Are you trying to troubleshoot a specific text-related issue, like missing fonts or formatting errors ?
Beyond the flagship applications, the glue of the Master Collection was the Creative Cloud itself: file synchronization, fonts, and collaboration. Creative Cloud Libraries emerged as a quiet hero of the 2014 release. A designer could save a color palette in Illustrator, and that same palette would instantly appear in InDesign and Photoshop on another computer across the country. Fonts were no longer a nightmare of licensing and missing files; with Typekit (now Adobe Fonts) integrated directly into the CC desktop app, over a thousand high-quality fonts were available to any subscriber. For the first time, creative teams could stop asking “Do you have that font?” and start asking “What time is the review?” Adobe CC 2014 Master Collection
Illustrator CC 2014, meanwhile, finally embraced the modern web and UI design workflow with the introduction of Live Corners—allowing designers to round individual corners of a rectangle independently, non-destructively, and with numerical precision. For the many designers who had spent years painstakingly cutting and averaging bezier points, this felt like divine intervention. The new pencil tool refinement, curvature tool enhancements, and integration of Creative Cloud Libraries meant that colors, character styles, and graphics could be synced across Illustrator, Photoshop, and InDesign in real time. The days of “Can you send me the hex code again?” were numbered. Are you trying to troubleshoot a specific text-related
The 2014 release was the first to deeply bake Adobe Fonts (formerly Typekit) into the desktop apps, letting designers sync fonts directly from a browser to their font menus. A designer could save a color palette in