T42 to UFO Converter

Transform Type 42 fonts into UFO source format for font development

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Design-Ready Source

UFO stores each glyph as a separate XML file, making it perfect for collaborative font development, version control, and iterative design on your T42 fonts.

Editor Compatibility

The UFO format is supported by RoboFont, Glyphs, FontLab, and FontForge — giving you freedom to choose the best tool for your workflow.

Secure Conversion

Uploaded T42 fonts are removed immediately. UFO outputs are automatically purged from our servers within 24 hours.

How to convert T42 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

T42 (Type 42) is a PostScript font format developed by Adobe Systems that wraps a TrueType font inside a PostScript font dictionary, enabling PostScript printers equipped with a TrueType rasterizer to print TrueType fonts natively. The name reportedly references Douglas Adams' "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy," where 42 is the answer to the ultimate question. Type 42 was introduced with PostScript interpreter version 2013 in the mid-1990s, with Adobe publishing the formal specification as Technical Note #5012 in July 1998. The format embeds the complete TrueType font data — outlines, hinting instructions, and tables — as a binary string within the PostScript sfnts dictionary entry, while wrapping it in standard PostScript font structure including CharStrings, Encoding, and FontInfo dictionaries. One advantage is preserved TrueType hinting: because the original quadratic spline outlines and grid-fitting instructions are passed directly to the TrueType rasterizer, the printed output matches the screen rendering quality that TrueType hinting was designed to deliver. This is superior to the alternative approach of converting TrueType outlines to Type 1 cubics, which discards hinting. Type 42 also enables PostScript workflows to incorporate the vast library of TrueType fonts bundled with Windows and macOS without manual font conversion. PDF generators commonly use Type 42 embedding when including TrueType fonts in PostScript-based output pipelines. The format bridges two major font technologies that evolved separately, ensuring interoperability across the PostScript and TrueType ecosystems.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: 1995
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 T42 to UFO?

UFO is a version-controlled, XML-based source format embraced by professional type designers — converting T42 to UFO opens up full glyph editing in modern tools.

How do I open a UFO file?

RoboFont, Glyphs, FontForge, and FontLab all open UFO packages. The format consists of XML and text files, so individual layers can be inspected in any editor.

Does the conversion include metrics and kerning?

Yes. Character widths, sidebearings, and kerning pairs from the T42 font are all carried into the UFO package for immediate use.

Can I process multiple T42 fonts?

Yes — upload a batch of T42 files and Convertio creates separate UFO outputs for each weight or style in your collection.

Is the conversion free?

Entirely free. No account registration or software downloads needed — just upload your T42 and get a UFO package.