- were almost certainly not designed by the vendor. CDs with insane quantities of fonts on the are almost always ripoffs (the possible exceptions being collections from major foundries that cost thousands of dollars). Usually, the ripoffs lack the quality of fonts from respectable founries.
Completeness: The higher quality fonts (notably from Adobe) come in several variants, with some nice supplements to provide the user with a more complete font family. There are often bold, italic, and demibold variants, swash capitals, small caps, old style figures, and extra ligatures to supplement the font. More recently, Adobe have a multiple master technology which gives the user ( almost ) infinite variation within one font family.
Quality: A lot of the freely available fonts or the cheap ripoffs lack fairly essential features such as kerning pairs and decent ligatures. They are basically cheap copies. In contrast, reputable designers take a lot of trouble to study the original design, and rework it to the best of their ability.
Authenticity: The person who designed Adobe Garamond (Robert Slimbach) actually studied the original designs of Claude Garamond. In fact reputable foundries always carefully research their designs, rather than just swiping something off the net, and modifying it with Fontographer.
9.2.3.2. Value
An excellent place to go for a CD packed with several Type 1 fonts of reasonable quality is Bitstream . Bitstreams more noted products include their 250 font CD and their 500 font CD (the latter goes for $50- at the time of writing). These are fairly good quality fonts, and are a fairly good starting point for the casual user. The fonts used in Corel's products are (mostly) licensed from bitstream.
Matchfonts offer more modestly priced fonts -- they are distributed in ''packs'' of about 8 fonts for $30. This includes some nice calligraphic fonts. All fonts seem to be offered in a usable format (the windows ATM fonts come in a .exe file. Don't let the extension fool you -- it's just a zip archive). These are not ripoffs as far as I can tell.
EFF sell TrueType fonts for $2- per hit. They also have ''professional range'' PostScript and TrueType fonts for $16- per typeface.
9.2.3.3. Premium
Adobe have several high quality, fonts available at Adobe's type website . Some of these are expensive, but they have several more affordable bundles -- see Adobe Type Collections . Adobe have some of the most complete font families on the market, for example, Garamond , Caslon , and their multiple masters (Myriad and Minion, used on their website are among the nicer of their multiple masters.)
Berthold Types Limited is a major foundry, who offer several quality fonts. Some of them are resold through Adobe, all are directly available from Berthold. Same price ballpark as Adobe.
ITC develop several quality fonts (including some of the ones Corel ships with their products) at http://www.itcfonts.com . They offer family packages for about $100-180 US. Their fonts, come in both Type 1 and TrueType format. It's better to choose the ''Windows'' package, because Mac formats are difficult to handle on

