: Interlocking patterns used to design page margins and certificate boundaries in applications like Microsoft Word or Adobe Illustrator.

The original legacy TrueType fonts (TTF) produced via older tools like Macromedia Fontographer often suffer from broken encoding when imported into 64-bit modern software suites.

Why would someone patch a font? It could be to fix issues like incorrect rendering, add glyphs for different languages, improve Unicode compliance, or enhance features like ligatures. The "regular" part might be indicating a standard version, not italic or bold. So the full name could be "Akruti Image Regular v0.8, Patched Edition."

I need to confirm the details. Maybe there was a specific problem in version 0.8 that the patch addressed. Perhaps the original had ligature issues or encoding problems that were corrected in the patched version. Also, who distributes this patched version? It might not be the original developer's version but another community's fix.

When installing 08 Akruti Image Regular Patched, it is important to: