![]() ![]() Tinos is available for free from Google Fonts under the Apache 2.0 license. In Finale, you can make this change in Document > Data Check > Font Utilities… In Sibelius 7 and later, you can use Sibelius’s hierarchical text styles feature to quickly switch the text font, or you can go to Text > Format > Edit All Fonts and change the Main Text Font to Tinos. However, if you switch back and forth between both fonts, notice how the position of the text remains exactly in place, yet Tinos is generally more legibile compared to Times New Roman: This is notable, because unlike some other font equivalents, Tinos does not look like Times New Roman much at all: The Tinos text font in use in Sibelius (The font originated as a font called Liberation Serif.) That means that you can replace Times New Roman with Tinos, and the position of all of your text will stay the same. ![]() One option available - at no cost - is the Tinos font, designed by Steve Matteson as a metrically equivalent font to Times New Roman. But if you are working on a score that has been carefully set with Times New Roman and is already in its final stages, your options are more limited if you want to avoid “items shifting during flight”. If you’re starting from scratch, or have flexibility in your layout, the number of commercial and free text fonts available these days is nearly as many as the number of grains of sand on the beach. ![]() The Times New Roman text font in use in Sibelius The second reason is more practical: Times New Roman can be difficult to read, especially at smaller point sizes, and doesn’t stand up as well to some of the bolder elements of music, like dynamic text. The first reason is purely aesthetic: replacing Times New Roman with something less pedestrian can make your score look more distinctive. But there are two main reasons, among others, to choose another font in its place. It’s a perfectly fine font, and I have used it in many scores. It is installed on all Mac and Windows operating systems and was the default font for Microsoft Word for many years. It is the default text font in Sibelius 6.2 and earlier and in 2018.6 and later, and it has been the default text font in Finale for as long as I can remember. Times New Roman is such a ubiquitous font that you might not even notice it. ![]()
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