This is an archive of the original scripts.sil.org site, preserved as a historical reference. Some of the content is outdated. Please consult our other sites for more current information: software.sil.org, ScriptSource, FDBP, and silfontdev



Home

Contact Us

General

Initiative B@bel

WSI Guidelines

Encoding

Principles

Unicode

Training

Tutorials

PUA

Conversion

Resources

Utilities

TECkit

Maps

Resources

Input

Principles

Utilities

Tutorials

Resources

Type Design

Principles

Design Tools

Formats

Resources

Font Downloads

Gentium

Doulos

IPA

Rendering

Principles

Technologies

OpenType

Graphite

Resources

Font FAQ

Links

Glossary


Computers & Writing Systems

SIL HOME | SIL SOFTWARE | SUPPORT | DONATE | PRIVACY POLICY

You are here: Type Design
Short URL: https://scripts.sil.org/TypeDesign

OFL Feedback Nicolas Spalinger & Victor Gaultney, 2005-08-15

OFL Mailing Lists Victor Gaultney & Nicolas Spalinger, 2005-08-15

OFL 1.1-review Nicolas Spalinger & Victor Gaultney, 2007-02-26
Details of the OFL 1.1 review.

OFL-FAQ web version (1.1-update6) Nicolas Spalinger & Victor Gaultney, 2020-12-15

SIL Open Font License (OFL) Nicolas Spalinger & Victor Gaultney, 2007-02-26
A license to distribute, create and improve fonts using an open collaborative model.

OFL Fonts Victor Gaultney, 2009-02-09
A partial listing of fonts under the OFL license.

OFL-FAQ web version (1.1-update3-draft) Nicolas Spalinger & Victor Gaultney, 2013-05-16

OFL Logo Victor Gaultney, 2005-08-15

Web Fonts and Reserved Font Names Victor Gaultney & Nicolas Spalinger, 2013-05-15

OFL web version Nicolas Spalinger & Victor Gaultney, 2007-02-26

OFL 1.0 web version (not current) Nicolas Spalinger & Victor Gaultney, 2005-11-22

More Questions About African Characters and Variants Peter Constable, 2003-03-14
Discusses questions regarding various variants of characters used for African languages.

Variants for Hooktop Y (U+01B3 and U+01B4) Peter Constable, 2003-03-13
Discusses a question regarding glyph variants needed for hooktop y.

Cuatrillo and Tresillo in Recent Linguistic Publications Peter Constable, 2003-03-28
The characters "cuatrillo" and "tresillo" were innovations of Jesuit missionaries in Guatemala for transcribing Mayan languages. This article documents the usage of these characters in some recent linguistics publications.


© 2003-2024 SIL International, all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted elsewhere on this page.
Provided by SIL's Writing Systems Technology team (formerly known as NRSI). Read our Privacy Policy. Contact us here.