Hi Alexander, The Skyfonts plot clarifies. Indeed, thanks to you I have been able to discover that the Skyfonts downloads are located here in Windows 10:
C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Roaming\Monotype\skyfonts-myfonts and C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Roaming\Monotype\skyfonts-google and so on - you can subscribe to multiple services. Since I have a Monotype subscription the name is in the path, but I think you can have SkyFonts from elsewhere, for Google fonts for example. Furthermore the folder holds a normal OpenType font file, not encrypted, no name mangling, perfectly able to be copied. I suppose one can say they are 'slightly hidden'. Andrew -----Original Message----- From: Alexander Kobel Sent: Monday, 7 November 2016 11:53 PM To: Andrew Bernard <andrew.bern...@gmail.com>; lilypond-user@gnu.org Subject: Re: Skyfonts For practical matters: I'm not aware of any tool that offers convenient extraction of PDF-embedded fonts, so I second your doubts about the practicality there. But googling for a few seconds led me to http://www.advogato.org/person/yosch/diary/150.html, where I read between the lines that the synchronized fonts are stored in C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Roaming\skyfont-google\ on Windows. The folder should be hidden, so you have to check the option to reveal hidden files. Since I have no access to Skyfonts and/or a Windows machine, I can't verify - but maybe you can. I assume the fonts there are not encrypted, since they seem to be usable in default applications, but that maybe their names are mangled? _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user