PT3 to UFO Converter

Transform PostScript Type 3 fonts into editable UFO source format online

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Development-Ready

UFO is the industry-standard source format for font development. Convert PT3 to UFO to gain full editing capability in any professional font editor.

Open & Flexible

From UFO, you can compile to TTF, OTF, WOFF, or any other target — making it the ideal intermediate step for modernizing legacy PT3 fonts.

Privacy Guaranteed

Your PT3 uploads are deleted immediately after conversion. UFO outputs are purged from our servers within 24 hours — your font designs stay private.

How to convert PT3 to UFO

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose ufo or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your ufo file right afterwards

About formats

PT3 (PostScript Type 3) is a font format defined as part of the PostScript language specification, introduced by Adobe Systems in 1984. Unlike Type 1 fonts, which use a restricted subset of PostScript operators optimized for hinting and efficient rendering, Type 3 fonts allow the full PostScript language to describe each glyph. This means glyphs can incorporate graduated fills, grayscale shading, complex path operations, color, and even bitmap images — capabilities impossible within Type 1's constrained charstring interpreter. Adobe originally kept the Type 1 specification secret and proprietary, so third-party type foundries and developers who wanted to create PostScript-compatible fonts had to use the publicly documented Type 3 format during the late 1980s. A notable advantage is creative freedom: because any valid PostScript program can define a glyph, designers can produce decorative, illustrated, and textured letterforms that go far beyond simple outline fills. The format's openness was another practical strength in its era, enabling anyone to create PostScript fonts without licensing Adobe's proprietary hinting technology. However, Type 3 fonts lack the hinting mechanisms that make Type 1 text crisp at small sizes and low resolutions, which limited their use for body text. When Adobe published the Type 1 specification in March 1990, most foundries migrated to the hinted format. Type 3 fonts remain primarily of historical interest, encountered in archived PostScript documents and specialized applications where artistic glyph rendering outweighs the need for screen-optimized hinting.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: 1984
UFO (Unified Font Object) is an open, XML-based font source format designed by Tal Leming, Just van Rossum, and Erik van Blokland, with the first version published in 2004. Unlike compiled binary fonts, a UFO is a directory structure containing separate XML files for each glyph (in GLIF format), font metadata (fontinfo.plist), kerning data, groups, and feature definitions. This decomposed architecture was purpose-built for collaborative font development — each glyph exists as its own file, making granular version control with Git or similar systems practical and clean. The format is explicitly application-independent, serving as an interchange layer between different font editors (RoboFont, Glyphs, FontForge, FontLab) rather than locking designers into a single tool. UFO 3, the current major version released in 2012, supports cubic and quadratic outlines, guidelines, anchors, image references, custom data storage, and layered design sources for interpolation. A defining advantage is collaboration-friendliness: teams of designers can work on different glyphs simultaneously and merge changes through standard VCS workflows without conflict. The human-readable XML format provides another benefit — every aspect of the font design can be inspected, diffed, and scripted using standard programming tools. The UFO specification is hosted as an open standard, and an active ecosystem of Python libraries (fontTools, ufoLib2, defcon) provides programmatic access for automated font production pipelines. Major type foundries and open-source font projects increasingly adopt UFO as their canonical source format.
Initial release: 2004

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PT3 to UFO?

UFO is the open standard for font source files — converting PT3 to UFO lets you edit glyphs, add hinting, and compile to any modern output format.

How do I open a UFO file?

RoboFont, Glyphs, FontForge, and FontLab all support UFO natively. The format uses XML and plain text, so individual files are human-readable too.

Can I version-control a UFO font?

Yes. UFO stores each glyph as a separate XML file — perfect for Git or other version control systems. This is a key advantage over monolithic font formats.

Does batch conversion work for multiple PT3 fonts?

Yes. Upload all your PT3 files at once — Convertio generates a separate UFO package for each font, ready for individual download.

Is this free to use?

Totally free. No accounts, no software installation — Convertio converts your PT3 fonts to UFO right in the browser at zero cost.