

However, at the time of that posting (2009), Apple had not decided about the actual license. Third party should be free to use the font, or to adapt it, modify Included as part of a system which is sold as a package). Use that tool to create a TTF file with the icons you want. Original font, or one derived from it or incorporating parts of it,Ĭan not be sold as a stand-alone package. Version 3 of TypeTool added this feature.

Result must have a different name (without "Apple" in it). The name "Apple Emoji" can only be used for the original unmodifiedįont if the font is modified or combined with another font, the The only conditions we want to impose are: a) Glyphs with those from another font, without Apple acquiring any It possible for anyone to change it as they see fit or to combine its In this posting Apple's Peter Edberg says:Īs previously stated, Apple would like to make the Apple Emoji font -Īnd the glyphs therefrom - widely available using a license that makes Preface Long-overdue, this guide will aid in enabling system-wide unicode emoji so they are interpreted as images, rather than unicode reserved spaces without an assignment.
#APPLE COLOR EMOJI.TTF HOW TO#
What's the license of OS X Lion's /System/Library/Fonts/Apple Color Emoji.ttf? What you see in font book just doesnt matter that much. Difficulty: Much was borrowed from gabrc52’s guide How to enable system-wide color emoji support.
