• ZeroGravitas a day ago

    Surely the next step is to tweak the open source font with AI to slightly better target the desired font?

    Sometimes you're trying to replicate a logo and they've hand tweaked a letter or two, or stretched it.

    edit: (Google Fonts actually have fonts you can natively stretch and some with replacement character variants) I wonder if the tool uses that to better match?)

    Sometimes you just don't want to pay for a fancy font and I believe font shapes are not copyrightable?

    • hank_z 2 days ago

      I’m curious to know how this model tackles newly released fonts. How difficult would it be if this model needs to recognise font in a different language?

      • Tommix11 2 days ago

        Graphic designer here. A font recognition ai is sorley needed. Gemini and its competitors flat out lie when asked and Adobe Illustrators Retype is laughably bad. The problem I face almost every day is not to find a close match but to find the actual font in use, commercial or not.

        • WillAdams 2 days ago

          whatthefont and identifont used to work well, but they've been overwhelmed by new designs which are not used often enough to warrant inclusion.

          I just use Rookledge's Type Finder and a battered copy of Precision Type 5.0

        • codemog 2 days ago

          Curious why the model architecture wasn’t talked about at all? Did I miss that part?

        • Terretta 6 days ago

          Instructive, with a rewarding repo for your time.