Aaron wrote:
...Frutiger is a big font family. Maybe it just doesn;t play nice with ArchiCAD as you suggest. I guess I was naive to think that my font issues of old would go away when I moved back to the Apple platform.
The issue is that you're using a still very much non-Apple DWG format as an intermediate.
You mention Archicad Paper space, I guess you mean that you dragged the DWG into an Archicad layout.
If you don't need to edit the file, you might just as well drag the Illustrator file (which should be saved as a PDF) directly into Archicad and check if it works better. if saved as a PDF, the font should be included with the file.
Also, you can create a font translation table in your DWG translator. You need to check that the actual font names match precisely — re-reading your original post, where you call it "jiggy" I'm thinking Archicad, not finding what you intended, has substituted the font your friend is using for its old bit-mapped screen representation.
The old MacOS (9 and previous) needed bit-mapped fonts for the screen. They were automatically exchanged for the real Postscript print fonts at print time. They have slightly different names, like
Frutiger Cond Bold might be substituted at print time with
Frutiger LTStd-Bold Cn,
for example. Both kinds are found within Adobe's font packs, but those are still different for the Mac compared to what's sold to PC/Windows. (that is an Adobe issue!)
So first you need to check that you have the right Postscript print font installed in your system, not just the bit-map font.
Then, if the above isn't enough, you need to check that's what's specified in your font translation table, because when you go through DWG, the bitmap-printfont connection is lost, and Archicad just does what it's told, finds and uses the font you've named. If you name the print font instead, that should work, because MacOSX will display and print whatever you throw at it!
Just my 2¢.
AC4.1-AC26SWE; MacOS13.5.1; MP5,1+MBP16,1