There are rumblings Microsoft may remove support for Postscript Type 1 fonts in Windows. I remember a previous Windows update a couple or so years ago disabling all the T1 fonts I had installed in the Fonts folder. Another update allowed T1 fonts to be installed again. I don't use Microsoft Office, but my understanding is T1 fonts haven't worked in Office for several years.
Anyway, even without Adobe's recent announcement, it's already obvious the T1 font format has been living on borrowed time for the last decade.
FontLab's TransType4 application looks promising. It can batch convert folders of T1 fonts into OTF, as well as do other kinds of font conversions. The only limitation it appears to have is old Type 1 Multiple Master fonts are not supported.
rjsigns said:
It's why Flexi is my go to and I bought Affinity Designer. I need to get in more practice with Affinity products. The small amount I've worked with Designer has shown it to be good for my needs.
SAi needs to get Flexi out of the 1990's regarding its type handling. I took Flexi off my computer back in the early 2000's and put the key on another production computer. We have 3 Flexi licenses, but they're all used for output,
not design. I do nearly all my full size sign design work within CorelDRAW and Adobe Illustrator. Both now support all the features of OpenType and the newer OpenType Variable format. Illustrator supports SVG fonts too.
Affinity Designer is a decent vector drawing program in relation to the low price. It works on Windows, OSX and iPad OS. It at least supports all the features of the standard OpenType format. As of version 1.9.1 it still doesn't properly support OTF Variable fonts. Only the basic weight of OTF Var fonts will show and there are no axis sliders. Inkscape now supports Variable fonts though. I'm waiting to see what Vectornator will do with the version 4.0 release at the end of the month.