Thursday, April 1, 2021

A Tragic Tale About Fonts

 Let me tell you a tragic story. One day I was editing, trying to choose a font for my opening credits. I was stressing out because the fonts I was seeing in Adobe Premiere Pro were just not cutting it. Where I was shown the fonts, there was a small green button in the right corner that said "TK", I still have no idea what that means but I still clicked it. It took me to Adobe Fonts and I was ecstatic. I was scavenging through all the different fonts but sadly nothing was catching my eye. That was until I found the font Dolce. I clicked on it and it gave me options such as Medium Dolce and Bold Dolce. I had clicked to save the font, but when I went back to Adobe Premiere it wasn't with the other fonts(ㅠㅡㅠ). I spent FORTY MINUTES trying to figure out how to get this font. Then I thought...hmmm there is no way Adobe Premiere PRO doesn't have more fonts. This lead me to looking back at the available font lists again. Now here's the thing, I don't have a mouse, so I'm using the pad on the laptop. Here's where it gets crazy, I accidently scrolled with two fingers...yep...I scrolled and what did I see. I saw so many fonts go by (ㅠoㅠ). I have never been more happy but also upset at the same time. I really spent forty minutes stressing only for my problem to be fixed by scrolling  (ㅠㅡㅠ). Anyway, aside from my dramatics, I scrolled through the fonts and instead of picking the font Dolce I chose Ink Free because Dolce started to seem too extra. Now luckily I have finished editing all the opening credit scenes, so I don't have to worry about fonts for a little bit. Thankfully XD. And She Lived Happily Ever After. The End.

Here are some screenshots of the process:




<Ink Free Font

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