

So, font substitution is definitely the problem.Century Schoolbook's x-height and fit are slightly smaller, too, hence more lines fitting on the page (without changing line endings?!)
T MOBILE FONT CENTURY SCHOOLBOOK PDF
And when I look at the PDF created and the paper prints of the document, the italic is indeed that of the built-in Century Schoolbook font rather than ITC's. Its italic is rather different than the italic in ITC Century Std. Then, I did a little digging, and sure enough "New Century Schoolbook" is a standard printer font installed on virtually every printer on the market.

When you print that document to either Adobe PDF as a printer or to any paper laser printer, there are suddenly 5 lines of text at the bottom of the page after the same subheading! And more bizarre, every single line on the page has the exact same line ending (even hyphenated words are identical).Īt first, I thought it must be a font substitution problem, or a margin change problem.When we view a test document I created on screen in MS Word, there are 3 lines of text at the bottom of the page after a subheading.I specified using "ITC Century Std" as a standard font in the identity.I designed a corporate identity for a company that deals with education publishing.

I am having a thorny and bizarre font substitution problem with Microsoft Word 2016.
T MOBILE FONT CENTURY SCHOOLBOOK DRIVER
Is there any way to utterly force Adobe PDF's printer driver to use only document-specified fonts that are installed at the system level and stop printer font substitution?
