The fourth option provides more information about the font, such as supported languages, copyright details, and the number of glyphs. The first involves double-clicking the font file to open it in preview. Once open, select Install Font in the lower right corner of the window to import the font.
Locate the font file you want to use, and select Open to import it. Open Font Book, and find the font you want to remove. If it is a font that you added previously, use the User collection or start typing the name of the font into the search box.
Click the arrow next to the font family name to bring up the different variants, right click the one you wish to remove, and select Remove Font, with "font" replaced by the name of the font. If you want to completely get rid of an entire font family, rather than just one version, the same can be done to the family itself. Right click the font family, and select Remove Font Family, again with "font" replaced by the font family name.
In the Collections section, right-click and select New Collection. This can also be done by clicking the arrow at the bottom left of the window. In either case, type in an appropriate name for the collection and hit enter. Find the font you wish to add to the collection, then drag and drop it from the font list to your custom collection. To get rid of a collection, right-click it and select Delete "Collection Name.
If you have many fonts on a Mac, the font list in an application may be too long to be useful, and may make it difficult to find what you want. You can disable fonts in Font Book, preventing rarely-used fonts from appearing on such lists. Select the font or font family in question in Font Book, and either right-click or enter the Edit menu, before selecting Disable Font. To re-enable the fonts, it's a similar process, either by right-clicking or entering the Edit menu, then selecting Enable Font.
There are a number of other useful features in Font Book that may be worth examining. For example, while Font Book does validate fonts at the time of installation, it can also be used to validate that they are functional in the event the font doesn't display correctly in an application. There are also options to handle duplicate fonts, emoji and symbols, smart collections, and exporting fonts, which are also useful in a limited number of cases.
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Steam Deck, Playdate handheld consoles delayed until early MacOS Font Book. To add fonts: Launch Font Book from the Applications folder. If you want to a font to a new collection: Click the plus button below the Collection section Give this new section a name. Drag and drop the fonts files from the desktop or a finder window into the new collection you created. If you want to add it to an existing collection, drag and drop the font file onto the collections name in the left pane.
If you don't want to start a new collection or add to an existing collection, just drag the font file on top of the User collection.
Enter a name for your new library and press Return. In the new collection, right-click and select Add Fonts. To select multiple adjacent fonts, hold Shift and click the beginning and end of the range. To highlight items that aren't next to each other, hold Command and click each font you want to add individually.
Click Open to add the selected fonts to your library. You probably have favorite fonts that you use frequently. You may also have ones that you only use for special occasions, such as Halloween, or special fonts, such as handwriting or dingbats, that you don't use often.
You can organize your fonts in collections so that it's easier to find a specific font, without browsing through hundreds of items every time you want to use it. You'll notice that Font Book already has some collections set up in the Collection sidebar, but it's easy to add more. Type in a name for the collection and press Return. Click the All Fonts entry at the top of the Collection sidebar. Click and drag the desired fonts from the Font column to the new collection.
Repeat the process to create and populate additional collections. Like the Smart Playlist feature in iTunes , Font Book has a feature that automatically populates a collection based on criteria that you set. Here's how to create a Smart Collection. Open the File menu and click New Smart Collection.
Type a name for the collection in the text box. Set conditions for Font Book to add typefaces to this collection. Your options are:. To add more conditions, click the plus sign. Conditions can be either additive e. Adding more will give you fewer fonts in your smart collection.
Click OK to create the smart collection. To edit the conditions for a smart collection, right-click it and select Edit Smart Collection. You can also use this menu to rename your collection, disable it, delete it, or create a new one. If you have a large number of fonts installed, the font list in some applications can get pretty long and unwieldy. If you're an inveterate collector of fonts, the idea of deleting fonts may not be appealing, but there is a compromise.
You can use Font Book to disable fonts, so they don't show up in font lists, but still keep them installed, so you can enable and use them whenever you want.
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