Active2 years, 3 months ago
It's been a few years since I've visited this topic, one which has been one of Apples biggest issues since OS9.
Font management. I have been using Font Explorer however I've never been very impressed as it crashes a lot and my font database has corrupted a few times which is infuriating.
Can anyone suggest their favourites and why?
Ready to use Fonts Find over 24k fonts to download and use in design projects of all kinds for web and print. These font sets feature hand-drawn, brush, and vector letterforms, along with extra character sets and embellishments for headers, text, and display. All of the East Asian language fonts and tools are available for use in the application. You turn on the East Asian language features in Office 2011 for Mac by using the Microsoft Language Register. Then, for each Office application that you want to type East Asian characters in, you can select a East Asian input type.
Thanks very much indeed.
AlexAlex19922 gold badges22 silver badges1010 bronze badges
2 Answers
I've been using FontAgentPro from www.insidersoftware.com for over a decade. Good app.
I tried FontXplorer back when it was free, it was good, but I wasn't overly impressed at that time. I'm sure it's gotten better since I saw it last.
I've also tried Extensis Suitcase - That pile will NEVER touch any system I own again.
Of course, the Mac OS has FontBook built in. You could use that. Although it's nowhere near as feature rich as the others.
Just my 2¢.
ScottScott158k1616 gold badges221221 silver badges446446 bronze badges
I just use RightFont from http://rightfontapp.com which is a lightweight font manager and super convenient. My team member also use it everyday.
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Whether you're putting together a resume, flyer, or web page, everyone needs to find and compare fonts some time. Here are some tools that can help you find the perfect font.
In all we're looking at a slate of excellent tools you can use to organize your fonts and identify and compare them; then we'll take a quick look at some great resources for downloading new fonts; and finally, we'll show you how you can make your own font, pixel-by-pixel or from your own handwriting.
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Organize and Preview Fonts
Every operating system comes with a built-in font viewer and installer, but sometimes the out-of-the-box options don't cut it for serious font work. Take a look at a few alternatives.
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All platforms with Adobe AIR: Test out words in any font already installed on your system using the free Font Picker application (original post). Enter the text you want to preview and scroll down the list of available fonts, and clear away the ones you don't want using the X to narrow down your list of choices and compare the finalists in a single window.
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Font Picker Previews Text Using Your Own Fonts
Windows/Mac/Linux (Adobe Air or Flash): Font Picker is a simple application that previews your text …
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Windows only: Organize, preview, categorize, and install fonts on your PC with the free AMP Font Viewer application (our original review). Particularly useful after you feast on the free font downloads listed below, Amp Font Viewer can categorize fonts and even install certain types for a single session, or save uninstalled fonts into a particular folder for archiving and backup. Windows users in search of the perfect font manager should also check out Cfont Pro (our original post).
AMP Font Viewer Previews, Categorizes, and Organizes Fonts
Windows only: Font organizer AMP Font Viewer handles all of your font management tasks—installing,…
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Mac users, OS X's built-in Font Book is pretty good for managing fonts, but don't forget you can also use Quick Look to preview fonts. Linux users, check out Fonty Python (our original post).
Preview Fonts with Quick Look
![Free Free](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126293446/439295726.jpg)
The Unofficial Apple Weblog runs down 10 ways to use Quick Look in Leopard, including one we…
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Identify and Compare Fonts
Stealing is the sincerest form of flattery, so when you see a killer font and think, 'I want that!' you also want to hit up one of these tools.
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When you're dying to know what hot font that web site or magazine is using, upload a digital image to the amazing WhatTheFont webapp (original post), a font-identifying system. If the font you're trying to ID appears in an image on a web site (like a header), just enter the URL of the image and let WhatTheFont do its magic. If you're looking to do some font identification on the go, you may also want to the WhatTheFont for iPhone. You'll have to help WhatTheFont identify what letters are what in the image, and its results will include a few similar options to choose from. Keep in mind WhatTheFont won't work for custom typography (like in Lifehacker's header).
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Discover font types with WhatTheFont
Web service WhatTheFont analyzes uploaded images and returns the font style matching the font used…
Read more ReadAdware Removal Tool For Mac
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To find a font from memory, try out Identifont, a simple webapp that asks a series of questions about the font you want and narrows down the field to options that match your description. You can also enter a known font name and get similar fonts, or a font designer or publisher to get the fonts they've created.
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Designer types trying to ID fonts from memory who notice things like whether it's monospaced or serif should check out TypeNavigator webapp. Start by choosing the font form, name, or designer, then check off various attributes of the font down the line in the left sidebar, and TypeNavigator will display fonts that match on the right side.
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Web page makers (or bloggers tweaking their CSS) should check out Typetester, a web-based screen font previewer. Enter your sample text into Typetester, and try out up to three different fonts (separated into web 'safe' and otherwise), at different sizes and styles side-by-side. When you've got the family, size, and style you want to use on your web page, Typetester will spit out the CSS you need to hook it up on your page.
If you're working on an ongoing project that requires choosing fonts—or you just want to get more familiar with typography—consider printing out this nifty 'Periodic Table of Typefaces' for your office wall (original post).
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Periodic Table of Typefaces Schools You on Fonts
Don't know your Minion from your Lucida? Can't decide which Sans-serif, Humanist font…
Read more ReadFree Font Downloads
There are countless places online to both purchase fonts or download them for free. Here are a few good sources for font freebies.
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Screenshot Tool For Mac
- Dafont (original post)—One of our favorites, preview fonts live online and download the ones you like.
- Font Squirrel—'Free fonts for graphic designers, all with commercial-use licenses.'
- TypeNow.net's Themed Fonts—Free fonts from TV shows, movies, and brands you love, from Alias to Xerox.
- Fonts 500—'The web's top 500 fonts of all time,' free to download one by one, or get all 500 for under 3 bucks.
- SearchFreeFonts.com—A user-rated directory of free fonts organized by category and rating.
- 1001 Free Fonts—Offers separate Windows and Mac versions with online preview and license information.
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If you're suffering from font overload, rely on the experts' picks for best fonts. Designer Vitaly Friedman lists his 25 best free quality fonts here. (Got another quality list of free fonts? Post 'em up in the comments.)
Make Your Own Fonts
Finally, if someone else's font doesn't cut it for you, there are a few ways to make your own.
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Turn your handwriting into a font: with YourFonts (free, our original post), or Fontifier ($9). Back in the day I gave Fontifier a test run; see how it works and download my (terrible) handwriting font from my 2006 article, Make your own font.
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YourFonts Turns Your Handwriting Into a Personlized Font
YourFonts is a web-based service that turns your handwriting into a TrueType font for free. If you…
Read more ReadDesign your font pixel by pixel: If your chicken scratch won't make a good font, you can design a custom font online with the easy FontStruct (our original post). While it's not a pro tool, FontStruct lets you draw your font pixel-by-pixel in your web browser and download the results. Do the whole alphabet or a single letter, and browse the typographical creations others have created there.
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Typography App For Macbook Pro
FontStruct Creates Typefaces Brick-by-Brick
For certain projects, even the gargantuan list of pre-installed fonts on your system just…
Read more ReadWhat's your favorite font or typography tool? Let us know in the comments.
Gina Trapani, Lifehacker's founding editor, could spend all day playing with fonts. Her weekly feature, Smarterware, appears every Wednesday on Lifehacker. Subscribe to the Smarterware tag feed to get new installments in your newsreader.
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