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Adobe has announced they are ending support for PostScript Type 1 fonts in all their apps in January 2023. As we shared in our webinar, failure to identify, isolate, and replace PostScript Type 1 fonts in your collection could lead to costly delays from unexpected text overset and reflow.
We want to help you avoid this kind of creative chaos. In this guide we’ll show you how to discover, evaluate, and find replacements for all PostScript Type 1 fonts within your creative environment.
The first step is to identify PostScript Type 1 fonts that live in your company’s managed font workgroups. It’s important to gather these fonts for the next step of isolating them from your workgroups, so they cannot be used for new projects.
Follow these steps to ensure PostScript Type 1 fonts are restricted from ongoing use, but are still available during the “replacement” period on a case-by-case basis.
Audit your Creative Cloud documents and templates to discover those containing PostScript Type 1 fonts.
There are 3 main actions you can take with handling documents and templates that contain PostScript Type 1 fonts: Remove versions that are no longer needed, find replacements for your PostScript Type 1 fonts, and convert fonts that are no longer commercially available.
Step 1 is the simplest step, since it involves identifying the documents that are no longer needed so they can be archived without any further action.
Step 2 requires identifying documents that need further review. Understanding which PostScript Type 1 fonts show up in each document is key to deciding what to do next. Documents that require further action should be analyzed to determine which PostScript Type 1 fonts they have in common. It’s likely the same fonts have been used in multiple documents, which will make replacing them much less tedious. Maintaining a fonts log for each file can help the replacement process.
Step 3 considers the decision to convert fonts that are still needed but no longer commercially available. Due to font quality and compliance concerns, conversion methods should only be used in exceptional cases and only after all other options have been exhausted. In the long-term, converted fonts should be deprecated as soon as substitutions can be found.
Maintain an ongoing process and monthly reporting during the “resolution” period to ensure PostScript Type 1 fonts are replaced in your font management workflow before Adobe’s end-of-support deadline in January 2023.
Column 1: Original PostScript Type 1 Font |
Column 2: Official Replacement Font |
Fields: Font name, PostScript Name, Type, Version, Foundry, Font Sense ID | Fields: Font name, PostScript Name, Type, Version, Foundry, Font Sense ID |
Metadata information for the original PostScript Type 1 font can be easily exported from the ‘Fonts by Name’ report in Universal Type Server