We know that choosing the right typography is important and that fonts can convey different emotions. This can have a massive impact on how a project or a brand is seen. But new research suggests that ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Pablo Lagarto via Adobe Stock Typography is much more than just choosing a font – it ...
A typeface choice could influence your perception of people running for school board seats, the lawyer opening a new law office, or the coffee shop you never noticed before. Any graphic designer worth ...
I got a question from a friend this week asking how to add different typefaces to his computer. She is going to be starting a newsletter and she wanted to use a font that she liked on another person’s ...
Have you ever thought a font looked “friendly” or “elegant”? Or felt that Comic Sans was somehow unserious? You’re not imagining it. Typefaces carry personalities, and we react to them more than we ...
Fonts are like pants: It's best to try on a few different styles before making a purchase. Like a pair of jeans that look flattering on one person and unbecoming on the next, a typeface that comes ...
Once you really understand them, typefaces can be powerful. A properly chosen font can either give your words authority, or totally undermine them. Even a typeface as openly reviled as Comic Sans, ...
Whether you realize it or not, you're designing every day. It might be a simple document, an updated resume, or a presentation, but either way you're making design choices, in particular about ...
A 14-year-old student thinks he has calculated a way to save the U.S. government more than $100 million per year, and it’s as simple as changing typefaces. The answer is to require all printed ...
There’s been plenty of talk lately about why certain typefaces are better (or truly awful) for our increasingly screen-based reading. A new typeface by celebrated typographer Tobias Frere-Jones is ...
PITTSBURGH – A teenager has published a study suggesting the federal government could save millions of dollars a year in printing costs by switching to a thinner typeface that uses less ink. Suvir ...