I have noticed that Figma does not display a slider for the italic axis. This only happens if the font is created with a slant axis. Is there a reason why it is not possible to select a position within the italic axis on a slider interface? According to the specs, the italic axis allows a scale interpretation.

Thanks for the feedback. As I shared with the internal team, we took the approach of interpreting it as a on/off value, so the current spec for variable font italics is on or off. We keep hearing you and consider for the future improvements.


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I've recently exported an image from Microsoft Expression Design to a .psd format, but when I open the exported .psd & attempt to create a new font layer, any font I choose will be italicized but only slightly. I'm positive that my font style is not set to be italicized, and when I select Italic the font will become visibly more italic.

Photoshop comes with fake bold/italic settings to provide fonts that don't naturally support it with those settings. But if that setting gets turned on, it'll stay on until it's turned off. As you can see in my screenshot, the font still says "Regular" even though the fake italics is pressed.

If this feature is available, I'm not seeing it. It would be hugely helpful if the Browse Fonts feature allowed for a font style to be chosen in the filter, for example italic. I'm trying to find a font with a nice italic, but can't filter to see it in the preview, I have to click into every font to see what it looks like.

Sorry for the delay in response. It looks like you need a fonts with a nice italics. However, in order to search for the font variation, we need to first search for the font and then you can view the family of the fonts which has all the variations in it.

That's exactly my point. If I knew what font I wanted, I wouldn't be searching. It would be nice if I could browse all fonts, by their italic. To have to pick a font, click to view the whole family just to see the italic variation is extremly time consuming. If I can browse fonts by type - sans serif, mono, script, etc. - why can't I also browse by italic, bold, light? It seems to be a completely rudimentary function, one available in pretty basic font management software.

Hi Stacy, I just want to add my support for your point. I've just gone into the Fonts search page expecting to be able to pull up lots of examples of italics. But, although all sorts of searches are possible, many I am unlikely to ever need, such as a narrow width, light weight, slab serif, art deco face (Niagara), there is no facility to search for italics. It's a big omission, I think.

Can I ask Adobe to add this feature asap. Thanks.

Did you know?: These bold and italic characters were originally added to the Unicode spec for use in mathematical notation. Learn more about how you're "supposed to" use these characters on the blog.

Bold and italic text can be used in social media and on the web for a few different purposes. These text styles can emphasize important information, draw attention to specific content, and highlight key points or calls-to-action. Using a bold or italic text generator enhances readability, breaks up long paragraphs, and can establish a visual hierarchy. These styles also contribute to a brand's visual identity, adding personality and consistency to an online presence.

Bold and italic text can be used for styling usernames, creating visually appealing posts, or on platforms that lack native text styling functionality. The generated text comes from Unicode's Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block, originally intended for mathematical notation.

While the bold and italic text that is generated here looks similar to text that is bolded or italicized in a word processor, it is different. These characters are not generated using the HTML tags (like or ), nor are they styled with the CSS attributes (like font-weight: bold or font-style: italic). If you copy this text, the letters will retain their styling when pasted elsewhere. This is the magic of Unicode.

It's crucial to use bold and italic text sparingly to avoid overwhelming readers. Additionally, it's important to note that the appearance of this text may vary across platforms and devices, depending on how they render Unicode.

People who use our bold text generators also use the styles below; including bold cursive, bold fraktur, black bubble text, and black square text. These styles are similar to bold text styles above, because they have thick dark lettering and a striking look that can be used to highlight words and phrases. Double-struck text, also known as "blackboard bold" is another unique style that can be used to give your text a bold look. People who use our italic text generators might also enjoy our cursive text styles, which contain slanted letters just like italics, albeit with a more unique style.

Mac OS starting with Big Sur ( 11 ) and continuing with Ventura ( 13 ) is systematically locking down the System Fonts. Starting with 11, the operating system stopped allowing third party programs to deactivate system fonts on your machine. Now with MacOS 13, now the Supplemental folder appears to be a bit harder to get at as well.

When I look at the PS names and Font sense IDs in Connect fonts, they are different between faces. These are the two attributes Connect Fonts uses to differentiate between fonts. Since they are both different no conflict is found and they are both activated.



The issue is probably the fonts.

I have four different versions of the Gotham family (16 styles) and the name fields inside the fonts range from a bit odd to totally wacko.

Your fonts could be missing required info.

Or APub could be confused by the way Book is used in what would normally be the Regular style group (which is treated a bit differently than other groups).

First just to clarify ...

Calibri and Calibri Italic are OpenType fonts, but with TrueType outlines.

The OpenType standard/spec recommends that

- OpenType fonts with PostScript outlines have the .otf extension

- OpenType fonts with TrueType outlines have the .ttf extension

Most of the time this recommendation is followed by commercial font foundries.

But you will find OT fonts with TrueType outlines with the .otf extension.

And older actual TrueType fonts also have the .ttf extension.

It is confusing.

Your fonts - Gotham.v3.201.(2014-03-19).OTF-PS - Style Groups

Note that older windows apps like LibreOffice use the style groups.

APub is using the Typographic Family and Subfamily (not pictured here).

The point is - all of it looks OK.


Gotham (normal width) tested in APub 1.7.0.305 (Beta)

All fonts selected from the toolbar - which appears to be Typographic Family/Subfamily.

It all looks OK.

Export to PDF - checked and all fonts are correct.

Below is Export to PNG.


I followed your advice and found Gotham-Book_0.otf etc. in the font folder. After deleting all gotham fonts I restartet Windows and tried to reinstall the fonts. But Windows claimed that the fonts are already installed so the font cache wasn't cleaned. I installed them anyway, but the original issue still persists.

Once I cleaned-up all the Windows font issues I now keep a tab open in my file manager to the fonts folder. When I un-install fonts I make sure they are gone. Often files are left behind and then when you install a new version duplicates are created. It appears some apps such as APub have problems with that.


I knew about the duplicate fonts issue because that is the same problem I ran into with LibreOffice on Windows. It too would not display certain fonts until I cleaned-up all the duplicate font files, registry errors, and font cache issues.

LibreOffice now takes about three minutes to rebuild its font cache when I install new fonts, but at least there are no issues like this any more.

I tried each and everything without success. On my PC Gotham Book Italic is shown as missing in APub's resources dialog although it's properly displayed in the document. All other Gotham fonts work fine and on another Windows PC everything works fine with the same Gotham font set.

I chose a 15 italic angle because it matches the 15 angles already present in the diagonal letters such as A/V/Y/v/y. These letters contain one slanted side and one upright side, and I found that they could work equally well in both Roman and Italic, so I left them untouched.

But I did not made any changes on the font. I double checked the global options and recognized, that there are not italic styles used. Nevertheless it looks very strange, because everything is italic and underlined.. does anyone knows how to deal with it?

had a similar issue and could find no help online. turns out the regular version of Consolas (which is set to the default sys monospace font when VS is installed, i think) was removed when some thrid-party application was uninstalled. i just had to find the consolas.tff file online and manually install it, which fixed everything. i imagine similar things happen with various font families depending on installations, so worth checking the default system fonts for completeness

I have a reccuring issue that I could not resolve. I use storyline for business purposes, and I've noticed every time I open a project from my computer the font is automaticly becomes italic. The italic button is not selected, but all the fonts in the file still seem italic. Because of that, I can not publish any project from my personal computer, and every edit I make in the text needs to be reviewed.

Select the fonts for the different font attributes(usually bold, italic, and bold-italic are seperate font files)

The bold/italic check boxes, in the properties panel only affects new text.

To change existing text use the buttons in the T-Panel.

Now, when I open Safari, Firefox or Word:Mac the Arial font is ALWAYS in italic and I cannot undo it. Could you please help me? I also do not know which other major fonts are corrupt. Is there a way to find out? 0852c4b9a8

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