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Hmm... after following thisthread and seeing allyour many skills, I waswondering... can you playthe banjo too...?
Wow Ron, I really asked for this, didn't I? All I asked was not to accept the oversize decal lettering which did not fit your model properly. I never expected a new TrueType font to come out of this exercise. I sure stirred the hornet's nest here. Ron, your skills and abilities never cease to amaze me! BTW, do you have to work for living? I couldn't whip up a whole new font on a regular work weekday. Seeing the lengths you went through to correct the decal problem, I sure hope that my part of this project will live up to your expectations. Is the lettering supposed to have gold outline?
I know I'm late to the party, so I apologize... the font tutorial is good stuff anyway!Here's a tracing of the Milwaukee lettering in vector PDF: http://cgwrr.com/MilwaukeeRoadLettering2.pdfYou have the font really close, but the leg on the 'K' that you modified should be a thick stroke, not thin, and head right for the opening between the two serif's at the top.
Had some time off today. Tried to put it to use.Yes, there is a gold outline.So I'm assuming you will do two layers. One gold, one maroon.Or, depending on the resolution of your printer, the gold could be the outline of the font.But you would probably need to slightly increase the outline dimensions.Comparing my font work to the original decal, I'm thinking my font needs to be fatter.The problem with the original font was not the fatness-- it was the excessive height of the road number in the middle.
WOW! That is different.Why didn't you assign all the nose letters to lower case font characters? That way you wouldn't have the crazy usage of punctuation characters to represent letters.
I love this thread....
I agree on this one. One other trick you can do — put the "THE" and the "ROAD" into one character each. So for example, if you shoved the "THE" into the less-than sign and the "ROAD" into the greater-than sign, you would type "< milwaukee >" to get the nose lettering. In a similar vein, you could shove a vector drawing of the herald into the "@" so that you have that available as well.I basically did this with my Pennsylvania fonts. It still took four fonts to accommodate all of the possibilities, but I included all of the heralds as well (circle keystone in the "c", keystone in the "k", shadow for the keystone in the "s", etcetera). The New Haven took two fonts.The font editor is cool, but I create all of mine directly in CorelDraw. You still can use existing fonts as a basis for new fonts, and you maintain the "raw" artwork in CorelDraw format.