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1 matches view forum post #16557 No match found. Looks like you have to prepare for eternal peace ...
1 matches view forum post #9796 Well, I guess not. I'm pretty new to this area of my work. I got moved into art dept. about a year ago, but I have no kind of training really. I just know how the process needs to go to prepare art for screen printing, and I'm pretty proficient with Illustrator 10 now. How does a font manager work, and where can I get a free one?
1 matches view forum post #10174 Hi all, I scourged through most of the threads here but was unable for find a similar font. I need the name of this font or atleast a font that is similar to the above. I need to prepare some buttons for my website and need them to be small - all fonts I downloaded are either too thick/big or thin. Thick fonts are not clear when seen in reduced size and thin fonts make the buttons longer. Thanks in arvance Rizwan
1 matches view forum post #13465 I once read that, but can't remember where and when. It is in the USA not uncommon to rename a font even if you have a licence to resell. See Bitstream eo. Did Corel stop bundling fonts with Draw? I don't know. Maybe with version X3 but they were there with version 12. CorelDraw 12 Product Features: * Design suite for illustration, page-layout vector drawing, and more; includes CorelDraw Graphics 12, Corel Photo-Paint 12, and Corel R.A.V.E. 3 * Over 10,000 professional clipart images; 1,000 TrueType and Type 1 fonts; and 1,000 photos and objects are included etc About the US High Court ruling; the trouble is a bit in the difference in copyright interpretation in the USA and over here. Here a digital type is nothing else than a way to reproduce a type and the intellectual property lies with the actual designer or the legal entity that the copyright has been transferred to. The interpretation of a design is what it looks like. Not how it is constructed. With you a digital type design is considered as software (the code). Difference in rendering the glyphs is considered a different type (font) and the copyright is in the code and the name. A letter is a letter and you can not copyright the shape. I remember someone then making the remark that the judges could not see the difference between a Helvetica and a Times. Funny thing is, try to use/sell a digital version of a Disney figure. Prepare for a huge traffic jam of gray suits on your doorstep.
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