I'll select this Quimby font I have and click OK. To use this, crop tightly on the text you want to identify and notice that you can adjust or move your selection to a different part of the image to identify other fonts. Photoshop shows me the possible fonts that are matched that I already have installed on my machine, and it searches the Typekit library and identifies fonts that are available to your Creative Cloud subscription level so that even if you don't have the font installed, you can click this little Cloud icon in the Match Font dialogue box, which will sync the font your machine. To get started, open the image in Photoshop, select the Rectangular Marquee Tool in the Toolbar, and drag to select the region of the image that contains the text. Instead, if I have a photo with a Latin font like English, we can use to new Match Font feature in Photoshop to identify the font in a photo. I could try finding this font in my existing fonts I already have in Photoshop by looking through them, but I've got thousands installed and it could take me a very long time. I'm going to try to identify the font in this photo. Here are a few photos I took the other day when I was out and about. In this video, I'll show you how Photoshop can help you find great fonts for your design by finding fonts in an image or photo. In recent releases of Photoshop CC, there's a new font feature added called Match Font that you might not know about.