When your software can’t read the font’s native language, it panics and says, “Fine. I’ll just use Arial.”
That is . What You Are Actually Seeing Let’s say you download a gorgeous vintage script called "WhiskeyBottle.ttf" (Type 1). You type your friend’s wedding invite. On your screen, it looks like elegant calligraphy.
But DaFont is also home to a massive library of "display" or "novelty" fonts. These are the beautiful, chaotic, handwritten, or super-ornamental fonts you actually want. And many of them are stored in a different format: .