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ok i was reading one of my Sweet Valley Senior Year books the other day, I think it was "He's Back"...i really like one of the fonts in there, the one that's used by the character Cherie Reese. i would really like to be able to find it and download it to my computer, so if anyone knows what the font used by the character Cherie Reese in the SVSY books is called, please please post it here!! thanx.
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puzzle pieces
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I have looked everywhere. I really don't think it is a custom font and I don't think it is a W made created from pieces and parts. But, I have exhausted most options.
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These puzzle pieces are some kind of font?
Anyone know it?
Please help
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Quote: "Designed in response to Gavin Peacock's Flat Pack Mail Art call. Gavin, (a.k.a. The Man from Icon), mailed out packs of interlockable cardboard pieces for mailartists to create something and photograph for his documentation. Any excuse for a font."
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Does anyone know if there is a road dingbat font out there somewhere? something like LEGO roads if you know what I mean, like pieces of a road (straight ones, bent ones, crossings...) that you can put together to form a road. I have never seen any, but it would be great if there is one.
Thank you!
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Alex
That font is exclusive to Porsche. They won't even give it to their American advertising agencies.
And if anyone is trying to use it for commercial purposes (right down to the lonely guy who makes 10 pieces of jewelry to sell) and Porsche finds out about it - they send their lawyers in...
Not one of the fonts you want around here.
They've used it for years - my first encounter 1978 - on a brand new 1979 911 SC - on the side in that script it said Targa.
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Hi-
This font is indeed called Samba, and is one of FontMonster's ( www.fontmonster.co.uk ) pieces of genius.
This is a problem I've found appearing over and over again in the freeware font community: so many fine creations are floating around on the web and yet unless their designers are featured on archives such as this or linked to on the more popular sites many will go unnoticed. It's a bugger, but I guess it's just the way things go.
I hope you find what you're looking for.
-Tørnquist
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The first one I found is 5x5 dots.
[img:7bd1a94b7f]http://thebronx.myweb.nl/images/5x5dots.gif[/img:7bd1a94b7f]
But I think it is far from ideal, all letters having the same hight.
Why not name a font that you think would be the best if it only were in dots? Then I'll make you the font.
When I was young and ignoranent we learned the shape of the letters with the help of letters cut out of sandpaper glued on pieces of board. Amazing that I can still remember this.
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If you need to convert PC ttf fonts to MAC ttf fonts here is your solution: TT Convertor 1,5 - This program converts all the PC-fonts into MAC-fonts. And, it is freeware. http://home.swipnet.se/highsite/programs/prog.html
Mac truetype to PC (Windows) truetype conversion is usually easily done without any special software. You can do it in a text editor at least if that editor permits some viewing of binary data. Just go to the top and find the first occurrence of these hexadecimal bytes: 00 01 00 00 00, usually a bit before the first pieces of readable text such as LTSH, OS/2, NVDM, cmap, fpgm, gasp, and so on. There may be more than one such sequence, so iterate. Remove everything before that hexadecimal sequence. Save and you have a Windows truetype font.
A free hexeditor can be found here: http://www.hhdsoftware.com/hexeditor.html
Have fun and ... be nice to the cats.
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