
Here are some a resources for free fonts.

I don't know for sure if Franklin Gothic Medium is approved for this use, but I doubt that it is. They usually let you use a font as long as you include a link to their page. This use isn't always explicitly covered in the license, but you can usually contact the designer directly to ask. Make sure any fonts you embed in a web page state that it is okay to do so in their licenses, as the font will live on your web server in a public directory, free for anyone to download. There is a more thorough article on this subject on A List Apart. The site is a great resource for playing with CSS3 tricks (or in this case CSS2 proposed tricks). eot.ĬSS3.info has a nice, brief tutorial on how to use the rule. Microsoft makes a horrible little font conversion tool called WEFT (Windows only) that you can use to convert most font formats to. eot (a proprietary embedded open type format) only. Designers: Morris Benton, Mark van Bronkhorst, Igino Marini. The 18-font family offers nine weights with true italics, a Latin-extended character set, and a suite of OpenType features. In google chrome, click on the 3 dots at the top.

Quick Tip: You can search any website using the 'find' or search feature. The dates on the feet are the Franklin Gothic font.

Internet Explorer version 5+ supports embedding for. ATF Franklin Gothic maintains the warmth and the spirit of a Benton classic while offering a suite of fonts tuned precisely for contemporary appeal and utility. Fonts are Starfish, Milkshake, and Franklin Gothic. Safari 3.1 (and Webkit Nightly builds), Firefox 3.1, and Opera 10 support embedding for.
