All Khmer Limon Font 2008 ~repack~

Limon Font series, often associated with the year 2008 in older software archives, represents a legacy collection of non-Unicode (legacy/ASCII) Khmer fonts. Unlike modern Khmer Unicode

Khmer Unicode Converter

If you have a document using Limon fonts and want to modernize it, you don't have to retype it. You can use a . These tools allow you to paste Limon text and instantly transform it into Unicode so it can be read on any modern smartphone or computer without needing the specific Limon font files. all khmer limon font 2008

  • File name: Limon S1.ttf, Limon S2.ttf, etc.
  • File size: Approximately 80–120 KB per font (smaller than modern variable fonts).
  • Digital signature / metadata: Inside the font properties (right-click > Properties > Details), the copyright line often reads “© 2008 Open Forum of Cambodia” or “© 2008 Khmer Software Initiative.”
  • Character set: Must contain all Khmer consonants, dependent vowels, independent vowels, and punctuation. A quick test: type the word "សួស្តី" (hello). If the subscript "ស្ត" renders as a clean stack, it is authentic 2008 Unicode.

Legacy Compatibility:

These fonts are essential for opening and editing historical documents created in the mid-2000s. Limon Font series, often associated with the year

  • Word Processing: Limon R1 and Limon S1 were the standards for Microsoft Word documents.
  • Photoshop/Design: Graphic designers preferred Limon fonts in 2008 because Khmer Unicode support in Adobe Photoshop CS3 was notoriously difficult to configure. Limon fonts behaved like standard English fonts, making layer manipulation easy.
  • Websites: Many early Cambodian websites used Limon text images because browsers often failed to render Khmer Unicode correctly without plugins.
  • a CSS @font-face snippet for web embedding,
  • a full pangram test file covering Khmer codepoints,
  • or example OpenType feature code (GSUB/GPOS) for a specific ligature — tell me which.