

In the case of most of the fonts I have purchased from MyFonts by Monotype, they are licensed for five users, so the Mac install, and the Windows VM install is covered by this license. Luckily for me, fonts are often licensed for several users. The only legal way around this is to acquire the rights to install a particular font both in the Mac and in a VM. The Mac doesn’t “see” the fonts you have installed in Windows, and Windows can’t “see” the fonts on your Mac. I can turn off unneeded fonts (like the non-English ones), so the app isn't. Font Book won't allow me to add new fonts either by pressing the + key or drag-and-dropping them into the app window.
FONT BOOK MAC RENAME FONT PRO
Just got a new MacBook Pro with Sierra pre-installed. pvm file(s) to your new Mac, the fonts will be right there in their proper place inside Windows.Ĭan you use your Mac fonts in Windows documents, and your Windows fonts in Mac documents? The short answer is “No, you can’t do this.” Fonts are installed and used within a particular OS. Running the latest version of Sierra (10.12.5), Font Book 7.0. This all works for the fonts on the Mac, but what about any Windows fonts that you use in a virtual machine with Parallels® Desktop for Mac? There is no need to worry about these since these fonts will be inside the Windows virtual machine, and when you move the. A great little utility that I use all the time. Double-clicking on a glyph inserts it into the document you are currently working on. In PopChar (Figure 2), you can search for a particular glyph by its name (e.g., interrobang) or its shape that you draw with a built-in drawing pad, or you can find it by category (e.g., General Punctuation, Currency Symbols, or Greek glyphs). Since I do this often, I got a third-party utility ( PopChar) that lives in the Mac menu bar when it is running. The “Export Collection” menu item in Font Book creates a folder with that collection’s name, and this folder contains copies of all of the fonts themselves! Now some of these exported collections are rather large (700MB or so), but I just imported these folders in Font Book on the new Mac, and everything worked just great.įinding the right glyph is not a task that Font Book is optimized for. The Apple engineers who designed the Font Book application knew that moving fonts to a new Mac was an important task for font addicts like me and that it needed to be as easy as possible to accomplish.Īll I needed to do was to export each of my font collections. I was dreading this, imagining that I would have to somehow record which fonts are in which collections, and then set up all these collections on the new Mac and populate these collections with the right fonts. Figure 1_The font collections and a few of the fonts on my old Mac
