Re: Comic Sans [was: Re: Text Line Length}
by Freda Lockert <fredalockert(at)clara.co.uk>
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Date: |
Sat, 27 Jan 2001 19:59:49 +0000 |
To: |
hwg-basics(at)hwg.org |
References: |
sunshineband |
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todo: View
Thread,
Original
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>I try to stick with generic sorts of fonts because frankly, other
>than the occasional freak like myself who actually can name off
>fonts on sight (you should hear some of the conversations my best
>friend and I have about fonts...we don't even discuss men in such
>detail [see above comment about needing a life]) I don't want people
>to NOTICE my fonts. I pick something to use for title graphics that
>suites the client, their business, and the audience we're after. But
>the body copy should be, IMO, as unobtrusive as possible. I don't
>want the average user to have an conscious thought about the font
>they see when the come into a site I've designed, and I certainly
>wouldn't want to give them any sort of impression about the type of
>content they're about to find based my (or a client's) choice of
>font. The purpose of the site is to convey information about a
>client/product. Part (all?) of design is making the information
>available to those who desire it in a manner that the RECEIVE it.
>They need to be able to find the info they are after, they need to
>be able to navigate the site with ease, it needs to function in
>their browser, and they need to be able to read it. My design is to
>make those things happen in the least obtrusive manner, and I
>certainly don't want people focusing on the design of the site when
>they are surfing it.
>
>Just a couple more cents' worth from the silly girl in the corner.
>Now I wonder what I'll think about while I vacuum?
>
Wot?? Have you read 'The Crystal Goblet' by Beatrice Warde? The
language is a bit dated but the message isn't. Good typography, web
or print, is about everything you said above.
Cheers.
Freda
--
Spaceship Earth: The problem for the passengers is that there is no
manual to identify all the parts, and no instructions for the
passengers on how to operate the spaceship. - Richard Buckminster
Fuller.
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