Quote:
Originally Posted by nabsltd
There are fonts full of fleurons like that.
Also, if you have a high-resolution image, you can also convert it to a TrueType/OpenType font glyph pretty easily, and create a custom font with all your special images.
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Interesting. I'll have to look into that technique. That might help with Amazon/Kindle but doesn't the user have to enable embedded fonts to see them? Is it more work to make a custom glyph in a custom font than to make the background transparent in an image??
I think with an image at least the users will see it... if Amazon can't figure out how to honor transparencies then they will get the complaints about ugly images.