The post How to Embed Fonts in PowerPoint FAQs appeared first on Donna's Technology Resources.
]]>When you use a unique font that is not a standard Windows or Office font, you risk suffering with the possible effects of font substitution occurring when your file is opened on another system. When font substitution takes place, the look of your presentation can change considerably. Parts of the text can become misaligned, text wrapping points may change, and special characters can turn into meaningless rectangles. To prevent font substitution from happening, you can try embedding the fonts to make sure the document looks the same on other computers. As a result, you minimize the risk of the fonts, layout, and styling of the presentation changing. Without using the embed feature, you may feel your only choice is to rely on sharing your file in only in pdf format because pdfs allow you lock down the look of the document. But pdfs suffer from the disadvantage of not allowing full editing rights and not being able to play your animations.
To turn on embedding you need to activate that option. Keep in mind that the file size will increase typically by several megabytes for each font embedded.
No, please be aware of 2 very important features of a font that can limit your ability to embed it.
Font designers often will restrict the ability of a font to be embedded. This prevents unlicensed use of the font. Generally, if the font is purchased at a higher price point, the ability to have PowerPoint embeddability is unlocked.
Fonts can be purchased with 1 of 4 levels of embeddability:
The levels of Editable and Installable allow the font characters to be embedded in PowerPoint.
To check what rights you have to a font: go to Control Panel in Windows and click Fonts. Clicking on the font shows the Font embeddability.
In the picture above, the Mickey Ears Regular font is shown as being Installable Therefore, this font can be embedded in PowerPoint and Word.
For more information, check out Microsoft’s Font Redistribution FAQ document.
Unfortunately, you cannot tell directly from within PowerPoint. Be aware that just looking at the font named in the Font box does not help, because it will always show the name of the original font even if the system has no access to that font. The only way to way to investigate if the embedding truly worked is to use a workaround.
The only way to way to investigate if the embedding truly worked is by using a workaround through exporting the presentation as a pdf. For the workaround, you should launch your PowerPoint presentation from a computer that does not have the font(s) installed and save it as a pdf. Then compare the fonts listed in the pdf by Adobe Acrobat Reader or Adobe Acrobat to those listed in PowerPoint.
The complete steps to do the workaround are:
Below is an example showing the two listing of fonts side by side. . By comparing the lists, you can see the Proxima Nova font is substituted in PowerPoint since it is not listed in the Adobe pdf list of fonts.
Unfortunately, with PowerPoint, you cannot control the font substitution. The algorithm that PowerPoint uses in selecting fonts to substitute is not completely known. Even with two systems that are completely identical and with both not possessing the original font, PowerPoint will not necessarily choose the same font on the two different systems.
On the Home tab, in the Editing group, click on the drop down menu for Replace and select Replace Fonts.
In the Replace Font window, work with each font listed in the Replace box one at a time. If the font needs to be replaced with a more common font, select the replacement font in the With box and click on Replace.
The conversion will replace the fonts on:
Safe fonts are those that are generally installed with either the Operating System or with the install of Microsoft Office.
These resource pages at Indezine.com and at Ampsoft.net list the fonts installed with the various versions of Microsoft Office. If you utilize one of the fonts that is predominantly used across the various versions of Office, you can be relatively sure that your presentation will not suffer any unintended consequences of font substitution taking place on other computers.
No, there are some important differences. Please read my other post on Word font embedding FAQs to discover how there are more direct tools to figure out Font Substitution in Word.
The post How to Embed Fonts in PowerPoint FAQs appeared first on Donna's Technology Resources.
]]>The post How to Embed Fonts in Word FAQs appeared first on Donna's Technology Resources.
]]>When you use a unique font that is not a standard Windows or Office font, you risk suffering with the possible effects of font substitution occurring when your file is opened on another computer. When font substitution takes place, the look of your document can change considerably. Parts of the text can become misaligned, text wrapping points may change, and special characters can turn into meaningless rectangles. To prevent font substitution from happening, you can choose to embed the fonts to make sure the document looks the same on other systems. As a result, you minimize the risk of the fonts, layout, and styling of the document changing. Without using the embed feature, you may feel your only choice is to rely on sharing your file in only in pdf format because pdfs allow you lock down the look of the document. But pdfs suffer from the disadvantage of not allowing full editing rights.
No, please be aware of 2 very important features of a font that can limit your ability to embed it.
Font designers often will restrict the ability of a font to be embedded. This prevents unlicensed use of the font. Generally, if the font is purchased at a higher price point, the ability to have Word embeddability is unlocked.
Fonts can be purchased with 1 of 4 levels of embeddability:
The levels of Editable and Installable allow the font characters to be embedded in Word and PowerPoint.
To check what rights you have to a font: go to Control Panel in Windows and click Fonts. Clicking on the font shows the Font embeddability.
In the picture above, the Mickey Ears Regular font is listed as Installable Therefore, this font can be embedded in Word.
For more information, check out Microsoft’s Font Redistribution FAQ document.
Unfortunately, looking at the font named in the Font box on the Home tab will not help you know if the embedding worked. The Font box will always say the name of the font used when designing the document even if the system has no access to such a font.
To check for font substitution, you need to find and use on the Font Substitution button which is found by these steps:
Please be aware that these settings for font substitution choices are unique to that particular installation of Word. The choices made here do not travel with the document.
Use the steps above to get to the Font Substitution window. Then for each unique font listed in the Missing document font column, find a desired Substituted font in the drop down of the adjoining column. Then click on Convert Permanently button in the lower left corner when you feel that particular font should be permanently replaced with another one.
Common fonts are those that are generally installed with either the Operating System or with the install of Microsoft Office.
This resource pages at Indezine.com and another from ampsoft.net list the fonts installed with the various versions of Microsoft Office. If you utilize fonts that are predominantly used across the various versions of Office, you can be relatively sure that your document will not suffer any unintended consequences of font substitution taking place on other computers.
No, there are some significant differences. Please read my other post on PowerPoint font embedding FAQs to discover how there are less direct tools to figure out Font Substitution in PowerPoint
The post How to Embed Fonts in Word FAQs appeared first on Donna's Technology Resources.
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