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Font Families

The document discusses different font families and their uses. It recommends using sans-serif fonts for online content due to better readability on screens, and serif fonts for print. Sans-serif examples include Arial, Helvetica, and Verdana. Serif examples include Times New Roman and Garamond. Monospace fonts like Courier are good for code or instructions. Fantasy, script, and cursive fonts are primarily decorative and not meant for long passages of text.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
183 views21 pages

Font Families

The document discusses different font families and their uses. It recommends using sans-serif fonts for online content due to better readability on screens, and serif fonts for print. Sans-serif examples include Arial, Helvetica, and Verdana. Serif examples include Times New Roman and Garamond. Monospace fonts like Courier are good for code or instructions. Fantasy, script, and cursive fonts are primarily decorative and not meant for long passages of text.

Uploaded by

Jhoyrylle Joxell
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Font Families

Dr. Leonard L. Alejandro, MSIT


Rules of Thumb
1. Don't use more than 3-4 fonts on any
one page.
2. Don't change the font in mid
sentence unless you have a very
good reason.
3. Sans serif for online, serif for print.
4. Monospace for typewriter and code.
5. Script and fantasy for accents.

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Sans-serif fonts

Sans-serif fonts are those fonts that have no "serifs": the little hooks on
the end of the letters.
If you've taken any print design courses you've probably been told that
you should only use sans-serif for headlines.
This is not true for the Web. Web pages are intended to be viewed by
Web browsers on computer monitors. And computer monitors don't
have as good of resolution as paper.
This means that when your readers view a page of serif font on the
screen, the little serifs all blur together and start making the text harder
to read.
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Examples

• Arial
• Geneva
• Helvetica
• Lucida Sans
• Trebuchet
• Verdana
Verdana is a font family that was actually invented for use on
the Web.
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Serif Fonts

While serif fonts are hard to read online, they are perfect for
print.
If you have print friendly versions of your site, this is the
perfect place to use serif fonts.
The serifs, in print, make it easier to read, as they allow people
to differentiate the letters more clearly.
And because print has a higher resolution, they can be seen
more clearly and don't appear to blur together.

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Examples

• Garamond
• Georgia
• New York
• Times
• Times New Roman

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Monospace

Even if your site isn't about computing, you


can use monospace to provide instructions,
give examples, or imply typewritten text.
Monospace letters have the same width for
each character, so they always take up the
same amount of space on the page.
Typewriters typically used monospace fonts.
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Examples

• Courier
• Courier New
• Lucida Console
• Monaco

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Fantasy

Fantasy fonts are primarily decorative, and are not


designed to be used as the main font for long
passages of text.
Fantasy fonts vary wildly in their appearance and
artistic content.
There are no elements or particular characteristics
that categorize fantasy fonts other than their
decorativeness.
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Examples

• Copperplate
• Desdemona
• Impact
• Kino

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Cursive

Cursive fonts resemble hand-written pen or


brush strokes, often have artistic
ornamentation, and sometimes have
strokes that connect the letters together.

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