![]() ![]() Using a second declaration alongside a unicode-range (something I’d not come across before, but looks really handy). It’s a good solution to his problem but it’s not really “combining” in the truest sense of the words, at least in my eyes. Loving the “Just Another Hand” font but not loving the position of the hyphen & equals glyphs.Īlthough he calls his solution “combining fonts” I disagree. His case was similar to the scenario I mentioned above. What triggered me to write this was recently enjoying an article about combining fonts by Jake Archibald. Your design doesn’t require the full character set.One option is (and I’m sure it happens more often than not) to find a different font, but what if you could fix the problems? There are a variety of reasons you could want to fix/edit an existing font. This occurrence can greatly depend on where you’re sourcing your fonts from (for example: free ones!). We’ve all been there when you absolutely love a font and you’ve dropped it into your designs, only to find out it’s missing a certain special character or the punctuation glyphs doesn’t quite capture the same feel as the rest of the character set.
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