These are two seperate questions. 1. What is this font? and 2. How can I use it in LaTeX. As answer to the first, you could use "WhatTheFont" at https://www.myfonts.com/WhatTheFont/ to recognise the font from an image. Your second question can be approached in two ways, depending on which engine or what ease of use has your preference. The easier solution uses fontspec through either the XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX engine. If you only wish to use pdfLaTeX (the "default" engine if you will), you should take a look at otftotfm, which installs your fonts and makes them accessible in any engine.
– 1010011010Oct 19 '14 at 11:57
@1010011010 Well it does depend on what the font turns out to be! If the font turns out to be type1 or truetype or, even, metafont, otftotfm is not going to do the job. (I am guessing you recognise the font and so know it is opentype but your comment suggests otftotfm is a viable strategy for any font, which is not the case.
– cfrOct 22 '14 at 13:38
LaTeX. As answer to the first, you could use "WhatTheFont" at https://www.myfonts.com/WhatTheFont/ to recognise the font from an image. Your second question can be approached in two ways, depending on which engine or what ease of use has your preference. The easier solution usesfontspecthrough either the XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX engine. If you only wish to usepdfLaTeX(the "default" engine if you will), you should take a look atotftotfm, which installs your fonts and makes them accessible in any engine. – 1010011010 Oct 19 '14 at 11:57otftotfmis not going to do the job. (I am guessing you recognise the font and so know it is opentype but your comment suggestsotftotfmis a viable strategy for any font, which is not the case. – cfr Oct 22 '14 at 13:38