them again at any time.

You can quickly reinstall fonts from the Creative Cloud desktop by clicking the Install button next to the font name in your Added Fonts list. Once the fonts are reinstalled, they will show up as usual in all your font menus.

That's fine when the fonts are available under a free licence, and can be hosted directly alongside the website. Sometimes, however, the fonts I need to use are only available under a paid licence. My employer pays for a subscription to Adobe Fonts to give us access to these fonts.

Unfortunately I've found very little information online about using @font-face with Adobe Fonts (or Typekit, which it used to be called). The closest thing I found on Adobe's own website ( -web-fonts/articles/use-at-font-face-with-with-font-services.html) doesn't say anything about using @font-face with Adobe Fonts/Typekit.

For anyone else running into this issue, the solution I've gone with for now is to create my own @font-face declaration using the URLs from Adobe Fonts' CSS file, but with a different name for the font family.

I currently have a bunch of fonts from Adobe that are not showing up in Affinity Designer. Is there another step I need to do for me to finally use them in Designer? I can see them in DaVinci Resolve so the fonts are recognized from other non-adobe programs, just not Affinity. Thanks!

In earlier versions (with installable physical fonts) the fonts that came with Adobe apps (e.g. Adobe Caslon Pro, Adobe Garamond Pro, Adobe Jenson Pro, Myriad Pro, etc,) might be installed in specific locations accessible to apps that support direct loading of font resources from files (this is not supported in Affinity apps), so this might explain the problem, as well.

thanks for your replies! I actually had to reinstall all the Adobe fonts, just for non-adobe programs in the Creative Cloud app. It threw me off because they were available in other non-adobe programs except Designer. Anyways, all the fonts from the Adobe CC are currently in my Affinity Designer program

When you have completed adding fonts to your Website project, go to Manage Fonts, and the Web Projects tab, and here you see the Project ID. Copy this and head to the Global Options > Typography > Custom Fonts on your Avada website.

At the bottom of the Custom Font tab is an option to enter your Adobe Fonts ID. Simply enter your specific Web Project ID, and save your changes. Then just refresh your page, and the Adobe fonts will be listed. There is also a Refresh TypeKit Fonts Cache button, that you can use if you change the contents of your linked Web Project (only available in the back-end global options).

Once you have your API token, go to Oxygen -> Settings -> Typekit on your Oxygen site. There, enter the API token provided by Adobe Fonts and click Submit. Once the key is validated, you'll have a Kit to use with Oxygen dropdown populated with all of the available web projects from your Adobe Fonts account. Choose one and click Submit. Now, any Adobe Fonts included in the web project you selected will show up in all of Oxygen's font family dropdowns. If they don't show up in the list, simply search for them and they will appear.

After adding Adobe Fonts, you can apply them to text on your site. The fonts in your web project replace the built-in Adobe Fonts in site styles. To quickly find a custom Adobe Font, search for it by name in the Search box.

If none of your fonts are displaying, check your site for any JavaScript. If you ever used Adobe Fonts' JavaScript method to add fonts to your site, your fonts may not load properly. Remove the JavaScript and follow the steps above to add your Adobe Fonts.

Before following these steps, determine if the issue is related to your browser. If browser troubleshooting doesn't solve the issue, review this section for other common situations you might encounter when changing fonts.

As a printing company, I have a wide variety of customers using a wide variety of fonts including ones that are part of an Adobe CC subscription. When I open an InDesign file that uses Adobe (online) fonts, give us a preference setting to auto-activate those online Adobe fonts AND to deactivate those fonts when the InDesign file is closed. I can't have a bunch of fonts activated all the time as they COULD interfere with an older version of the font causing type reflow!

I work for a printing company, as well, and I'm having a similar issue. InDesign is prioritizing the Adobe Font (which is deactivated) rather than the packaged font, and at times it will interfere with the fonts and give me a message that the fonts are missing. I can save and close, and sometimes when I reopen the fonts will magically be there, and other times it will say missing again. It seems to be fairly random, but the only thing I can trace it back to is the Adobe Font. When it's missing, the Adobe Font menu always pops up asking if I want to activate it (though activating it doesn't work, and it still shows as missing after activation). I have "Auto-activate Adobe Fonts" turned off, but it doesn't stop it from trying to look for them if it deems they are "missing."

I can't believe Adobe is forcing this feature. I can have the same font from another vendor and if it's an Adobe font too, it's going to force activating their font on my computer. Therefore, if I stop using Adobe then their fonts go with it leaving me with messed up version of my files because I now have to go and add the fonts back manually (which my system will see as a different font b/c of a naming structure). Another reason why I steer clear of using Adobe fonts. It's just a way to lock you it to their platform. I'm so sick of these companies FORCING you to comply or else. What happened to FREEDOM OF CHOICE!!

Agreed, bypassing the document fonts folder would be immensely detrimental for those of us who work on packaged files, client files, and older jobs. The solution is simple: an InDesign preference setting where we can set the default behavior to enable/disable Adobe Font activation

This is a huge issue in automated Indesign file processing workflows and using scripts. Adobe fonts can't be activated, so the files can't be processed correctly. This needs to be fixed asap! -adobe-fonts/m-p/10926050?page=1#M175583

Adobe Fonts is causing issues with workflows that don't rely on Adobe Font versions as well -- it's giving preference to Adobe Font versions and ignoring what is in the Document fonts folder. This is a huge problem. There need to be some way to avoid this as well.

With the name change came numerous enhancements to the service. There are no longer any desktop sync limits, all fonts are now available for both web and desktop use, and there are no longer any pageview limits for using webfonts on websites. Anyone with a paid Creative Cloud subscription now gets complete access to the entire Adobe Fonts library without any restrictions or limits.

Not anymore. Previously, Typekit limited the number of desktop fonts users were able to have synced at one time (although it was possible to go over that limit without any repercussions). Now with Adobe Fonts, users are able to sync as many fonts concurrently as they would like.

The quality and selection on Adobe Fonts is much better, which you would expect from a paid service. Many fonts available on Google Fonts contain a limited number of styles and lack the features you would need in a professional font. And oftentimes (although definitely not always), fonts on Google Fonts are designed by new or inexperienced type designers. ff782bc1db

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