You can see in the exported image from Illustrator, the bottom of the “C, F, H, J, L, M, N, P, R, X, and Y” are cut off. See Here
Can you show your vertical metrics settings (Font Info > Masters)? Specifically the descender?
Is the ‘cut off’ version an earlier version of your font? How do you install the font? Are you using the Adobe Fonts folder?
In reality it’s not cut off, it is longer than the original version.
I do it by opening the font with FontBook and clicking ‘install’. But ok, I’ll take a look at the tutorial.
That’s the worst way – FontBook in general is quite limited and often buggy, and installing it in the system like that will inevitably lead to font cache errors.
ah ok. thanks. i’ll try the way in the Glyphs tutorial
You may also need to clear your macOS font cache completely to make sure your system doesn’t still use some old, previously installed version of the font.
It’s not an earlier version. I’ve never drawn it like that. There’s always been spikes on the bottom. I just reinstalled in through adobe and it still exports like that.
We know that illustrator is using the lowercase “d” to determine the first baseline. Did we ever found out what it uses for the descender?
I’m sorry, I kind of don’t know what you’re asking but my Glyphs 3 files is set up like this:
Ascender 800/0
Cap Height 700/0
X Height: 500/0
Baseline 0/0
Descender -200/0
Your file is fine. My comment was for everyone else, not for you directly. Sorry for the confusion.