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SOME ONE HAVE IN HIS COMPUTER THE MATRIX MOVIE FONT? pLS LET ME KNOW WHERE DOWNLOAD IT
THANKS
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Take a look at this site i think it shows a sample of the letters your looking for if it is what your looking for i'll find you a matching font.
I think what you are looking for is a dot matrix type font. take a look and let me know.
brother wp site
BiG
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I am lookin for the font used for the actors names on the original Matrix poster. Not the movie title itself, but the actors names and also the tagline. Does anyone know what that font is?
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That's better. It is the Matrix. You'll want the Tall.
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Thanks Tørnquist, I appreciate you looking. If you could just identify the Matrix font, I would be perfectly happy with that. If you could identify both, that would be amazing. But I don't want to waste your time with 2 complicated fonts. Thanks for the help so far, and thanks for not giving up!
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Also known as The Matrix font. Here you have it.
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Thanks for your help!
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Read carefully and note the dot after the e of Title ...
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mbrinkma,
If you have a vector graphics application like CorelDraw or Adobe Illustrator, you might try editing the font on an as needed basis.
When you type a letter in CorelDraw, you can see that the letter is made up of an outline with lots of points (like a dot-to-dot game. If you drag specific points you can distort the font... and in your case, elongate the ending strokes of each word.
I attached an example that I did just now with a simple Brush Script font. It took me about 2 minutes...but I've been using CorelDraw for over 15 years.
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Finding out which font is used in the PDF should not be that difficult. Click file > document info > fonts and you know. Finding the font itself may not be so easy. In '94 Wordperfect shipped with a number of 'international' versions of the Times New Roman and Helvetica with many dialectrics. in '95 Monotype brought us someting like that; the 'Special G1 and G2' series. But I have not seen one with the 'dot' being used as 'underscore'. So I assume that somewhere there is a more elegant version around where for capitals the underscore has been replaced with a dot :?:.
Maybe a university with a faculty for middle european (slavic) languages (see the e in Yo'el) can help you out. Try digging in the Czech :?: font scene. Or, maybe Alex knows something about this :shock:?
I'm afraid this is all I know about this.
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