@Owlor I cut my teeth on bitmap fonts, which are way easier to get to an acceptably usable and decent-looking state. (For those of us who like bitmap fonts, anyhow.)
Has anyone introduced you to FontStruct yet? https://fontstruct.com/ – build vector fonts like Lego, and not just square ones.
Makin' fonts on the cheap!
@xinjinmeng @Owlor I've used FontForge for several projects. Symbol and "alien" fonts for puzzle events, fonts to simulate old dot-matrix type, Cleaning up FontStruct exports, especially since (unless they've fixed it in the last half-year) the way FontStruct chooses vertical metrics is kinda crap. Also, I once used it to replace the titling numerals in a font with its existing-in-the-same-font-but-utterly-unused "old-style" set. (Roboto Serif, for the Rainfurrest cyberpunk-themed year.) Your description of the software is spot-on! As in, it's unstable enough that I have to draw everything in a different program then import it, 'cause drawing in FontForge (Windows build) is a guaranteed crash.
I used Calligraphr (or similar?) once forever ago and I've used the results in a couple projects, but I've made some changes to how I write, so it might be worth another go....
@ElectricKeet I have done a bitmap font! It's very pixelly so I tend to use it as a template when I'm hand-lettering and I might use it as-is in, like, a retro-flavored game at sime point.
Fonstruct looks really fun! I might try and mess around with that at some point
@Owlor I encourage it!
Also, I may as well show off. *grin*
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructors/17866/electrickeet
@ElectricKeet @Owlor
https://fontforge.org/en-US/
FontForge is the paragon of open-source software - it's powerful, it's free to use, it's documented, it's hard to use, and it's unstable as a Sunday-school stacking chair.
https://www.calligraphr.com/en/
Calligraphr lets you upload a scanned sheet of your handwriting to turn into a font. (But there's no reason you can't upload your own art.)