Stylistic set vs separate font

I'm designing a font combining Latin with insular Gaelic characters as a stylistic set. In your opinions, is this the best way to proceed? Should the Latin and Gaelic be separate fonts or combined as I'm currently doing?

Thanks in advance.
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Comments

  • Wolf BöseWolf Böse Posts: 35
    i have decided against stylistic sets when it goes beyond replaying one or two glyphs.
    (two story a and so on) 
  • Mark SimonsonMark Simonson Posts: 1,652
    edited June 2018
    Recent versions of the Adobe apps have wider (not just InDesign) and more visible support for Stylistic Sets, including support for set names. I wonder if this has made a difference in terms of use and awareness.
  • Wolf BöseWolf Böse Posts: 35
    3 people raised their hands.
    I dont have the same sample size but my experience is that the same applies to other OT features. That is to say we need to educate more…
  • The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • James PuckettJames Puckett Posts: 1,969
    I dont have the same sample size but my experience is that the same applies to other OT features. That is to say we need to educate more…
    Maybe type foundries should get together and produce a free ebook on using OpenType features in various apps. Similar to the PDF Laura Worthington uses to educate her customers about accessing PUA encoded glyphs.
  • Thomas PhinneyThomas Phinney Posts: 2,730
    Adobe once had an “OpenType User Guide” PDF that I did most of the writing for, which was pretty much exactly that. I think it was about a dozen pages. It explained what every feature was and how it worked and how to get at all the features in the apps of the day. They stopped updating it after I left, unfortunately. (About 5% of the content lives on today on a web page, though.)

    I would hope/suspect they would be willing to let folks use and revise the content, as long as it was not something being sold. I would be happy to dust that off. I am sure I have at least the PDF version, though presumably/sadly not the InDesign file.
  • I tend to pack everything into the main font via stylistic sets and then export dedicated instances with the most useful sets rotated into the default slots for ease of use.
  • Adobe once had an “OpenType User Guide” PDF that I did most of the writing for, which was pretty much exactly that. I think it was about a dozen pages. It explained what every feature was and how it worked and how to get at all the features in the apps of the day. They stopped updating it after I left, unfortunately. (About 5% of the content lives on today on a web page, though.)

    I would hope/suspect they would be willing to let folks use and revise the content, as long as it was not something being sold. I would be happy to dust that off. I am sure I have at least the PDF version, though presumably/sadly not the InDesign file.
    I have the (a) pdf of Adobe's, same one likely unless there is a newer one. ID CS3 circa 2008.
  • Thomas PhinneyThomas Phinney Posts: 2,730
    @Mike Wenzloff
    That is about right. Last version I did would have been some time in 2008.

    I am not immediately finding a copy of it myself! I will have to go look harder.
  • I can email a copy...PM me an address or let me know just to upload it to dropbox and I can PM a link. I'm using mobile right now.

    I think that if the scope of such a project is broad acceptance and usage of OT features, the document should be less technical/historic as in the first part of that document and should be as application agnostic as possible--i.e., not Adobe-centric.

    Which then may preclude using the verbiage of that document altogether.

    I believe the target audience should be defined and kept in mind when writing the document.

    Mike
  • Matt McDonaghMatt McDonagh Posts: 14
    edited September 2018
    Thanks for your advice guys, and sorry for the late reply. I think I'll continue development as a single file and split them into two on export. I'll use stylistic sets for a few alternate characters in the Gaelic version (s and r mainly).


    When I did Andron-Irish as a font package of its own, I utilized OT-set-1 for the implementation of the alternate insular r- and s- shapes; and OT-set-2 for the implementation of the lenited consonants.
    What's the general opinion on this approach (OT-set-2?) for lenited consonants as opposed to key commands. I can see how it might be easier for the end user. At the moment my lenited consonants (ċ, ḋ, ḟ, ġ, ṁ, ṅ, ṗ, ṡ) are created as cdotaccent etc. with the associated key commands when typing. I think my approach is more technically correct, but I can see how Andreas' method would be easier for the user.
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