webdesign/design
Adobe Fonts included with Creative Suite
yunsoo.note
2024. 3. 19. 17:03
Licensing:
https://helpx.adobe.com/fonts/using/font-licensing.html
Adobe Fonts offers thousands of fonts as part of a Creative Cloud subscription. All fonts are licensed for personal and commercial use. The licensing information below applies to any fonts that have been added through Adobe account or added to a website with the embed code they provide.
- if you are creating graphics or documents that have rasterized or properly embedded font data, such as a PDF, JPEG, or PNG, your client doesn't need their own font license to use the designs.
- The fonts are licensed for embedding in any ebook format which protects the font data such as EPUB, iBooks, Kindle (mobi), Adobe’s Digital Publishing Suite (DPS), and PDF. Any ebook authoring workflow which requires the user to move the font files themselves is not allowed under the Terms of Use, however.
- The font licensing does not allow you to embed the fonts within mobile or desktop applications.
- The Terms of Use do not permit the fonts to be transferred to another user or computer, so they cannot be packaged with the file. The printer needs to have their own license for the fonts, either through a Creative Cloud subscription or as a perpetual desktop license purchase.
- if I cancel Creative Cloud? Any file which embeds the font data, such as PDF or image formats, and any text that has been rasterized or outlined, will continue to display correctly. These types of files may be reproduced and distributed independent of your subscription status. 👍
- Web fonts on my personal or company website: If your website is viewed in the browser–either on the desktop or on a mobile device–it's covered by the web font license. The web font license also requires that the fonts be added to your website by the embed code that we provide. The tutorial on adding fonts to your website shows how it works.
- Adobe doesn't offer the ability to locally host fonts. Our web font hosting delivers fonts from a globally-distributed content delivery network (CDN), which performs much better and is more scalable than using local hosting for static assets.