Fri, 18 Mar 2011 Extensis Suitcase Fusion 3 review
Simplify font management with help from Extensis Suitcase Fusion 3
- Manufacturer: Extensis
- Pros: Uncluttered interface; Finds similar fonts; Integrates with Web fonts
- Cons: Can't print font specimen books; Web fonts are limited to Extensis' WebINK catalog
- Price: $100 (£62); upgrade $49.95 (£31)
- Star rating:
Even under the best of circumstances, font management is complicated. Fortunately for creatives, the formerly crippling font problems in Mac OS X have mostly been ironed out by the current crop of font management software.
Products such as Suitcase Fusion 3 capably weed out problem fonts and duplicate fonts, organize and categorize your fonts, and can auto-activate necessary fonts when you open a document. As with all professional font managers, it lets you create sets of fonts for various purposes, manage system fonts, preview and export fonts, explore technical font details, and so on.
So, what's left for a company such as Extensis to add to their font manager? First, a few features were added to catch up with the competition: you can now create application sets that activate specific fonts whenever a particular application is launched, you can export a .png image file that shows your custom text in any font (with transparency), you can clear the font cache files to resolve font display glitches (including caches for Mac OS X, Adobe applications, QuarkXPress and Microsoft Office), and auto-activate fonts in Photoshop CS4 and CS5 documents.
But two new features are unique to Fusion 3: QuickMatch and WebINK integration. QuickMatch lets you explore your font collection to find fonts that look similar to a selected font—a tremendously helpful feature for people who are new to choosing fonts, as well as for deadline-driven designers who have more fonts than they can remember. To use QuickMatch, you simply choose a font in your library and choose Edit -> QuickMatch. Fusion 3 then examines the shape of the glyphs in your selected font and searches your selected library for fonts that are similar in appearance. You can then adjust the number of results you want to see, and whether you want to search your local fonts or Extensis' collection of WebINK fonts (see below). I found the QuickMatch feature to be accurate enough to be useful, as well as joyfully addictive.

The QuickMatch feature makes it easy to find similar-looking fonts.
The new WebINK integration feature opens a huge new world of fonts to Website designers. Extensis is one of a number of companies hoping to persuade Web designers to rent their fonts, which are licensed from font designers around the world. (Right now, their WebINK collection includes almost 2,100 fonts.) These Web fonts can be used on any Web page by adding an @font–face tag to its CSS definitions, and are viewable in most modern Web browsers. The fonts are stored on Extensis' servers and streamed when a visitor loads a page that requests one. A monthly fee is paid to Extensis by the person or company who owns the Website, based on the Website's traffic and the base price of the fonts used. The monthly rental price ranges from $2 to $40 based on the amount of bandwidth your site requires. Bandwidth is determined by the number of fonts on the page and number of unique visitors to your site.
This is a potential gold mine for Web font distributors, and Extensis has brilliantly integrated this feature into Fusion 3. For example, you can type in the URL for any CSS-based Web page and then preview what it would look like using any of the WebINK fonts. (You can also preview Web pages using any of your local fonts as well, which can be useful in combination with the QuickMatch feature to find a WebINK font that resembles your project's printed material.) If you're working on a Website design, you can preview Web pages on your hard drive and create a Type Drawer to keep track of the fonts under consideration. You can even print any Web page using the new fonts to show your clients.

WebINK integration lets you preview new fonts in any Web page—local or on the Internet.
Once you've chosen the WebINK fonts you want to use, Fusion 3 gives you a snippet of code to drop into your Website's CSS definitions. When you tell Extensis to activate those fonts, your credit card starts getting charged to rent them. It's important to note that if payment isn't made, your Website's fonts revert to default Web fonts defined in its CSS definitions.
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User Reviews
Tue, 19 Jul 2011Reviewed by: Gleddit
Star Rating: 
Duration of ownership: 6 months
Strengths: Temporary Activation still works well, and is essential for anyone in a busy studio!
Weaknesses: 1) Suitcase Core is still 32bit! 2) Inability to turn 'off" previews, sometimes you know the font you want, so why do you need to wait for the font preview!?
Overall Evaluation: Overall, still very good and Webink is interesting, but I'd rather have a 64bit Core and the ability to turn off previews for a faster working environment. A lot of what is in Fusion 3 is in Fusion 2, most of the upgrade is about CS5 compatibility, CS5.5 is not supported!


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