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#1
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How can I edit a Word 2000 symbol?
I want to make a small change to an existing Word 2000 symbol (Wingdings
2:157), however I cannot find a way to do this. The symbol uses a full stop (or period) and I want the same symbol but with a comma in it (not a period). I have tried to copy the symbol and edit it with a paint package, but the lines of the font no longer look clean and thin, instead they look fuzzy, the is exacerbated as I am trying to use a 10 point font. I have tried to edit it in PowerPoint, but the symbol is too small to adjust. Any ideas where I am going wrong? Word Perfect had a built in editor did it not? Should I be looking for a 3rd party route? |
#2
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Hi Spike-
Wingdings, Webdings, Symbol, etc. are fonts created just like Times New Roman, Arial and the rest. Where you are "going wrong" is that fonts are vector shapes designed based on lines & curves defined by formulas which you cannot directly modify without the appropriate design software. The way you are trying to modify the one 'instance' of the character causes it to be converted to a rasterized image made up of square pixels which results in the jaggies. Regards |:) "Spike Tenny" wrote: I want to make a small change to an existing Word 2000 symbol (Wingdings 2:157), however I cannot find a way to do this. The symbol uses a full stop (or period) and I want the same symbol but with a comma in it (not a period). I have tried to copy the symbol and edit it with a paint package, but the lines of the font no longer look clean and thin, instead they look fuzzy, the is exacerbated as I am trying to use a 10 point font. I have tried to edit it in PowerPoint, but the symbol is too small to adjust. Any ideas where I am going wrong? Word Perfect had a built in editor did it not? Should I be looking for a 3rd party route? |
#3
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In , CyberTaz told
us an interesting story. My reply to this story is at the bottom of this message. Hi Spike- Wingdings, Webdings, Symbol, etc. are fonts created just like Times New Roman, Arial and the rest. Where you are "going wrong" is that fonts are vector shapes designed based on lines & curves defined by formulas which you cannot directly modify without the appropriate design software. The way you are trying to modify the one 'instance' of the character causes it to be converted to a rasterized image made up of square pixels which results in the jaggies. To add to this: You could try to find font editing software (I think there are some very basic font tools somewhere deep in the Coreldraw suite, but I'm not sure) and export the glyph you want to clip art. Then you can edit it as much as you like. -- Amedee Van Gasse |
#4
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Hi Amedee-
Actually, it can be done rather easily in PhotoShop or Illustrator by typing the character & converting it to a vector path. Hadn't mentioned that because it isn't the sort of thing most people would get involved with. You really don't need _font design_ software unless you want to design a complete font family. Any good vector editing software should do. Pardon the HTML, but here is a quick sample of what I mean: It started out as A about 2 minutes ago. Regards |:) On 8/12/05 4:02 AM, in article , "Amedee Van Gasse" wrote: In , CyberTaz told us an interesting story. My reply to this story is at the bottom of this message. Hi Spike- Wingdings, Webdings, Symbol, etc. are fonts created just like Times New Roman, Arial and the rest. Where you are "going wrong" is that fonts are vector shapes designed based on lines & curves defined by formulas which you cannot directly modify without the appropriate design software. The way you are trying to modify the one 'instance' of the character causes it to be converted to a rasterized image made up of square pixels which results in the jaggies. To add to this: You could try to find font editing software (I think there are some very basic font tools somewhere deep in the Coreldraw suite, but I'm not sure) and export the glyph you want to clip art. Then you can edit it as much as you like. |
#5
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In , CyberTaz told us an
interesting story. My reply to this story is at the bottom of this message. Actually, it can be done rather easily in PhotoShop or Illustrator by typing the character & converting it to a vector path. Hadn't mentioned that because it isn't the sort of thing most people would get involved with. You really don't need _font design_ software unless you want to design a complete font family. Any good vector editing software should do. Pardon the HTML, but here is a quick sample of what I mean: It started out as A about 2 minutes ago. Regards |:) I was looking too far! ;-) BTW, I get something multipart/alternative... -- Amedee Van Gasse |
#6
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It would be fiddly to get right but you could use an EQ field to superimpose
a comma on the wingdings character without the period. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Spike Tenny wrote: I want to make a small change to an existing Word 2000 symbol (Wingdings 2:157), however I cannot find a way to do this. The symbol uses a full stop (or period) and I want the same symbol but with a comma in it (not a period). I have tried to copy the symbol and edit it with a paint package, but the lines of the font no longer look clean and thin, instead they look fuzzy, the is exacerbated as I am trying to use a 10 point font. I have tried to edit it in PowerPoint, but the symbol is too small to adjust. Any ideas where I am going wrong? Word Perfect had a built in editor did it not? Should I be looking for a 3rd party route? |
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