I encountered what appears to be the same underlying issue with the New Acrobat Experience.
Environment:
Windows 11
Acrobat Pro Continuous Release 2026.001.26191
TrueType font: Architect (MicroLogic Software)
The font is correctly installed in Windows and is available in Microsoft Word and Notepad.
In the New Acrobat Experience:
Searching for "Architect" returns "No fonts found."
I cannot select Architect when creating new text.
Existing PDFs containing Architect text sometimes lose characters after saving and reopening.
After switching to the Classic Acrobat Experience, every problem immediately disappears:
Architect appears in the font list.
New text can be created using Architect.
Existing PDFs edit normally.
I spent several hours verifying the font installation, reinstalling the font, updating Acrobat, and rebooting Windows. The only change required to restore full functionality was disabling the New Acrobat Experience.
This appears to be a broader font handling regression in the New Acrobat editing engine rather than a problem with any specific font.
I encountered what appears to be the same underlying issue with the New Acrobat Experience.
Environment:
Windows 11
Acrobat Pro Continuous Release 2026.001.26191
TrueType font: Architect (MicroLogic Software)
The font is correctly installed in Windows and is available in Microsoft Word and Notepad.
In the New Acrobat Experience:
Searching for "Architect" returns "No fonts found."
I cannot select Architect when creating new text.
Existing PDFs containing Architect text sometimes lose characters after saving and reopening.
After switching to the Classic Acrobat Experience, every problem immediately disappears:
Architect appears in the font list.
New text can be created using Architect.
Existing PDFs edit normally.
I spent several hours verifying the font installation, reinstalling the font, updating Acrobat, and rebooting Windows. The only change required to restore full functionality was disabling the New Acrobat Experience.
This appears to be a broader font handling regression in the New Acrobat editing engine rather than a problem with any specific font.