![]() For information regarding other uses of Source Sans, see copyright and license details for Source Sans Pro ExtraLight, Source Sans Pro ExtraLight Italic, Source Sans Pro Light, Source Sans Pro Light Italic, Source Sans Pro Regular, Source Sans Pro Italic, Source Sans Pro Semibold, Source Sans Pro Semibold Italic, Source Sans Pro Bold, Source Sans Pro Bold Italic, Source Sans Pro Black, and Source Sans Pro Black Italic. You're free to use it with your Adobe Fonts account just as you would any other font in the Adobe Fonts library. Source Sans is available via an open source license. Typefaces released as Adobe Originals are the result of years of work and study, regarded as industry standards for the ambition and quality of their development. Today the Type team’s mission is to make sophisticated and even experimental typefaces that explore the possibilities of design and technology. i've pretty much run out of ideas.The Adobe Originals program started in 1989 as an in-house type foundry at Adobe, brought together to create original typefaces of exemplary design quality, technical fidelity, and aesthetic longevity. I still have a bit of work to do on this project, and will be getting more Chinese translations, so any help would be much appreciated. I try repeating steps that I thought had worked last time, and find they now don't appear to be giving me the same results. I've tried pasting into InDesign (it crashed the program), into Sherlock's translation channel (sometimes works as an intermediate between PDF and TextEdit), and occasionally, through some convoluted series of steps, I'll be able to get the Chinese into Illustrator in a font I can work with, but there doesn't seem to be any rhyme or reason to the process. No matter what font I format them into, I still can't get the original characters back. BUT.upon closer examination, some of the characters seem to have been substituted when copying and pasting from the PDF into TextEdit - they're not the same as in the PDF. Some fonts make the translation, others are "missing" to Illustrator, even though they are in fact there. I've had some success pasting into TextEdit, formatting the same text in a number of different fonts, saving, and then opening the TextEdit file in Illustrator. ZCool QingKe HuangYou is a free font created by Zheng Qingke, and donated to the ZCOOL font project for public use, and now hosted on Google Fonts. When I copy the PDF text and paste into TextEdit, it looks good, and I can change the font. When the file opens, once again I get a mess of symbols. (even though I know I have those fonts - they're listed in AI's font menu). Fonts with foreign encodings have been reencoded". When I try to open the PDF in Illustrator, I get a dialog saying: "Missing TrueType fonts have been substituted with the default font. When I try to copy the text from the PDF directly into Illustrator, it's just a mess of symbols and boxes. The Chinese text displays properly in a PDF file that was supplied (the accompanying MSWord file displays the Chinese as blank spaces or a mess of symbols and punctuation). I'm having a similar problem problem bringing Chinese text into Illustrator. Update, I also tried importing that pdf file into Photoshop, it rasterised it and brought the Chinese text in successfully, but I would prefer to have it as outlines in Illustrator, if anybody has any suggestions on how to do this, i would be really happy to hear from you. ![]() ![]() OK, just tried that, no good, Illustrator imports the pdf as editable text and still can't see the Chinese part. Hey, I just had an idea, maybe if I change the font in TextEdit and then create a pdf file, it will import into Illustrator as outlines. Is Illustrator the only program that can't see this text?Īll I need to do is get it into Illustrator long enough to select a different font and then turn it into outlines. Ironically, the Chinese text looks just fine in Safari browser. If somebody wants to have a crack at it, the rtf file can be viewed/downloaded at: I have also tried copy and paste directly into Illustrator, still no good. I have tried enabling the Chinese input menu from the System Preferences International Pane (both simplified and traditional), still no good. The rtf file opens up just fine in TextEdit, but if I try to place it into Illustrator, some of (sometimes all of) the Chinese text comes in as rubbish or just blank. ![]() I need to input some translated Chinese text I receive in a rtf file into Adobe Illustrator 10.0.3 English version on Mac OS X 10.2.6 also English version. ![]()
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