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Re: Does that “y” exist?
Yes, it exists, and can certainly be appropriate to this style of type, but yours is too wide, as is your lowercase u (your uppercase U, conversely, is too narrow). Begin by making the counter of the…2 -
Re: Are OTF fonts from Glyphs broken on Windows?
NotePad is especially useful for testing raw OpenType lookup behaviour as processed by Uniscribe. There's minimal intervening levels in Notepad, so it is better suited for this process than Word…3 -
Re: Are OTF fonts from Glyphs broken on Windows?
Re. testing on Windows: The perennial problem is that there are so many different layers of system, shared libraries, and apps, that it is difficult to diagnose where a problem is occurring. Testing …4 -
Re: Are OTF fonts from Glyphs broken on Windows?
Have you confirmed that OS/2 things like codepage and Unicode range bits are correct in the font that is being generated? That's the most common font fallback trigger on Windows. You say that TT…1 -
Re: Does that “y” exist?
In a type style like this, yes it could. This construction — with related uppercase — is found in handwriting, and could be adapted to type that also uses the monocular a and g like this one.1
