Musical fonts for word
Ah you might have preferred the B flat to be in the tenor, with the F-G in the alto - but that's easy enough to fix. Then do a screen dump, and extract the relevant part of the image as a jpg or png file, which can be embedded in Word. It can be transposed easily to any key - using the Transpose option in that program. Leading note in soprano up to tonic, so D – Ebįinally remaining notes in alto, so F – G. Rules are bass goes down (or up), so Bb – Eb I’m practising my cadences, so let’s keep it simple for my sake. You can see this technique in action in the introductory pages to this score:ĮA, I’m confused by your “using the appropriate codes” comment re Sibelius. Although when I have to put bits of musical notation into a Word document (which is quite often) my preferred method is to make them up in Sibelius, magnify them to fill the screen, make a screenshot and then drag the resulting jpg document into Word, where it can be moved around and resized as necessary. If you need to send the resulting document to anyone else it would be best to re-save it as a pdf.
#Musical fonts for word mac os
Similar considerations apply to Mac OS of course. But bear in mind that the treble clef won't display properly if you send the Word file to someone who doesn't have that font installed. So if you're a Windows user and you want (say) a treble clef in your Word document you could run the Character Map program, choose Helsinki, find the symbol you're after and copy+paste it. Helsinki) installed, ready for use by other applications. If you've got Sibelius installed then your system will have the music fonts it uses (eg.