We have some non-standard webfonts (wich we have a license for) and we received the .otf version of that font. There are some online tools to convert the fonts to the web-formats and then with some css you can include the fonts, so far so good.
However when displayig text in different browsers the renderd text is wider/smaller and the word-spacing varies also. I tested to be sure the fonts are actually used in the different browsers, and that all works fine.
There are 4 font files needed to support all browsers out there, and it seems each file has its own inherited letter-spacing and word-spacing for each font-size used.
in case you want to see the include statement here it is:
@font-face {
font-family: 'myfont';
src: url('myfont.eot?') format('eot'),
url('myfont.woff') format('woff'),
url('myfont.ttf') format('truetype'),
url('myfont.svg#webfontaAipHhrc') format('svg');
}
I think the best way to deal with this problem is te generate the fonts in the defferent formats with the same word- and letter- spacing, only i have no idea how to accomplish that.
Fonts internally use EM as glypth width. So it made sense to me to set the document font-size to some value and have the used fonts scale accordingly, and then set a font-size for each element in wich i use the font.
Also setting the letter- and word- spacing in the @font-face definition has no effect because it is the adjustment of the font's own spacing that is set.
Anyone maby know of a font-generator who has the same word- and letter spacing for each of the generated fonts? Or has some other sollution/suggestion?
I tried 2 font generators, but only remember the last one, http://www.fontsquirrel.com/fontface/generator
Also while were at it, anyone know how to test if all languages (utf-8 characters) can be printed given the font? I tried printing a bunch of utf-8 characters to see if they can be displayed but ofcourse i dont know all languages so i have no idea if its ok or not.
Thanks :)
EDIT:
i made printscreens of how the different browsers i use render the fonts
http://www.imagedump.nl/img9/8589/15fonts.png
ths css used:
.test {
font-family: myfont;
font-size: 20px;
letter-spacing: -0.67px;
word-spacing: 1px;
}
the thing im looking for is to have some default starting position where all browsers render the font the same
with the 'different' part i ment that a browser like ff renders the text different than a browser like ie, who both use a different generated font file. but also there is a difference in chrome vs. ff when they are both use-ing the same generated font file (woff)