The Vector Doctor said:You have access to over 1800 fonts as long as you pay the monthly fee.
Dafont has lots of free or shareware fonts but not all are high quality
https://fonts.adobe.com/fonts
Adobe Fonts is a pretty good perk that comes with a Creative Cloud membership. Over 1800 type families are available to sync, many of which are commercial families that cost a lot to buy outright. They periodically add more commercial families to the collection from a pretty wide variety of type foundries.
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If you end your Creative Cloud membership, what happens to fonts you have used?
I assume you still have to download and install them, correct?
Nothing screams convert to curves more then ever.
I take it you mean; a person would lose the ability to open and edit text on a design once they cancelled their membership, correct?
As Bobby mentioned and I forgot about... Google also has a tremendous number of fonts available for use. I find that more and more logos and layouts are using those fonts so people are becoming more aware of these
I take it you mean; a person would lose the ability to open and edit text on a design once they cancelled their membership, correct?
I use these all the time with PWA/Electron work.
I knew one guy that cancelled his subscription and opened up one program 2 minutes later to prep his files for another program, was greeted with a pop up modal that said essentially that this would be the last time he would be able to open any of his files from an Adobe program. 2 minutes later. If that is accurate, there certainly is a lot of phoning home for some things on the program. At least it appears that way to me.
Jburns said:Bobby H, so once you have the adobe subscription, you have access to the font library- can you sync / download to your wondows Font file?
The Vector Doctor said:There is no limit to the number of activated fonts but you probably don't want to activate too many and slow down your computer.
That is correct. I don't know if the fonts are copied over to your computer at any time. You activate the fonts at the adobe site and then they show up in your software for use until you deactivate and I believe there is a limit as to how many you can activate at one time. So you do have to keep on top of things and not go overboard and forget to deactivate when no longer needed
Adobe isn't going to give away thousands of commercial fonts (quite a few of which are recent releases) for free, especially when the foundries who make those fonts are still charging quite a lot of money for them via normal channels.
For most of my design work I end up converting the type to outlines anyway. That solves part of the "what if" issue of ending a Creative Cloud subscription. Of course, if always having an "out" away from Adobe or any other software is important then one should be saving all art files in "generic" formats like EPS and have any application dependent effects expanded or flattened so the artwork can be imported into a different application.
The big concern I have regarding Adobe Fonts is whether they'll remove any type families from the service. They have to maintain contracts with various type foundries (and pay them a certain amount of money) to post their fonts in the Adobe Fonts service. What if a certain foundry decides it wants a whole lot more money and Adobe isn't willing to pay? I assume their fonts would go bye bye. Anyone who has those specific fonts activated in any projects would then have to go buy those fonts outright to keep using them. I don't expect Adobe to start cycling all kinds of fonts in and out of the service the same way Netflix does with a bunch of movies. But it's still a serious concern.
The big concern I have regarding Adobe Fonts is whether they'll remove any type families from the service. They have to maintain contracts with various type foundries (and pay them a certain amount of money) to post their fonts in the Adobe Fonts service.
You can buy packages from Sign DNA and Letterhead Fonts.