

And if you have a Cricut Access membership, you have even more font options at your fingertips.īut sometimes, you need to search for that perfect font elsewhere. Hooray for a quick win! Keep reading to learn how.Īre you still scrolling through the font menu in Design Space, looking for just the right font to use for your project? (Yep, I’ve been there!)ĭesign Space comes with a bunch of fonts, it’s true. The good news? Uploading fonts to Cricut Design Space is a lot simpler than you may think. (One of those beautiful cursive fonts you saw on Pinterest, perhaps?) I guess it has to do with the data being stored in a "fork" whatnot.Have you ever wanted to upload your own fonts to Cricut Design Space? Sure, Design Space has a ton of free Cricut fonts, but sometimes you just want to use one of your own fonts. I converted and emailed myself the fonts from the graphic designers laptop. Where wold I find the the "data fork" and "resource fork" on the Mac? I want to be able to tell the designer exactly where to look.ĭFontSplitter works on the original computer but not on my PC. (A different machine from the original.) "Get Info" reveals that there is no file extension, leading me to believe that this is the newer font format. The font doesn't work when downloaded to Mac OS X either. Can someone please explain that?ĭo I need both for a font conversion? What do I tell my graphic designer to send me?

I saw something online about "data fork" and "resource fork" that has to match up. (FrancoNormal, actually.)ĭFontSplitter didn't work. (Surprise! I didn't thinks so, but I'd be a fool for asking if that was the answer, so I tried.) Perhaps I need to try a different extension?Īre there any utilities to convert the font? A Windows equivalent? It's called Franco. Windows Vista shows it as a "File".Ĭhanging the file extension doesn't work. I have a font that was used on Mac OS X 10.5.
