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When a font is activated through Adobe Fonts, where does it get stored on my computer?

And why doesn't it show up in Font Book?

Background: I recently ran into a situation where I was trying to verify that my CSS @font-family tags were working correctly. I opened Font Book to verify that I did NOT have the font already installed, then proceeded to open my HTML file in Chrome. Everything looked great! But it turned out that I DID have the font installed via Adobe Fonts. So my test was invalid and unfortunately my tags were not setup correctly.

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    Creative Cloud Fonts and Typekit are not really the same things. If you have a typekit subscription, your website loads fonts from Typekit based on script tags with identifiers for your web property. Creative Cloud Fonts is a service for fonts on local systems that are made available in Adobe products, but may 100% absolutely not be used for webfont purposes. Commented Jul 30, 2019 at 2:08

4 Answers 4

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The fonts are located on your machine in the following folders:

Mac: /Users/<your user name>/Library/Application Support/Adobe/CoreSync/plugins/livetype/.r

Windows: C:\Users\<your user name>\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\CoreSync\plugins\livetype\r

You likely need to make sure you can see hidden/invisible files.

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    Yes! Too bad Adobe moderators block any posts on their forums with this info! Commented Feb 24, 2021 at 19:56
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    Good find! To add to this, I sorted my r folder [Windows] by date, then went 1-by-1 through each file, edited w/ Notepad++, until I found which font(s) I needed within each [font-family] group. Then copied that file to desktop, gave it an extension of .otf, installed the file and converted to .woff and .woff2 for web use
    – Rob Scott
    Commented Mar 2, 2021 at 2:01
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    You can see the font manifest in livetype/c/entitlements.xml -- that contains the numerical ID that goes with each named font.
    – ZachB
    Commented Mar 6, 2021 at 0:46
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    Small fix on the path @ZachB says: it should be livetype/.c/entitlements.xml Commented Sep 19, 2022 at 10:08
  • in my case the fonts were in various subfolders of livetype/, so you may have to dig around a bit. Commented Feb 28 at 21:14
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To copy all Adobe fonts to your Downloads directory, and automatically rename them to something meaningful, you can check out my repo: https://github.com/Kalaschnik/adobe-fonts-revealer

The script is working like this:

enter image description here

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    Nice script! I always think it's clever when people put unicode emojis in their script.
    – parleer
    Commented Jan 8, 2021 at 3:29
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    This is awesome! Commented Feb 25, 2021 at 20:27
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    That's a must have! Thank you very much Commented Aug 17, 2022 at 19:10
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    I love this. THANK YOU!
    – ejucovy
    Commented Oct 2, 2022 at 14:25
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    I have followed the installation instruction, but then running 'sh reveal' returns the 'no such file or directory' error. Do I need to be in some specific place with 'cd'? I am on macOS 12.6.7, the Terminal is set to its default ZSH. Thank you Commented Jun 3, 2023 at 13:07
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I found the files in the core sync folder, and I copied my fonts to use in a local environment.

Few hours later, this folder has disappeared without any reason. I tried to get display the hidden files in Mac, didn't work.

To get the file, I used bash cdcommand and opened it in finder. Hope that helps. ...cd "Application Support" ... open livetype.

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I work at Adobe Fonts and I'm happy to clear things up here. I'm sorry you ran into this.

First, when fonts are activated/installed with Adobe Fonts, they won't show up in Font Book as these fonts managed through our site and Creative Cloud.

You can remove or temporarily deactivate them to make sure you're seeing the web fonts: https://helpx.adobe.com/fonts/kb/troubleshoot-font-activation.html#5ToggletheAdobeFontssetting

Also, when possible, we use a different font-family name format to avoid this very issue. You can always check to make sure you're using our font-family name in your CSS/web project to be sure: https://fonts.adobe.com/my_fonts#web_projects-section

I hope this helps!

Cheers, Ben

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    This doesn't really help him out--he needs to know where the actual font file is. There is a number of reasonable reasons to need the actual font file--like using ImageMagick or some other library that doesn't support Creative Cloud's font system.
    – Kris Dahl
    Commented Oct 14, 2020 at 14:49

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