About
This guide covers the basics of good typography , explaining theories behind font choices, and certain details of creating legible, and good looking text. Once you go through this style guide you will know some of the DO's and DON'T's to web typography, from the absurd to the unseemly. This blog even covers some CSS so stick around and you might learn something.
When it comes to style Typography is at its most creative. The style of the type can either depend on the color, the weight, underlined or italics, and the typeface. This, for a designer like myself, is the most interesting part of typography and it can often be the trickiest. There are many things that we often want to experiment with that, in real life, would be hurtful to the content and the user. I like to play with script and grunge fonts. However, there are certain limits to how far one can go with the style that the user can handle.
- Underlined Text
Underlined text is advised against due to users mistaking it for a link. If you want to use it for emphasis then I suggest bold, color, or italics instead. Using underlined text as links is the appropriate use and can help ease user navigation. If a link isn't underlined then it's hard to find all the links and can be hazardous to the user. If, however, you absolutely need to underline text for emphasis then I suggest having the links a specific color to show that that underlined text is in fact a link. I have yet to use underlined text in my pages except for the default for links.
I'm a link, but
I am not.
Labels:
bold,
color,
contrast,
decoration,
depth,
italic,
link,
quotation,
style,
typeface,
typography,
underline,
user,
weight
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