![]() ![]() ![]() I mean, who really needs nine font weights anyway…? :-) Not really a viable long-term solution though. If the fonts are available under a permissive license (like the Google fonts), you might be able to use FontForge to fudge the font names somehow.įWIW, I managed to get the Extra Bold working by installing precisely FOUR fonts from those available (Regular, Italic, ExtraBold, ExtraBold Italic) and it seems to work fine. I’d love to see fonts work like this in Storyline (2+). Whenever you want to use a font in Inkscape, you have to install it on your operating system first, then Inkscape should catalog it next time you launch it. Some Free Software such as LibreOffice and Inkscape (along with the Adobe apps) list all the weights in the submenu, so this is definitely possible to implement. Storyline (sadly) works just like Word and PPT, where you get the default Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic (whether an actual font exists or not). Then it seems to be down to the individual application as to whether all the individual font weights are available. As a result, the self-worth of many individuals resides in how they look or their weight. So they appear to be programmed differently. Daily Gifts - Free Fonts, Crafts & Graphics Get a Free Font. If anyone wants to see an illustration of the problem, go to Google Fonts and install the complete Open Sans and Raleway font families: Open Sans appears in font menus spread across several different families ( Open Sans Light, Open Sans Semibold…) while Raleway just has the one. ![]() We wanted to use Raleway for a new design, but couldn’t access the Extra Bold weight. I just discovered this thread after having a similar issue with accessing different font weights. font-weight: normal, bold, bolder, lighter, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900. ![]()
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