Like you can see here to achieve crossbrowser success when using font-face we need to use many font formats. So, convert your font to eot ttf and svg and explicit use this formats.
Like you can see here, to achieve crossbrowser success when using @font-face we need to use many font formats. So, convert your font to eot, ttf and svg and explicit use this formats: @font-face { font-family: 'ITC Kabel'; src: url('ITCKabel. Eot'); src: local('ITC Kabel'), local('ITCKabel'), url('ITCKabel.
Ttf') format('truetype'), url('ITCKabel. Svg#font') format('svg'); }.
Right!.. now I realize that I just have the font in PostScript format! And I have to convert it to those others types. I`m trying to use some online converters but none of them are workin!
Don't know why! – Arthur Neves May 9 at 16:12 1 PostScript isn't a widely used format like TrueType then online tools could had problems interpreting it. Maybe be better to use some Mac program to do it.
I'm not a Mac user, then I couldn't test, but FontForge looks very promising. If it don't works too, maybe your font has some problem. Try with another font to see if the problem is with the font itself.
– ErickPetru May 9 at 16:55.
Um.... the point is, the file(font) I have it`s without any extension. I`m using mac, and if I go to the properties of the files it`s saying- kind: Font Suitcase – Arthur Neves May 9 at 14:14.
I can't identify that particular one; if you want to do so you could search for 1930s typefaces (which is what fonts used to be called). If you simply want something near it, look for Shadowed Fonts, or Shadowed Sans Serif Fonts, and you'll find a lot to choose from.
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