This is what I’ve tried to do, but it doesn’t seem to be fool-proof. It’s possible to embed some free fonts into your document. If you really want to use that fun font and have teachers edit a Microsoft Word or PowerPoint document, then you’ll have to get the font to them somehow. I have not yet verified it: SOLUTION #2: EMBED THE FONT INTO THE DOCUMENT Source – this list comes from a third-party source. They are fonts that are already installed on Windows and Mac computers. The easiest solution is to use one of the following fonts. PDFs or images (because you can’t edit these files.).You don’t need the font installed on your computer.) Google Docs / Google Slides resources (because Google loads the fonts from the internet.Easel by TpT products (because you can only use their font selection.).Want teachers to be able to edit their products.Use Microsoft Word or Powerpoint formats.This font issue only applies to teachers who sell TpT resources that (For example, it can push a line of text onto a blank page.) If the font isn’t available, the computer will automatically substitute a different font… which can mess up the layout and page count. The issue is that the fun font you choose may not be installed on everyone’s computer. I love choosing fun fonts when I make lessons and handouts for students.īut, when I try to sell that resource on Teachers Pay Teachers, I might hit this unexpected problem. (Scroll down for the QUICK LINKS to different parts of this video) THE PROBLEM: If you choose the wrong font, you’re in for a world of hurt! The font you use to create resources to sell on Teachers Pay Teachers (TpT) matters.
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