![]() It also means it’s a system font, but it doesn’t necessarily equate to you being able to use it in Figma.ģ. If the Install button is disabled, that means the font is already installed in your system. To check if this is the case, select and open the font located in your computer’s Fonts folder. Another possibility is that the font you’re using is a system font, which means it’s already installed on your computer but isn’t available for use in Figma. If it’s not, you’ll need to install the font before you can use it in Figma.Ģ. Here you can see all the fonts that are currently installed in your system. To check if this is the case, open the Windows Folder in Drive C and look for the Fonts folder. ![]() The first possibility is that the font you’re using is not installed on your computer. Below is a list of its possible causes:ġ. Or, I should say, fixed it again.There are a few reasons why your fonts might not be showing up in Figma. I really don't understand why Apple hasn't fixed this yet. Using the older, Yosemite copies are able to be seen by all apps. But, the apps installed by Apple with the OS don't. Microsoft Office, the entire Adobe suite, Quark XPress and any other third party app I have can see the High Sierra installed versions. Font Book won't show them, but Suitcase Fusion and other third party font managers will. I simply dropped them into the Fonts folder of my user account, and there they were (I had already long ago removed the ones installed by High Sierra from the /Library/Fonts/ folder).Īs has been the problem since it appeared in El Capitan, Apple has managed to screw up these five fonts only for themselves. You don't need to rename them, or otherwise goof around with the fonts to make them work. The only fix now is to delete these font entirely, then grab these same named fonts from a Yosemite installation. These five fonts won't show up in Font Book, TextEdit, or other Apple supplied apps no matter what you do. Apple must have changed something in one of High Sierra's updates, and actually managed to make matters worse. What is "them"? I would imagine the five fonts in question, but installed from what source? What installed the fonts to your user account Fonts folder? The OS will never install any fonts there. I've read all of the topic, but your notes keep changing, or don't fully describe what you're doing. The next Sierra update broke them again and the issue hasn't been fixed since. It was fixed in a late beta of Sierra, and into 10.12.1. I've reported this issue to Apple a couple of times since it appeared back in El Capitan. Remove the fonts with the original names. The steps you first posted is what needs to be done. "They" being what? The originally named fonts? If so, no, they won't show up in Font Book. They were copied to my user fonts folder, but they are still not showing up in Font Book. Since they didn't match, they were considered third party fonts. They were removed because the copied desktop names of the fonts don't match the list the OS uses to determine if they should be taken out of the Fonts folder. I guess it no longer considers them 'standard', even though they came with my system. I ran "Restore Standard Fonts", and it removed them. After creating the "copy" fonts, you must remove the originals. The issue is they have the same internal names, so they conflict with each other. Yes, because the copied fonts are duplicates. When I tried to "install" the fonts, I got duplicate errors.
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