Font names: Cutlings Geometric (Round) License: SIL Open Font License http://scripts.sil.org/OFL This license permit you to use, modify and distribute the font freely as long as the resulting font also remain under the Open Font License. Created by: Ellen Wasbø Link: http://cutlings.wasbo.net/ where you find instructions on how to use the svg-files. The ttf files of this bundle are stickfonts (double lined) single line stroke fonts and can be used as any ttf font file, though it has zero width. The svg files contain glyph tables following the SVG 1.1 format http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd These files are ment to be used in Inkscape as single line or stroke fonts together with the Hershey Text extension or the Custom Stroke Fonts extension. For your convenience, install the ttf fonts to work with the objects as text before you convert to the true single line font using the Hershey Text tool which will then guess the correct svg-font if you just specify the path where it is. Nothing will show up if you try to display the svg file in a browser or in vector grafics software like Inkscape as the paths of the glyphs are hidden in the xml code. The _Stick.otf-file contain a stickfont which is a double line font and will be traced twice using a plotter. This stickfont can be converted to single line font using Inkscape and the removeDuplicateLines extension (http://cutlings.wasbo.net/inkscape-extension-removeduplicatelines/) The .ttf-file also contain a stickfont, but have some drawbacks when used directly for cutters and plotters. You may use the ttf font together with the Hershey Text tool to automatically select the corresponding single line svg font. (http://cutlings.wasbo.net/how-to-use-the-single-line-svg-fonts-in-inkscape/) ------------------------------------------------ Font names: Cutlings Singularis, Dualis & Pluralis License: SIL Open Font License http://scripts.sil.org/OFL This license permit you to use, modify and distribute the font freely as long as the resulting font also remain under the Open Font License. Created by: Ellen Wasbø Link: http://cutlings.wasbo.net/ where you find instructions on how to use the svg-files. The ttf files of this bundle are just lookalike single line stroke fonts and can be used as any ttf font file. The OTF_stickfonts have zero with and might look strange in some programs but could work well for a plotter (drawing the lines twice). The stickfont can also after converting to path in Inkscape be converted to single line font by using the remove duplicat lines extension (http://cutlings.wasbo.net/inkscape-extension-removeduplicatelines/). The true single line fonts (drawing lines once) are the svg fonts in the SVGfonts folder. The svg files contain the SVG 1.1 format http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd These files could be used in Inkscape as single line fonts together with the Hershey Text extension or the Custom Stroke Fonts extension. For your convenience, install the ttf fonts to enable Hershey Text guessing the correct svg-font if you just specify the path where it is. Please note that nothing will show up if you try to display the svg file in a browser or in vector grafics software like Inkscape as the paths of the glyphs are hidden in the xml code. You could also pick the letters one-by-one from the glyph overview SVG files if you are reluctant to using Inkscape.