Discussion:
[scribus] OTF randomized feature - how to activate
ZASKE Martin
2018-10-29 22:02:52 UTC
Permalink
Dear List,

Today I discovered, as a holiday-fun-activity, the web-service
Calligraphr. I will not comment either way, just saying that I managed
to create a rather ugly font of my own handwriting. That is where the
ugliness comes from. My wife can read it fluently.

Now I made at least thee variations for each glyph in the main alphabet,
and a so called "randomized font" was generated for me, because I spent
some money and did an upgrade. Still believe in OpenSource, no worries.

Turns out that I cannot find how or where to turn on this OpenType
feature in Scribus.

I know where the "normal" features are, and all I am finding there for
my own font is "ligatures" on/off.


For the last two years or so we have needed handwriting more and more
(for speech balloons in comics and other personal-style matter). In
myfonts.com I see more fonts now with this randomizer-feature.

So if the feature can be used in a recent Scribus, please advise how to
activate. Otherwise, what do other users think about this and the
roadmap please? Should it not be a feature request?

Seems that even MS Word can use the random OpenType feature (but only
since 2010), when activated manually. So this is maybe not some exotic
will-not-last feature but possibly useful to several contexts.

Want to see an example (not mine):
https://www.calligraphr.com/en/docs/faq/#faq-random

Thanks and greetings,

Martin
--
ZASKE Martin
responsable GʊGʊ
BP 50 - Bassila - Bénin
tel GʊGʊ 66.66.11.11
tel pers 97.44.62.95

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John Jason Jordan
2018-10-29 22:32:29 UTC
Permalink
On Mon, 29 Oct 2018 23:02:52 +0100
Post by ZASKE Martin
For the last two years or so we have needed handwriting more and more
(for speech balloons in comics and other personal-style matter). In
myfonts.com I see more fonts now with this randomizer-feature.
In the US I find that the robo-mailers are now using random fonts to
make the envelope look like it was hand-written. It used to be that
they used a regular handwriting font so I could just compare a given
letter with another instance of the same letter to see immediately that
it was written by a machine, but it's getting harder now.

Not that this observation has much to do with Scribus. :)

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