Aggghhh! I don't have Illustrator!
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Browse All TopicsI have an opentype font with different glyphs (different versions of different letters). How do I use the different glyphs in Photoshop CS2? I can't find anything in my character pallet that would allow me to change between glyphs. Thanks in advance!
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If you do this Illustrator workaround, be aware the Photoshop will convert the text to whatever typeface you have selected in Photoshop. So, for example, if you copied a Caslon glyph from Illustrator, then pasted it into Photoshop with Myriad Pro selected, the glyph will be in Myriad Pro. Simple fix: change the tyepface back to Caslon.
The Windows Character Map is very clunky, but you can get your glyph. Just remember: create your text layer in Photoshop, make sure the cursor is blinking, then paste. And remember that even though you copy the glyph from the Caslon set in the Character Map, you may have to manually change the font to Caslon once you paste it.
Hmmmm.... I bought this font: http://new.myfonts.com/fon
I never use the Character Map, so I'm just taking stabs here. Try this:
In the Character Map window, click "Advanced View", then for "Group by", select "Unicode Subrange." Now you're looking at the different character sets that are included in the font. You should see a new menu, giving you choices of Unicode Subranges. In that list, you should see something like "Contextual Alternatives." Click that, and it might display the glyph you're after.
Again, I'm flying blind since I don't have your font on my machine. If you don't find "Contextual Alternatives", or if your H isn't there, try going through the other subranges. It's there somewhere.
The method that cassinola has outlined is how I'd do it with other applications (although I don't have Photoshop).
One thing to note is that in most (all?) font formats, the glyph number is NOT the same thing as the code-point; for TrueType/OpenType fonts:
- characters are indexed using Unicode code-points;
- glyphs are mapped to code-points within the font at design time;
- additional remapping may then take place to map the Unicode code-points to an 8-bit locale-dependant coded character set.
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by: casinnolaPosted on 2009-10-28 at 13:18:39ID: 25687783
We've needed a glyphs panel in Photoshop forever.
The easiest workaround is to use Illustrator. Make a document, insert your glyph using Illustrator's glyph panel, select it and copy it. Then, in Photoshop, create a Text layer. Then, with your cursor in the Text layer, paste the glyph.