MCTIME.TTF
The FF Chartwell story began with a graph-heavy print project produced in InDesign, and the question ‘Couldn’t some of this be automated?’ Inspired by fonts like FF PicLig, which for example substitutes a picture of a car when you type in ‘car,’ designer Travis Kochel started with a simple pie chart font just to see if he could get it working. FF Chartwell isn’t like other faces in that its letters and figures aren’t intended to be displayed; They only serve as placeholders for chart and graph el.
Chartwell Font Indesign
Character map
Please use the pulldown menu to view different character maps contained in this font.
Basic font information
Converted by ALLTYPE
MAC C Times
Regular
Ff Chartwell Font Family
FontMonger:MAC C Times
MAC C Times
Converted from C:WINDOWSSYSTEMCTR_____.TF1 by ALLTYPE
MACCTimes
Extended font information
Platforms supported
Chartwell Pie Font
![Chartwell pie font Chartwell pie font](/uploads/1/1/7/9/117948242/244758433.png)
MicrosoftUnicode BMP only
Font details
Ff Chartwell Font
Glyph count223
Embedding rightsEmbedding for permanent installation
WeightSemi-light
Width typeNormal
DirectionOnly strongly left to right glyphs + contains neutrals
PostureUpright
PitchNot monospaced
Complete pack contains 4 font weights listed below:
Install fonts
Double-click the font in the Finder, then click Install Font in the font preview window that opens. After your Mac validates the font and opens the Font Book app, the font is installed and available for use.
You can use Font Book preferences to set the default install location, which determines whether the fonts you add are available to other user accounts on your Mac.
Fonts that appear dimmed in Font Book are either disabled ('Off'), or are additional fonts available for download from Apple. To download the font, select it and choose Edit > Download.
Disable fonts
You can disable any font that isn't required by your Mac. Select the font in Font Book, then choose Edit > Disable. The font remains installed, but no longer appears in the font menus of your apps. Fonts that are disabled show ”Off” next to the font name in Font Book.
Remove fonts
You can remove any font that isn't required by your Mac. Select the font in Font Book, then choose File > Remove. Font Book moves the font to the Trash.
Learn more
macOS supports TrueType (.ttf), Variable TrueType (.ttf), TrueType Collection (.ttc), OpenType (.otf), and OpenType Collection (.ttc) fonts. macOS Mojave adds support for OpenType-SVG fonts.
Legacy suitcase TrueType fonts and PostScript Type 1 LWFN fonts might work but aren't recommended.