Skip to main content

How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP


How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP






How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP


How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP.There are many free fonts available on.Install new beautiful fonts in your computer.Download Font Mega Pack from here.Add new stylish fonts in your computer. (note: if you’re an XP user, scroll down to the XP Method Section):



  1. Download the Megapack




    How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP


    Download Font Mega Pack






    If the font file is in a .zip archive, right click the file and click Extract

  2. Right click on the font file and click Install



How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP


Install a New Font – Method 2



To install a font through the font manager, do the following:


  1. Download a fontIf the font file is in a .zip archive, right click the file and click Extract

  2. Click the Start button, type font, and click on Fonts

  3. Drag the font file into the Font manager



How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP


XP Method



For Windows XP users:



  1. Download the Megapack




    How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP


    Download Font Mega Pack






    If the font file is in a .zip archive, right click the file and click Extract

  2. Open C:\Windows\Fonts

  3. Drag the font file to the Fonts folder:



How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP




How to Install Custom Fonts in Window 7 or Window XP


Enjoy your new fonts.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Bouncy Content Filter for big Website

This space-saving content filter allows the users to switch from one category to the other in a fancy way! Each click fires the rotation of the gallery images, revealing the items belonging to the selected category. Content filters  are particularly useful for big websites, where each pixel counts. Lets say you are showing the “ last products ” of your e-commerce . How about giving the users the option to switch to the “most popular” products without a page refresh? A good solution could be to hide the “most popular” items right behind the “last products”, then use the power of CSS3 3D Transforms to rotate the items when the user switches from one option to the other. The bounce effect is optional, but you get the idea! The rotation won’t work on older browsers like IE9, but the experience won’t be broken – just a display on/off with no transitions. Lets dive into the code! Creating the structure We wrapped the filter into a <nav> element. The filter structur...

Side Team Member Biography Resource

Use this team member biography resource to insert extended descriptions of your team members, with no need of dedicated pages or modal windows. Let the user meet your team and trust your company! Sometimes a picture and a role are not enough to completely describe a team member; you need a more detailed description to make your team “real”! But this requires space… and you can gain it using CSS3 transformations . Just give a look at the smart solution found by Aquatilis : the description enters from the side, just like mobile application behaviour, with no need of page reload. Creating the structure We created a #cd-team section containing our team members preview: <section id="cd-team" class="cd-section"> <div class="cd-container"> <h2>Our team</h2> <ul> <li> <a href="#0" data-type="member-1"> <figure><!-- .... --></figure> <div class=...

Pricing Table-Cross Reference Table for Website

Pricing Table-Cross Reference Table for Website.Tables are indispensable parts of web designs. They let you visually organise tabular content, distributing it on rows and columns. Although they are quite easy to design and code for large screens, things get more complicated on smaller devices. Whether it’s a subscription plan or a checkout process, you must deal with tables in your projects. And you must deal with responsiveness too. I’ve noticed some websites just cut off some columns to make their tables fits on a phone, but this solution doesn’t work in most cases (at least not if you need 5+ columns). I found this good example of a responsive table which inspired this resource: the list of features gets fixed on a side, allowing the user to horizontally scroll through the columns. Nice! Now why didn’t I use the HTML table structure , and instead went with unordered lists? It was difficult for me to make this resource responsive using proper table semantics (maybe an...