Please forgive me if I'm not allowed to start this thread since I'm not an admin or a mod, but I assumed what with 2022 winding down, there was almost no point in adding to the previous 2022 thread anymore, and since a 2023 thread was bound was inevitable, I thought what the heck?
Anyway, getting back to the discussion of fonts and such, I honestly believe if ever there was a specific font out there that just screamed 1990s, it's this one
Seriously, this font was everywhere in the 90s, just looking at me makes me feel like I'm under the age of 10 again.
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(*edit by kawaiidaigakusei. Thank you for the initiative, J_Scarbrough!)
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Happy 2023! General Discussion Thread
Ironscarf wrote:Ooh! I should definitely take advantage of this! A lot of their better fonts are expensive AF, and at least this way, I can actually own some of the fonts that I use extensively (Meanwhile, for example), as opposed to licensing them through Adobe Creative Cloud.
While we're on the subject of fonts, don't forget it's the Comicraft New Year's Day font sale today. Any font from their extensive library can be yours for a mere twenty dollars and twenty three cents, which doesn't get you much these days.
That, and admittedly, I've also been using some pirated freebie versions of some of their fonts anyway, which I've always felt somewhat guilty.
kawaiidaigakusei wrote:Verdana is a good, all-around, basic font for just about anything like that, but yeah, when I write scripts, I tend to use Courier, since it's the closest you can come to a typewriter font.
Verdana (size 10) is my bread and butter for writing long papers.
For leisure, I prefer font styles that look similar to typewriter keys and the Architect family of fonts are my main jam.
but yeah, when I write scripts, I tend to use Courier, since it's the closest you can come to a typewriter font.Funny because that was a font you could buy on daisy wheel or metal ball for your typewriter. I had it for my Smith Corona daisy wheel typewriter. Last physical typewriter I ever owned.
The wife used to have a little manual one for forms. That was Pica.
Okay, I just purchased and downloaded some of the fonts that I previously either used via a license through Adobe, or, ahem, downloaded bootleg freebies of.
Soooo . . . how exactly does Crossbar I technology work with these fonts? Because . . . from what I've been trying out on my computer, they don't work, regardless of what programs I'm using (i.e. image editing programs, or Word programs). According to Comicraft, the Crossbar I technology is in the OpenType version of these fonts . . . well, the OpenType versions are the ones I installed, but again, the Crossbar I technology doesn't appear to be working with any of them. Is there maybe something I've overlooked in the original Zip folders?
J_Scarbrough wrote:I just downloaded and installed a font, When I try to type words that usually wouldn't have a capital I, the font techology changes the letter to sans serif so it's just a plain upright bar. I can see this happening. I dunno what open source does or does not do, so I installed true type.
Soooo . . . how exactly does Crossbar I technology work with these fonts? Because . . . from what I've been trying out on my computer, they don't work, regardless of what programs I'm using
J_Scarbrough wrote:It sure works okay in mine. On the site they don't say "only works with truetype fonts" so… if it's not working for you, maybe time to contact them? There's a Contact Us link at the bottom of the main page.
Does that mean Crossbar I technology works in the Truetype version then?
dpat57 wrote:No, but again, just about all of their fonts that utilize their patented Crossbar I Technology note such as being a feature in the Opentype versions. But, I still have the original Zip folders with both versions, so even they strongly recommend installing the Opentype versions, I'll uninstall those and try the Truetype versions, as see if that makes a difference.
On the site they don't say "only works with truetype fonts" so…
I do the lettering within the same program that I do the rest; in the case of when I actually work on comics and such, I use Fireworks, simply because I had been using that since the days of when it (and Flash) used to be Macromedia products before Adobe bought them. I know Adobe hasn't updated or done anything with Fireworks in years, but even so, like I said, for a while, the Adobe licensed version of some of these fonts that I used, the Crossbar I Technology actually worked, both in Fireworks, and even in other programs like Word . . . even the bootlegged freebie versions I used, the Crossbar I Technology worked as well.
I bought Hush Hush yesterday and just added it to my library in opentype. A quick test run with Inkscape (I always use the poor man's illustrator for lettering!) shows the crossbar I tech to be working fine. I bought Meanwhile way back before the crossbar I tech was introduced and got used to that, so I can't help hitting shift anyway, but it's definitely there!
Looks like Fireworks was discontinued 10 years ago so I'd hazard it's a software issue and not a problem with your fonts.
dpat57 wrote:This. So much this. Using the free Photoshop CS2 Adobe put out when they stopped supporting the product and I know all the keyboard shortcuts. I'm not changing anything unless someone gifts me all new software.
Just saying, I use Paint.NET to add dialogue, balloons and effects. I've tried other programs, but when you use something and it's simple and you like it, it's hard to make a jump to something else.
I have a stylus and pad that I bought five years ago and it's still in the box because I'm so used to my mouse for everything. Now with a much smaller laptop I'll have room to actually use the stylus. Tempted to start drawing again.
dpat57 wrote:
Just saying, I use Paint.NET to add dialogue, balloons and effects. I've tried other programs, but when you use something and it's simple and you like it, it's hard to make a jump to something else.
Now you mention it, Paint.Net is the one program I've been using since I started and still use today. It's great for all kinds of editing tasks, lightweight and fast, like zipping through the traffic on a motorbike.
Like I said, I've been using Fireworks since high school: I took a Flash animation course for a couple of years (this was back when Flash was still mostly for webtoons like HOMESTAR RUNNER, and stuff like that), and our teacher had us using the entire Macromedia suite of programs for various different elements of making animations - Fireworks was basically what we used to create things such as backgrounds and scenics, or to make scanned JPGs of our storyboard panels. I tried Photoshop a time or two before, but I've just found Fireworks to be a slightly easier and more user-friendly version of Photoshop, which is why I continue to use it even to this day.
Ah I remember back in the day when Photoshop was the Rolls Royce of image editing programs but all the other stuff was done much better by Adobe's competitors- apart from Acrobat, which was crap but a standard for some reason.
Then Adobe ate the competition :(
Corel, Macromedia etc.
Fireworks was much better than the Adobe version of that program… I can't remember its name unfortunately.
Ozoneocean wrote:
Fireworks was much better than the Adobe version of that program… I can't remember its name unfortunately.
Don't worry about it, neither can anyone else. It was just some stray icon you never clicked on and you just used Flash and Fireworks.
J_Scarbrough wrote:
I honestly believe if ever there was a specific font out there that just screamed 1990s, it's this one
Seriously, this font was everywhere in the 90s, just looking at me makes me feel like I'm under the age of 10 again.
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I now realized that the "Funhouse Regular" font can be seen on all episodes of Kenan and Kel. Nifty, huh?
In regards to alternatives to Adobe products, I'm recently using Inkscape (for you know what), also I might wanna use Paint.NET someday, because I always use two of the MS Office programs for speech bubbles and some effects. XD
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Next week, I'm starting my college classes. Let's hope I stay focused this time, and can adjust to my new work schedule.
As much as I loved KENAN & KEL as a kid, watching it again as an adult, while there is an obvious nostalgic factor that's hard to deny, you kind of realize how much the show doesn't really hold up that well, and it's mainly because of just how dumber and dumber Kel got over the years. Earlier episodes he's not so bad when he's clearly just the foil to Kenan's straightman (which is why they worked so well together a comedy duo, as opposed to solo ventures), but the more moronic he got over the years, the more you realize (again, as an adult) just how absurd and preposterous the situations he got himself and Kenan into really were.
Having said that, I do wish the show was available on DVD in Region 1; I'd buy it.
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