

Five new fonts: Meet Tenorite, Bierstadt, Skeena, Seaford, and Grandview And don’t worry if the font you love best isn’t chosen as the next default all of them will be available in the font menu, alongside Calibri and your other favorite fonts in your Office apps in Microsoft 365 and beyond. Head over to social and tell us your favorite. We’re excited to share these brand-new fonts with you today and would love your input. To help us set a new direction, we’ve commissioned five original, custom fonts to eventually replace Calibri as the default. It has served us all well, but we believe it’s time to evolve. And just as people and the world around us age and grow, so too should our modes of expression.Ĭalibri has been the default font for all things Microsoft since 2007, when it stepped in to replace Times New Roman across Microsoft Office. A default font is often the first impression we make it’s the visual identity we present to other people via our resumes, documents, or emails. Still, while default fonts may not have the same flair as some of their more eye-catching cousins (we’re looking at you, Bauhaus 93 and Showcard Gothic), they communicate a distinct personality in their own quiet way-a personality that by extension becomes our personality as well. When a font blends into the background of a user experience, people can jump right into the creative process and stay grounded in their thoughts rather than thinking about the form those thoughts take. We seldom give them much thought, and therein lies their greatest gift.

I'm using two Google fonts, so it should be working.We’ve commissioned five new custom fonts– which should be the next default font?ĭefault fonts are perhaps most notable in the absence of the impression they make.

I looks like it does, I can choose and add them, but they don't appear in the list. I've also tried it with a docx without the choosen fonts, hoping I could add the fonts when editing the epub.Īnd I can't install the font families. But are still only visible in the Calibre viewer. In the stylesheet, both fonts I use, are mentioned (and again, whether I've embedded them or not during the setup for conversion). Again, whether I've embedded them or not during the setup for conversion. When I edit my epub in Calibre, there is no mention of fonts on the left side (were all the CSS stuff is shown). So I decided to see what I could do with CSS. Nor does it seem to help if I install the fonts when setting up the conversion in Calibre. It doesn't matter whether or not I choose to embed the fonts I used in my docx or not. Not in Adobe Digital Editions, not in the e-reader on my iPhone. Everything looks fine in the Calibre viewer, even the fonts.īut I only get to see the choosen fonts in the Calibre viewer. The conversion from docx to epub is no problem. I'm having trouble with embedding fonts in Calibre.
