I am designing a new web project and I am going to use Icon fonts for symbols over my pages.Menus Icon Bar Menu Icon Accordion Tabs Vertical Tabs Tab Headers Full Page Tabs Hover Tabs Top Navigation Responsive Topnav Split Navigation Navbar with Icons Search Menu Search Bar Fixed Sidebar Side Navigation Responsive Sidebar Fullscreen Navigation Off-Canvas Menu Hover Sidenav Buttons Sidebar with Icons Horizontal Scroll Menu Vertical Menu Bottom Navigation Responsive Bottom Nav Bottom Border Nav Links Right Aligned Menu Links Centered Menu Link Equal Width Menu Links Fixed Menu Slide Down Bar on Scroll Hide Navbar on Scroll Shrink Navbar on Scroll Sticky Navbar Navbar on Image Hover Dropdowns Click Dropdowns Cascading Dropdown Dropdown in Topnav Dropdown in Sidenav Resp Navbar Dropdown Subnavigation Menu Dropup Mega Menu Mobile Menu Curtain Menu Collapsed Sidebar Collapsed Sidepanel Pagination Breadcrumbs Button Group Vertical Button Group Sticky Social Bar Pill Navigation Responsive Header Any ideas on how to accomplish this, short of downloading every Google font I want to test and invoking it locally? Url('Oranienbaum.ttf') format('truetype')Īnd nothing works. I’ve tried various ways of invoking it, like: Header-font Īnd a zillion variations on the src, such as src: local ('Oranienbaum') Font-face seems like the solution, but it only seems to work with resident fonts or direct URL fonts…I can’t figure out how to get it to recognize a Google font family. But I want to create a font “alias” called Header-font to which I can assign different Google fonts to see how they display throughout my site. The rule should be added to the stylesheet before any styles. This is the method with the deepest support possible right now. The only practical thing also using WOFF buys you is Internet Explorer 11 support.
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