David Kastrup wrote > It may be that the "prescribed" music font here similarly is a > same-purpose clone of something saner in which case a replacement will > quite likely go unnoticed anyway.
In this very special case there is an unparalleled mismatch between upper and lower case letters: The upper case letters have nothing in common with handwritten letters, they look like sans-serif font, obviously they represent block letters. The lower case letters, however, are joined like in classic elementary school script fonts. The combination of the two looks so terrible and I first thought there were no capital letters in Escolar so that they are taken from another font. I guess it's hard to find a replacement font combining non-script capitals and script lower case letters. I believe number 2 has been an accident. :) All in all, this font is quite unique. In a bad sense, but: unique. Replacing Frankenstein's Monster without anybody noticing? All the best Torsten -- Sent from: http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/User-f3.html _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user