A few days ago I ran into a problem: I had to embed the ruble sign on the site, the main font on which was Arial. As it turned out, the
solution proposed by technologists at Lebedev Studio requires the creation of a unique EOT font, which, by definition, contains licensing information and works only on a limited number of domains. Therefore, it was impossible to simply steal the font from the site where the ruble sign is already embedded. The problem was that two days ago there were no normal free TTF fonts with a ruble sign on the Internet that could be converted to EOT. (ParaType made a great
free serif font, but the utmost fat shit without it, but I needed Arial or something very similar).
I honestly wrote about all this to Artemy Lebedev and asked him to share with the general public the TTF fonts that the studio definitely had: the different styles of the ruble sign appeared regularly on its websites.
Artemy published an
entry yesterday in his live journal, in which he gave references to the font with 19 ruble marks: Arial Regular, Arial Italic, Arial Bold, Arial Bold Italic, Georgia Regular, Georgia Italic, Georgia Bold, Georgia Bold Italic, Tahoma Regular, Tahoma Bold, Times Regular, Times Italic, Times Bold, Times Bold Italic, Lucida Regular, Verdana Regular, Verdana Italic, Verdana Bold, Verdana Bold Italic.
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Bravo! In my opinion, this is a great New Year's gift. Thank!
We take away here:
rouble.ttf ,
rouble.otf