T42 to TTF Converter

Extract TrueType font data from Type 42 PostScript wrappers online

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Universal Format

TTF is supported on every major platform and application. Extracting it from the T42 PostScript wrapper makes your font usable anywhere without special tools.

Lossless Extraction

Since T42 embeds TrueType data verbatim, the conversion to TTF preserves every outline, hint, and metric from the original font exactly as intended.

Instant Online Tool

No font editors or PostScript utilities required — upload your T42 file in any browser and download a ready-to-install TTF in seconds.

How to convert T42 to TTF

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your ttf 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
TTF (TrueType Font) is a scalable outline font format developed by Apple Computer in the late 1980s and first shipped with Mac System 7 on May 13, 1991. Microsoft licensed the technology shortly after and included TrueType support in Windows 3.1 in 1992, establishing it as the dominant desktop font technology for over a decade. TrueType describes glyph shapes using quadratic Bezier splines — simpler mathematically than the cubic Bezier curves in PostScript fonts — stored alongside a powerful instruction set (the "hinting" language) that controls exactly how outlines are rasterized at each pixel size. This instruction-based hinting gives type designers pixel-level control over rendering at small sizes on low-resolution screens, producing exceptionally crisp text. The format stores all font data — outlines, metrics, kerning, naming, and hinting — in a single file organized as a directory of tagged data tables. One advantage is universal platform support: TTF files render natively on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android, and virtually every operating system and web browser without conversion or plugins. The byte-code hinting system is another distinctive strength, enabling screen rendering quality that remained superior to competing technologies until high-DPI displays reduced the importance of pixel-level optimization. TrueType's table-based architecture also proved remarkably extensible, serving as the structural foundation for the OpenType specification that added advanced typographic features and PostScript outline support on top of the TrueType container.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: May 13, 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert T42 to TTF?

T42 is a PostScript wrapper around TrueType data — converting to TTF extracts the raw font into a universally supported format that works everywhere without PostScript.

How do I open a TTF file?

Every modern operating system — Windows, macOS, Linux — opens TTF natively. Double-click to preview and install, or drop it into any design application.

Is the original TrueType data preserved exactly?

Yes. T42 contains verbatim TrueType data, so extraction to TTF is essentially an unwrapping — outlines, hinting, and metrics remain identical.

Can I convert many T42 fonts to TTF at once?

Yes — Convertio supports batch uploads. Queue your entire T42 font collection and download individual TTF files for each.

Is this conversion free?

Completely. Convertio lets you convert T42 to TTF for free in your browser — no account or software installation needed.