statmake takes a user-written Stylespace that defines OpenType STAT information for an entire font family and then (potentially subsets and) applies it to a specific variable font. This spares users from having to deal with raw TTX dumps and juggling with nameIDs.
The easiest way is by installing it with pip. You need at least Python 3.8.
pip3 install statmake
If you are producing more than one variable font (i.e. you have multiple Designspace files), you can avoid duplicated information by writing a single all-encompassing Stylespace file which statmake will subset for each variable font.
Attention: A STAT table is supposed to describe a font's relationship to the entire family. If you have separate upright and italic variable fonts with a wght axis each, you need to mark each font's position on the ital axis in the Designspace lib org.statmake.additionalLocations key. The Designspace <axes> elements are not supposed to hold this information, so it must be done in a separate lib key.
- Write a Stylespace file that describes each stop of all axes available in the entire family. See tests/data/Test.stylespace for an annotated example. You can also use it as a starting point.
 - You can have the file stand-alone or use the Designspace lib's 
org.statmake.stylespacePathkey to store the path to the Stylespace file relative to the Designspace file. See tests/data/TestExternalStylespace.designspace for an example. - If you have one or more Designspace files which do not define all axes available to the family, you have to annotate them with the missing axis locations to get a complete 
STATtable. See the lib key at the bottom of tests/data/Test_Wght_Upright.designspace and tests/data/Test_Wght_Italic.designspace for an example. - Generate the variable font(s) as normal
 - If...
- ... you store the Stylespace file stand-alone: run 
statmake --designspace variable_font.designspace --stylespace your.stylespace variable_font.ttf. - ... you store the Stylespace inline in the Designspace file or as a stand-alone file and added the relative path to it in the Designspace's 
org.statmake.stylespacePathkey: runstatmake --designspace variable_font.designspace variable_font.ttf 
 - ... you store the Stylespace file stand-alone: run 
 
Be sure to use the Designspace file that was used to generate the font to get the correct missing axis location definitions.
If you are producing a single variable font containing an entire family, this approach will save you an external file.
- Write the file as above, point 1.
 - Insert it into the Designspace file's lib under the 
org.statmake.stylespacekey. See tests/data/TestInlineStylespace.designspace for an example. - Proceed from point 3 above.
 
Yes, but you have to convert it to .plist yourself, as statmake currently only read .plist files. One possible converter is Adam Twardoch's yaplon.
Q: I'm getting errors about how statmake doesn't like the way I wrote the Stylespace, but I want the data to be that way?
Use a custom script with the https://fonttools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/otlLib/builder.html#fontTools.otlLib.builder.buildStatTable API instead.
The project uses uv; install it from https://docs.astral.sh/uv/, and then:
# Install this project and its dependencies
uv sync
# Install tox globally for your user with uv support (if your other projects use it too)
uv tool install tox --with tox-uv
# Run tests on various Python versions
tox