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As my font list and font settings show below, my fonts on Windows 7 are nowhere to be found. Any ideas how I can "find" my fonts? I'd like to copy a font file.

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    Is there anything in %systemroot%\Fonts\ ? i.e. the actual folder in the file system the fonts live inside.
    – Windos
    Aug 2, 2011 at 5:11
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    Of course to actually check the Fonts folder, you’ll need to use the command-prompt, you can’t just navigate to it in Explorer. Open a command-prompt (cmd.exe) and check the Fonts folder: > dir c:\windows\fonts/s/o/a/p
    – Synetech
    Aug 2, 2011 at 5:19
  • @Synetech inc. you can if you enabled viewing of hidden folders... Aug 2, 2011 at 21:55
  • @Breakthrough, nope, you can’t. The Fonts folder is special (due to its desktop.ini file) and is interpreted differently than a normal folder. Therefore, when you open it, instead of seeing a list of files, you see a list of folders. There are other such folders like the \Windows\Assembly; open it and see that you cannot see the files or folders, but rather the interpreted items. You can only see the actual files and folders on disk via the command-prompt.
    – Synetech
    Aug 3, 2011 at 1:43
  • @Synetech inc. maybe that's a Windows 7 thing - I can see them as files on my XP machine (albeit with a slightly different layout). I can see the file size, type, font name, etc, all through Explorer. Aug 3, 2011 at 1:48

3 Answers 3

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Not sure if it's possible to mark a comment as an answer. Anyway, as Synetech inc. said:

"Of course to actually check the Fonts folder, you’ll need to use the command-prompt, you can’t just navigate to it in Explorer. Open a command-prompt (cmd.exe) and check the Fonts folder: > dir c:\windows\fonts/s/o/a/p"

Cheers mate!

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  • No, but you can upvote his comments. Aug 3, 2011 at 21:08
  • I can't yet it seems.
    – Brandon
    Aug 3, 2011 at 21:48
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    Now you can. :) Aug 3, 2011 at 21:52
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Yes, you CAN see the Fonts folder using Windows Explorer.

First off, to answer one of the comments, this is, indeed, a Windows 7 thing. (Possibly Vista as well? I don't remember.) Anyway, in Windows 7, entering the Fonts folder with Windows Explorer activates the Fonts Control Panel instead of just displaying a normal folder.

However, the answer is in one of the comments above!

Synetech said:

The Fonts folder is special (due to its desktop.ini file) and is interpreted differently than a normal folder. Therefore, when you open it, instead of seeing a list of files, you see a list of folders.

And therein lies your answer...!

PLEASE NOTE: You do this at your own risk! Make sure you know what you're doing before attempting this, although, if you follow these instructions, you should be OK. Also, this all relies on the assumption that you have Administrator privileges.

Open a new command prompt by typing "cmd" in the Run box, and go to the Fonts folder:

cd /d C:\Windows\Fonts

Next, temporarily deactivate the special folder by renaming the desktop.ini file:

ren desktop.ini desktop.ini.orig

Now if you use Windows Explorer to go to C:\Windows\Fonts, you will see a normal Explorer folder, including all of the font files!

When you are done, close the Windows Explorer window, go back to your command prompt window, and move the desktop.ini back:

ren desktop.ini.orig desktop.ini

Open Windows Explorer again, and go back to the font directory. Once again you should see the Fonts Control Panel window instead of a regular folder window.

I want to reiterate that you do this at your own risk! If you're not absolutely comfortable doing this, DON'T!

BTW, just to be safer, before renaming the desktop.ini file, you might want to copy it to a backup location. (You'll have to copy it to a name like "desktop.ini.bak", because if you just copy the file as is, you'll overwrite the desktop.ini of the backup directory.)

I hope this helps!

P.S. I should have added... The only reason to do what I've laid out here is if you absolutely need to access the Fonts folder as a regular folder. For standard font actions, such as installing, deleting, and hiding fonts, Windows 7 provides these commands as part of the OS. So, in general, it's best to use the Fonts folder in the way intended. If, however, you absolutely need Explorer access to the Fonts file, use these instructions to do so.

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If you need to copy the fonts just open it in windows 7 font view and drag the font outside of the window and it will copy the ttf for you.

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