
Good coding, good designs, and SIL user licenses that let you use them as you wish without any additional licensing/usage fees.Īnd they're Unicode/OpenType, which is the industry's standard for font technology.

These are quality fonts designed by experienced type designers (some well-iknown names in the industry, too) that have more "robust" glyph sets where you are likely to find the common ligatures. If youre into cute, simple fonts, try this one out. It was designed to look like hand letters done with a brush pen, and its suitable for holiday cards, postcards, brochures, invitations, and many other projects. I like the letter shapes, but I think the behind-the-scenes coding is sloppy or minimal and the glyph set is puny. Priscillia Script Pretty Font (OTF, TTF) Priscillia is a really pretty font style. If the font works for you without the ligatures, then go ahead and continue to use it.īut from my inspection of the font, I don't think it's a well-produced font. By right! Your font is missing quite a few glyphs, but what's shown in your screen capture is a lot more than just the ligatures.

I have the feeling all those symbols that look like 4 Bs squashed together should be the ligatures - only they're not appearing properly.
