![]() ![]() ![]() Typically you'd have to open Photoshop, GIMP, or Sketch (wait for the updates to finish), and then create an image with this text, select the font, color, and then save it as an image.Ģ. Here's the old, slow, and convoluted way you'd do this:ġ. * Let's compare the old and new way (thanks to this package) to put custom fonts in emails. **:tada: Congratulations, because this package lets you do that with basically one line of code!** * You want to use this font in your emails and write the text "Make something people want" with it to use as a footer graphic. * Imagine you find a really cool font on GitHub such as, or another font at sites like or. > **Don't want to configure this yourself?** Try ! * :white _check_mark: Supports offline and missing image support by automatically adding `alt`, `title`, and `style` attributes of `color` and `font-size` based upon the options passed. * :pear: Pairs great with and (see usage as an example). ![]() * :sparkles: Use with recommended packages and, or simply use (has this built-in). * :tada: Supports all WOFF, OTF, and TTF fonts (both with TrueType `glyf` and PostScript `cff` outlines). you don't need to write `Arial.ttf `, you can just write `Arial`). * :crystal _ball: Detects user, local, network, system fonts, and `node_modules ` folder fonts using and (e.g. * :bulb: Automatic smart-detection of font names spelled incorrectly (or with the wrong extension) with 50% accuracy (uses and checks for at least 50% distance match). * :art: Outputs optimized SVG, PNG, and Base64 inlined images with optional support for ). **An extremely easy way to use custom fonts in emails without having to use art software.** ![]()
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