Illustrator automatically imports and loads all fonts that are installed on your Windows or macOS. To use a new font, you must download that font on your computer. For more details, see Add a new font.

When an Illustrator document contains any missing Adobe Fonts, they are automatically activated if all the fonts are available in Adobe Fonts. This task runs in the background without displaying the Missing Fonts dialog.


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In the Classification Filter drop-down list, select your preferred font classes to narrow down the font list. By default, all font classes are displayed. Only Roman fonts can be filtered using this filter.

To set frequently used fonts as favorites, hover over a font and then click the Favorite icon displayed next to the font name. To filter all your favorite fonts, click the Show only Favorites filter.

To filter fonts that are visually similar, hover over a font and click the View Similar icon. Fonts closest in visual appearance to the selected font appear on top in the search results.

The variable font is an OpenType font for which you can customize the attributes, such as weight, width, slant, optical size. These fonts provide flexibility and customization of font attributes to create responsive web lettering and typography.

To change the number of fonts in the Recent Fonts, choose Edit > Preferences > Type (Windows) or Illustrator > Preferences > Type (macOS), and set the Number of Recent Fonts option.

This article got you started with adding, activating, and editing a font in Illustrator. Now, use the power of fonts to design your typographic artwork. If you still have any questions, check out the Fonts | FAQ and troubleshooting tips.


For the longest time if I select some text and start scrolling through fonts to find one that worked well, it would get stuck on certain fonts while scrolling and had to manually skip a couple fonts so I can keep browsing through only the get stuck by another. I decided that I've had enough of that and decided to search for a solution.

I am a font developer. I test the fonts that I am building in Illustrator. I will work on a font, export an installable .otf file, place it into the font directory on my system & test it out in Illustrator. Oncce I have done more work on the font & want to test again I will delete the older version from the fonts directory & install the new version in it's place. The new version has the exact same font name, style name, version number etc.

On the Windows platform I have seen some glitches with some fonts not showing up in one of the past version builds of Illustrator. One type family called Sica (by dooType) had some weights not showing up. I haven't noticed an issue with the current version of Illustrator. Likewise, I've seen similar font disappearance glitches, but with different fonts, in other applications such as CorelDRAW. For example, I have a 60 font super family called Vito (originally sold by Typejockeys, but now by Dots & Stripes type) that works fine in Illustrator. The fonts come in 5 widths, 6 weights per width and with matching italics. None of the 5 bold upright fonts show up in CorelDRAW 2020; they only appear italic. They do show up properly in previous versions of CorelDRAW.


Anyway, in the case of Windows, one of the culprits may be the Windows OS itself. Apparently the OS thinks there are only four weights of any given typeface (regular, italic, bold and bold-italic). When type families greater varieties of weights (from hairline to ultra black) the OS sometimes makes a mess of the situation. Type designers have to do things "under the hood" to fool the OS into working with the fonts properly.


With type technology continuing to make more leaps forward, with things like Variable Fonts or SVG Color Fonts, the folks at Microsoft and Apple really need to get on the ball at properly supporting current standards as well as these new standards. It's either that or we're going to end up stuck going in a time machine approach and become more reliant on third party font managers or type utilities like Adobe Type Manager from 20+ years ago.




I know this topic has come up before, but I've only ever seen it with regards to Macs. I use the Nexus Font font manager and I have tons of fonts which I can see in it, but lately I've been noticing that a bunch of them aren't showing up in Illustrator or InDesign (CS6). I find it especially strange that I can't access a lot of my Adobe fonts in Illustrator. I know sometimes with Macs the issue has been that fonts are being stored in multiple locations on the hard drive. I'm not sure if this is a common issue with Windows PCs or not or if anybody has any other ideas? I miss my fonts!

Same problem here... all installed fonts do not show preview. And somehow I managed that font preview in NexusFont and afterwards in Illustrator are showing... but today again... empty text boxes without font preview...

You may have already seen the solution elsewhere of disabling Windows Font Cache Management in Windows Services, but I continued to have problems with my fonts looking like they were missing even AFTER doing this disable.

The solution is to open Nexus Font, go to the font, or folder of fonts, select them and then choose "Uninstall fonts...". IMPORTANT: You want to choose to "Leave the files where they are" when you do this. When I installed all my fonts, I also chose to leave the font files in their location because it helps me organize them.

After you uninstall the fonts, you will see that "magically" they show up again and the font preview is no longer missing. Simply choose your fonts again (I just do a Ctrl-A in the folder I'm in), and choose to "Install fonts...", and again I choose to leave the files where they are.

I know tons of logos are created each day. Surely there is a workaround for this. Do any of you just not outline the fonts? I would think for such a large company, that would leave a lot of room for error if the vendor does not have our font installed when printing.

SHX fonts are not system fonts so there is a different process than you might be used to. These fonts do not get installed nor are they available from Font Book. You simply place the SHX file(s) in a directory, then tell LightBurn where to look for these files.

I'm having a bit of an annoying issue. at my work I often have to edit files where I don't have the font on my computer and that's fine, I usually find the font, install it, and it's fine. However, there are some fonts that, even after I change them, the "missing font" with the diamond next to the name remains in my list of fonts, so even if I open up a new file, those fonts are listed with the diamond next to them, and appear as the pink highlighted text. Is there a way to remove those fonts from the dropdown list of fonts? it's really annoying when I'm going through them and I have a bunch that are not useable. I've attached a screenshot of what I mean with red lines next to the fonts in question. In the file in the screenshot, it's a new file I'm working on where I'm NOT using any of those fonts, so why are they listed? It's so annoying and I just want them to be removed. I understand showing them when I have a file open that contains missing fonts, but not when I'm working on a file that doesn't contain them.

This may be worth a try: Open the offending document and Go to the Menubar > Type > Find Font. Then click the missing font and choose a font from your System that you know that you have. Select Change All, until you no longer have any missing fonts in the document. Hopefully it will clear whatever cache that is causing it to show on the font list.

This is avoided by correctly replacing all fonts on opening the document. You have these "artifacts" because at some point you opened a document and didn't correctly relink all missing fonts to a replacement.

Windows 7/8, Windows Vista, Windows XP (Home and Professional), and Windows 2000 have built-in support for OpenType fonts (both .otf and .ttf), as well as PostScript Type 1 fonts (.pfb + .pfm) and TrueType (.ttf). You can use the Windows Fonts control panel to install or remove fonts of all these formats, though the control panel is accessed slightly differently between Windows XP and Windows 2000. See the instructions below.

Note: If you wish to use PostScript Type 1 multiple master fonts with Windows XP or Windows 2000, you need to install ATM 4.1 or later, and follow the instructions below for installing fonts in Win 98/NT/ME. Do not install ATM 4.0 or earlier on Windows 2000 or XP.

If you are running Mac OS X, decide if you want to install fonts into both the Classic environment and the OS X native environment. If you want your fonts to be accessible to both Classic and Carbon/native applications, install your fonts into the Classic environment. If the fonts only need to be accessible to Carbon/native applications, install into the OS X native environment instead.

Periodic saving is a natural part of design work. Now when I periodically save I get to watch the 'wait bar' slowly slide by while it converts variable fonts and color fonts to objects. I DON'T even have any of those on my computer.

Hi everyone, a found a possible solution to this issue: Anyone try to save the file in 2020 format? In my case, I have a 2019 file, open it, working on it, and then save, at this point appears the msj "Converting text objects with variable fonts and colored". I re-save the file with other name but with the "2020" version (the latest) and the msj dissapears. I continue to try this option, feel free of try and comment.

I am beyond infuriated by this. I first tried to research this problem months ago and now i just live with it. How is it possible there is not a fix for this? I am not using variable fonts in this file. In fact, I NEVER use them because if it triggers this its not even remotely worth it. 2351a5e196

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