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Of course, for Free ("as in Freedom") fonts, you don't need to worry (and one of the most prominent licenses of such fonts is the OFL). After you’ve installed 7-Zip, double-click (or tap if you have a Windows 10 tablet) the. That's great, but be careful to see if the license of the fonts that you are splitting/converting allows such wide redistribution. Addendaįurther comments: One reason why some people may be interested in performing the splitting mentioned above (or using a font converter after all) is to convert the fonts to web formats (like WOFF). If you want to have a more programmatic/automatic way of manipulating fonts, then you might be interested in my answer to a similar (but not exactly the same) question. Note that I emphasized generating instead of saving above: saving the font will create a file in Fontforge's specific SFD format, which is probably useless to you, unless you want to develop fonts with Fontforge. Repeat the steps of loading 4-6 for the other font and you will have your TTFs readily usable for you. After the font is loaded (it may take a while, as this font is very large), you can ask Fontforge to generate the TTF file via the menu File > Generate Fonts.Fontforge will tell you that there are two fonts "packed" in this particular TTC file (at least as of ) and ask you to choose one.Open it with Fontforge (e.g., File > Open).Assuming that Windows doesn't really know how to deal with TTC files (which I honestly find strange), you can "split" the combined fonts in an easy way if you use fontforge.