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Designing Captions Using the Debossed Fonts

Ever since the Wizard™ could cut letters, the quest has been to cut them smaller and smaller. Even when the tight curves were engineered out of the letters or cut as V-Grooves, the minimum height was still over an inch.

Debossing presses into the matboard. There is no cutting, so the minimum size is about three-eighths of an inch.

There are four fonts designed for debossing.

  • Bristol is a traditional serif typeface.

  • Vienna is contemporary sans serif typeface.

  • Ariadne is a flourishing italic typeface.

All three of these fonts deboss as single lines.
Thorndike is a Roman typeface and it debosses as a double line so there is width variation in the letter strokes. It looks best a little larger.

There are even punctuation marks in these debossed fonts as well.

Adding Debossed Letters

Add debossed letters to the mat design like you would add any other LetterMat opening.

Click the Openings tab at the top of the edit screen.
Then click the LetterMat button under Other Openings at the bottom left.
The default LetterMat will appear.

To change the font, click the Properties tab then click the drop down arrow beside the Font Name field.

Scroll down and click on the one you want.

At the bottom left under Cut As it reads Normal. This means that it will cut as it was designed. It does not mean that it will cut as a normal bevel.

All the debossed fonts were set to deboss using the thin tool. If you would like to select one of the wider tools, click the drop down arrow beside Normal and select the tool width you want. This field will then reflect your choice.

Altering the Caption

Type the words you want into the Text box at the top.

Note that there are now some punctuation marks.
Change the Height.

A suggested minimum height is 0.38 inch.
Click the Keep Aspect Ratio button. This keeps the letters in their intended proportions.
You can condense the letters or expand them, but this is a good place to start.

Refine the Spacing

Kerning changes the size of the space between the letters.

Tracking changes the size of the space between each word.

If you click the + and – buttons beside them, the values change a sixteenth of an inch
with each click. (One millimeter with each click in metric).

Hold the Atl key on the keyboard as you click the + and – buttons and these values change 0.01 inch per click. (0.2mm per click in metric)

Zoom in on the caption so you can get a closer look as you make these changes.

Click on Tools at the top, click on Zoom, then select the zoom level you want.

An easier way is to hold the Control key on the keyboard and click the + key to zoom in.

You can click it up to four times to get 150%, 200%, 250%, or 300% magnification.

Scroll bars appear at the bottom and on the right so you can move the view around the entire design.

Hold the Control key and click the – button to zoom back out.

You can add more captions and openings. Use the Alignment buttons and guide lines to align and space the debossed items just as you would for every other item in the design.

Manual Spacing

With debossing, spacing is more critical than with cut letters.

Some of the letters in the Ariadne font have extra flourishes and do not space very nicely. The letters of this font are all at an angle and some of their extended parts make their bounding rectangles even larger.

This example shows the results from the program’s kerning.

  • The E is too far away from the m.

  • The y is much too far away from the l.

  • The period is too far away from the T.

  • The o is too far away from both the R and the g.

  • The s is too far away from the r.

Exploding the Font

Click the Advanced tab at the top.

Select the caption and click the Explode Font button at the bottom left under Other Options.

This breaks the caption into its separate letters.

Each letter can be individually moved now.

The E has already been moved closer to the m using the right arrow key on the keyboard.

Now, select the E, m, i, and l.

Hold the Alt key on the keyboard and click the right arrow key until these letters move as close to the y as you want them.

With each click of the arrow key they will move 0.01 inch. (0.2mm in metric)

Select Emily and the T.

Move them to the right until the T is as close to the period as you want it.

Keep selecting groups of letters and moving them into place using the arrow keys.

All that remains to be done in this illustration is to move the s closer to the r, then move the g, e, r, and s closer to the o.

Remember the Undo button. If you unintentionally change something’s size or move it as you are selecting it, the undo button will restore it.

Once this manual spacing is complete, it would be helpful to lock the letters back together. Then, as you add the opening, move it around, and space it with the caption, you will not accidentally move any of the individual letters.

Regrouping the Caption

Select all the letters.

Click the Advanced tab then click the Group Selection button.

When you click it, all the letters will disappear.

Do not panic.

Click the Properties tab.

At the bottom left under Options is a Merge Paths? button. It will already be checked.

When you click it and uncheck it, the caption will return.

Explanation: All of these letters are just lines, not closed paths. Only closed paths are recognized in merging. Lines will group, though. Once their paths are unmerged, they reappear. And they remain grouped.

You can now add openings, grooves, and more captions.

The Emily T. Rogers caption will stay in one piece and can be moved around and aligned using all the Wizard™ tools without fear of disturbing the spacing of the letters.

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