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Tangerine font
Tangerine font











tangerine font

Step 3, Create a custom font scheme file based on one of those out of box fontscheme*.spfont files, like, “fontscheme002.spfont”:Ī portion of the custom font scheme file to define custom font for body area:įor reference, see the Web fonts area in this article.

tangerine font

Step 2, Upload the four files to a library in the SharePoint site, for example, themes library 15 folder at In my example, it is :

TANGERINE FONT ZIP FILE

Then click Convert button, you will get a zip file that includes the needed file extensions:

tangerine font

I used a sample font (.tff file) from Google ( ), and retrieved other file extensions through this font-face generator ( ).ĭownload will give you a fonts.zip file, in there you can find. Step 1, you need to get custom font with four file extensions. When you change to the custom font in this way, all web pages in the site will use it so the site have a consistent font for main content areas. The font scheme defines the fonts that are used in four areas: title, navigation, heading, and body. Here are the different types of customizations we can do around the custom fonts :Ĭhanging the default fonts globally through custom fonts in Font Schemes used in Composed looks:Ĭustom fonts can be defined in the font scheme (.spfont file) for a SharePoint site. With help from our Escalation Engineer, Westley Hall, we were able to implement the customizations to meet the above requirements. Recently I assisted a SPO customer, who wanted to add custom web fonts to their SharePoint Online sites both as overall default font and custom rich text font when editing individual site pages. This post is a contribution from Jing Wang, an engineer with the SharePoint Developer Support team













Tangerine font