The Scenario
A new freelance designer just joined the team for the holiday campaign. She needs to know which Cardly fonts are available, which ones support humanisation, and what variants exist for each — before she starts mocking up layouts. The alternative is having her log into Cardly, click through each font one by one, and take notes. That's your most expensive option for gathering a reference list.
You tell her you'll get her a sheet.
The bad version:
- Open Cardly's font library. Click the first font. Note the name, category, and humanisation support in a Google Sheet manually. Go back, click the next.
- Some fonts have multiple variants that are only visible after you click into the detail view. Add a second column to capture them.
- By the fifteenth font, your notes are inconsistent — sometimes you wrote "yes" for humanisation support, sometimes "Y," sometimes "supported."
The designer has a kickoff call in two hours. You have other things to do.
The Easy Way: One Prompt in SheetXAI
SheetXAI is an AI agent that lives inside your Google Sheet. It reads your sheet and talks to Cardly directly — pulling the full font catalog into the sheet with clean, consistent columns.
Open the SheetXAI sidebar and ask:
List all available Cardly fonts and write to this sheet: Font Name, Category, Supports Humanisation, Variants.
What You Get
- One row per font, with Font Name in column A, Category in B, Supports Humanisation as a clean yes/no in C, and Variants listed in D.
- Consistent formatting — no mixed "yes/Y/supported" values, no half-captured rows.
- A sheet you can share with the designer or the whole creative team immediately.
What If the Data Is Not Quite Ready
You only want fonts that support humanisation
The campaign is specifically designed to feel handwritten. Fonts without humanisation support aren't relevant.
List all Cardly fonts where Supports Humanisation is "yes" — include Font Name, Category, and Variants in separate columns.
The designer wants to filter by category
Different card types call for different styles — script for personal cards, print for corporate. Filter to just one category first.
List all Cardly fonts where Category is "script" — include Font Name, Supports Humanisation, and Variants. Then do the same for Category "print" and write those results starting five rows below the first list with a "Print Fonts" header.
You want to add a "Shortlist" column for the team to annotate
After the catalog is in the sheet, you want a column for the designer to mark her top picks for each card type.
List all available Cardly fonts with Font Name in A, Category in B, Supports Humanisation in C, and Variants in D. Then add a blank column E with the header "Shortlist" and a blank column F with the header "Notes."
You want to cross-reference fonts against the templates that use them
You have a "Templates" tab that lists template names and the font assigned to each. You want to see which fonts are actively in use.
List all available Cardly fonts into this sheet — Font Name in A, Category in B, Supports Humanisation in C, Variants in D. Then check the "Templates" tab and add a column E that lists any template names using each font. Leave column E blank for fonts not currently assigned to any template.
The pattern: get the full catalog first, then layer on the cross-reference in the same prompt — no second pass needed.
Try It
Get the 7-day free trial of SheetXAI and open a Google Sheet you're using to plan a Cardly campaign. Ask it to pull the full font and writing style catalog so your design team has a reference they can actually filter. Or back to the Cardly integration overview.
