I have no understanding of font embedding etc except that preflight will warn if fonts are not embedded. Why would I not want to embed ALL fonts for printing. Seems like Distiller shouldn't even have an option to omit certain fonts from embedding. What am I missing.
You are not “missing” anything.
Historically, one of the selling points of PDF
was that the resultant files were exceptionally compact while maintaining visual fidelity with the original content.
One but not the only means of achieving this compactness was by allowing the PDF file creator to not embed some or all fonts. PostScript's Type 1 Multiple Master font technology was used to provide for “substitution fonts” mimicking the original fonts' metrics (although not design) when the PDF file reader didn't have the required fonts if the fonts were not embedded in the PDF file. The assumption was that
everyone had the base fonts (four faces each of Times, Helvetica, and Courier plus Symbol and ITC Zapf Dingbats) installed on their system. Early versions of Acrobat and Reader in fact did install these fonts in its own private directory. Subsequently, it was assumed that everyone on standard platforms (Windows and MacOS) had at least “work alike” fonts to those base fonts and as such, Acrobat and Reader only installed a few uber substitution fonts plus AdobePi (a work-alike font for ITC Zapf Dingbats). For the common
.joboptions files except for
High Quality Print, Press Quality, and
PDF/X, there is a list of common so-called “system fonts” that are not embedded (including fonts in the Verdana, Georgia, Tahoma, Trebouchet, Times New Roman, Courier New, and Arial families). Ironically, this list has not been updated in many years and is fairly obsolete in terms of the default OS fonts.
Given the history of PDF and its use/misuse and problems over the years, if I had to do it all over again, there would not be the concept of not embedding fonts in a PDF file. Any PDF file that simply references fonts that may or may not be installed on the recipient's system, printer, or RIP is a potential problem. That is exactly why all the ISO subset PDF standards including PDF/X, PDF/A, PDF/UA, and PDF/E all
require that all fonts be embedded.
- Dov