![]() ![]() You probably didn’t realize that so many things could go wrong with fonts in Figma, but actually all UI design tools suffer the same fate. The solution is simply to go through the replace fonts process mentioned above even though you’re not really replacing the font you’re just prompting Figma to get the right font name. This is because Sketch can sometimes report font names incorrectly - e.g., as “OpenSans” rather than “Open Sans.” When importing a Sketch file into Figma, it’s possible to run into the missing fonts problem despite having the font(s) installed. Missing fonts after importing from Sketch Other font providers might insist that you do the same thing or something similar. If successful, the interface might say “in Adobe & other local apps” next to the font name, rather than “in Adobe apps”: If you’re using Adobe Fonts but the fonts are showing up as missing or not appearing in the font picker, open Adobe Creative Cloud, click on the Adobe Fonts icon (the one with the lowercased, italicized “f”) in the top-right corner, and then click on the Install family button next to each font that you’d like to make available in Figma and other non-Adobe apps. You can fix this problem by deleting the font from your organization/team (via the same interface that you uploaded it with) and/or uninstalling the font from your computer - any collaborators will need to do this, too After that, the Google Font should work perfectly and even update automatically as new versions come out. ![]() Remember: those versions take precedence over Google Font versions, even if they’re incomplete. If you’re using a Google web font but it appears that there are some weights missing, it’s probably because you have a version of the font uploaded to your Figma organization/team or installed on your computer that doesn’t contain those weights.
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