Hopefully, this may be the last of the font creation posts.
Taking Bryan's suggestion to place whole words in a character key- specifically
THE and
ROAD.
So I double click on on of the glyphs. But the space allotted is too small.
So I found the I could grab the right side line (not the left for some reason).
By grabbing it, you can drag it.
It turns green when you have hold of it.
Now, I am copying and pasting from other glyphs.
But I discovered something.
Font Forge likes to paste on the LEFT side.
So I found it worked better if I started at the end of the word.
Paste, move right. Paste, move right.
Comparing to my prototype shot, I get the letters situated.
The whole word THE is what you get in the RailroadFair font when you type
<ROAD was a little harder. I moved the boundary as far right as I could go.
I then had to move the O out of the way so I could paste the R.
As I studied this view, I realized that the O was definitely too wide.
But the D and the R are as well.
That looks better.
This is what comes out when you type
>Heck, while I'm at it, I also did the Class designation as one character.
And, I might as well do the numberboards.
This is what comes out when you type
#I think I'm ready.
That looks good.
My letters are placed right over the prototype photo for exact spacing.
I then move that lettering to my sized photo of my boiler room.
So when I get the decals back from Peter, I should have no trouble fitting them- even WITHOUT lowering the separation.
And for Peter's purposes, I made him this image on my scanner.
He can place this in Corel Draw to get everything the size it needs to be.
The wall is 28.25 mm.
The orange stripe is about 3.5 mm.
I could stretch that to 4 mm but I'd rather not.
BTW- this also confirms that my stripe was only half a millimeter off (or less). Not bad.