As such, if you chose to use Myriad Pro in your font family, all you can do is add some other fonts to the family which provide alternatives for as and when the end user doesn’t have it installed. If I’m not mistaken Myriad is owned by Adobe (who license that font) and as their license prevents the use of embedding for the web you cannot use that method to ensure your visitors see that font (it would constitute a criminal offence - copyright theft on a large scale). While this may seem like an easy problem to fix (have it in the page and then it’ll download to any persons machine who doesn’t have it), Myriad Pro is one of the many font’s which their license explicitly prohibits their use for web embedding. The only way to ensure that a font is used across a website (and thus the visitor see it in that way) is to have it installed on the end users machine - either by them having the font or it being attached to the page through the likes of CSS3. Xiaawan, for lack of a better term, your totally out of luck here.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |