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If you have Unicode Gujarati text (typed in Google Translate, MS Word, or any website) but need it in Gopika font for old publishing software, embroidery machines, or classic DTP layouts—our is the exact tool you need.
You paste the entire text, convert, then copy the result. There’s no way to correct errors inside the converter itself. So you’ll need a separate text editor (like Notepad++ or Google Docs) to fix the 1-2% of characters that didn’t map perfectly. Free Gujarati Unicode Text Gopika Font Converter
Gopika is a legacy, non-Unicode font developed in the late 1990s and early 2000s. It uses the ASCII encoding system. This means when you type the letter "A" on your keyboard, the font shows a Gujarati character (like 'ક'). However, if you open that text on a computer without the Gopika font installed, you see the English letter "A" instead of the Gujarati letter. It is aesthetically pleasing but digitally trapped. If you have Unicode Gujarati text (typed in
Most free converters available online operate with a simple, user-friendly interface. Here is the typical workflow: So you’ll need a separate text editor (like