The name "Limon" (also spelled Limon or Lemon) is associated with clear, readable, and elegant Khmer typography. The fonts were created by Cambodian developers and linguists in partnership with international organizations (like Open Forum of Cambodia) to standardize Khmer text on digital platforms.

Dara exhaled a breath he didn’t know he was holding. He opened his design software, Adobe Photoshop 7.0. He clicked the font dropdown menu. It scrolled down, past the English fonts, past the system defaults, until he saw them.

| Property | Expected value | |----------|----------------| | | Khmer Limon / Khmer Limon Bold / etc. | | Version | Typically "Version 1.00" or "Version 1.10" (2008-2009) | | Copyright | © 2008 Danh Hong / Open Forum of Cambodia | | Truetype checksum (regular) | (varies, but tools like ttx can show creation date ~2008) | | Number of glyphs | Usually between 620–680 |

were essential for migrating old Limon documents into the Unicode format. Keyboard Layouts:

: To edit these older .doc or .docx files without retyping everything, you must have the original Limon fonts installed.

The collection is more than just a set of files; it is a digital archive of Cambodian typography. Whether you are a graphic designer looking for a specific vintage aesthetic or a researcher accessing old archives, these fonts remain a vital tool in the Khmer digital toolkit.

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