> Am 22.10.2014 um 21:47 schrieb Willi Egger : > > Hi all, > > I know that there was earlier a thread dealing with this subject…. However I needed to typeset a title in a typeface with a medieval look. One of the choices is “Maximilian” a ttf font (free font). > > I put the font in texmf-fonts/data. > > The mtxrun --script font --list --info --all maximilian gives: > > mtx-fonts | mapping : maximilian > mtx-fonts | fontname: maximilian > mtx-fonts | fullname: maximilian > mtx-fonts | filename: Maximilian.ttf > mtx-fonts | family : maximilian > mtx-fonts | weight : normal > mtx-fonts | style : normal > mtx-fonts | width : normal > mtx-fonts | variant : normal > mtx-fonts | subfont : > mtx-fonts | fweight : conflict: book > mtx-fonts | > mtx-fonts | gsub features: > mtx-fonts | > mtx-fonts | feature script languages > mtx-fonts | > mtx-fonts | tlig all all > mtx-fonts | trep all all > > I tried in a classical way: > > \starttypescript[serif][medieval] > \definefontsynonym[serif][file:Maximilian][features=default] > \stoptypescript > > \starttypescript[medieval] > \definetypeface[Maximilian][rm][serif][medieval][default] > \stoptypescript > > \usetypescript[medieval] > > \setupbodyfont[Maximilian,rm,12pt] > > I tried also the new approach > > \definefontfamily[Medieval][rm][Maximilian][features=default] > \setupbodyfont[Medieval,12pt] > > In both cases I end up with an empty page, because the font is not fount. — What do I miss? Change the name of the typeface to “medieval”. Wolfgang