When the letter "R" is printed, and you cut it out, the part that shows correct will be the part that the ink/toner faces as well.isn't that what a backwards font is?
If you print a backwards "R" and cut it out, and then turn the letter around, it will be correct. Like ironing on a letter to a shirt. When you look at the iron on, it's backwards, but when you actually apply it to the shirt, the 'back' of the iron on faces forward.
This would be easy to see using the 'flip' option on a picture viewer with a picture that had words on it.
This is backwards, but if printed out on a piece of white paper, the black part will be backwards. BUT if you flipped the cut out letters over they'd be white and facing the correct way to read it.
this is:
Christmas
-the GRiNCH
Ɔʜɿiƨƚmɒƨ
- ƚʜɘ ᎮЯiИƆH