Typography - types Flashcards

1
Q

What is a Serif?

A

A serif is a small shape or projection that appears at the beginning or end of a stroke on a letter. Typefaces with serifs are called serif typefaces.

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2
Q

List the different types of serif fonts

A

Old-Style serifs resemble writing in ink, with:

  • Low contrast between thick and thin strokes
  • Diagonal stress in the strokes
  • Slanted serifs on lower-case ascenders

Transitional serifs have:

  • High contrast between thick and thin strokes
  • Medium-High x-height
  • Vertical stress in the strokes
  • Bracketed serifs

Didone or neoclassical serifs have:

  • Very high contrast between thick and thin strokes
  • Vertical stress in the strokes
  • “Ball” terminal strokes.

Slab serifs have:

  • Heavy serifs with imperceptible differences between the stroke weight
  • Minimal or no bracketing
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3
Q

When should you use serif fonts?

A

Use serif fonts if you:

  • Want to be seen as trustworthy, established, and reliable.
  • Want your reader to stick with you longer because you have a large amount of printed text.
  • Your printed text will be small

It is favored by publications like books and newspapers or long stablished news papers that go digital like the The New York Times

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4
Q

What are sans serif fonts?

A

A typeface without serifs is called a sans serif typeface, from the French word “sans” that means “without.”

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5
Q

List the different types of sans serif fonts

A
  • Grotesque: Low contrast between thick and thin strokes, vertical or no observable stress
  • Humanist: Medium contrast between thick and thin strokes, slanted stress
  • Geometric: Low contrast between thick and thin strokes, with vertical stress, and circular round forms
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6
Q

When should you use sans serif fonts?

A

Use sans serif fonts if

  • If your audience has less time to read, like on a website or app.
  • DeCotes also says that sans serifs work great for signage or having to read large letters from a distance.

Source ethos3.com

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7
Q

What are monospaced fonts?

A

Monospace typefaces display all characters with the same width.

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8
Q

When should we use monospaced fonts?

A

Use monospaced fonts:

  • To display code blocks
  • To help users find what they are looking for, quickly and easily on any device. Monospaced fonts are incredibly easy to read, on all screen sizes.
  • To display tabular figures in tables, for finance results and mathematic formulas.
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9
Q

What are handwriting fonts?

A

Handwriting typefaces are unconventional with a natural, handwritten feel. These typically are used as H1 - H6 in your type scale. T

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10
Q

List the different types of handwriting fonts

A
  • Black letter: High contrast, narrow, with straight lines and angular curves
  • Script: Replication of calligraphic styles of writing (more formal)
  • Handwriting: Replication of handwriting (less formal)
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11
Q

When should we use handwriting fonts?

A

Use handwriting fonts if you:

  • Want to give a personal touch or a unique character to your project
  • What the user to focus and try to read the text.
  • If you want to evoke a handmade character to your logo.
  • If you are writing a short note and want to increase the possibility that the user will read it.
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12
Q

What are display fonts?

A

A miscellaneous category for all classification types that are only suitable for use at large point sizes. Display fonts typically are used as H1 - H6 in your type scale.

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13
Q

When should we use display fonts?

A

display fonts are intended for use in display type (display copy) at large sizes for titles, headings, pull quotes, and other eye-catching elements, rather than for extended passages of body text.

Source wikipedia

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14
Q

How many fonts should a website have?

A

In general, limit the number of font families to a minimum (two is plenty, one is often sufficient) and stick to the same ones through the entire website.

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15
Q

List the diferent ranks of fonts you should add to a website if necessary

A
  • Primary font: this will be the most visible font on your page, your primary font should be most synonymous with your brand identity. Primary fonts are mostly used for larger text, such as headings.
  • Secondary font: use this font for your body copy. This means that any article or description on your page is going to be in your secondary font. Above all else, your secondary font should be clean and easy to read.
  • Tertiary (accent) font: this one is entirely optional. Accent fonts can be used for specific website elements such as a call-to-action or a navigation menu. They should be prominent enough in order to quickly catch the eye of your visitors.

Note: keep in mind that pairing two fonts is hard enough, without throwing a third into the mix.

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16
Q

Why does the project scope (length) matters when you choose a font?

A

A long-term project (like a periodical or newsletter) will have a variety of different typographic needs over time. Your best bet for covering those different needs is to choose a large type family that includes a variety of weights, styles, and variants like small caps and ligatures.

A short-term project (like a poster, album cover, or logo) might not need extra weights, or the condensed and extended versions of a font. You could even choose a font with a single weight if you think it’s right for this particular task.

17
Q

What fonts should you choose for headlines and subheads?

A

For headlines and subheads, you can choose an expressive, unique, even idiosyncratic font—including Display, Decorative, Handwritten, and Script styles. These unconventional, high contrast designs tend to work well in this context because their details and visual complexity help to attract the eye.

If you’d like to use a sans serif font for short bits of text, especially in large sizes, the regular weight tends to look a little out of place. Consider using the bold and compressed styles instead. If you prefer serifs, hairline serif fonts like Playfair Display or Rufina tend to work well in short lines because their high stroke contrast tends to grab the reader’s attention.

18
Q

What fonts should you choose for medium-length text?

A

Medium-length text, defined loosely as three to four paragraphs, is pretty flexible.

If you’re leaning toward a serif font, opt for something in the old style like Quattrocento, a transitional style like Libre Baskerville, or a slab serif like Arvo.

If you prefer a sans serif? Then the best choice would be something in the humanist or grotesque style like Cabin or Raleway, but even some geometric styles like Montserrat will work. Experiment by trying out a few of these and see what works best in layout.

19
Q

What fonts should you choose for longer sections of text –exceding fire paragraphs–

A

For longer sections of text—exceeding five paragraphs—a serif typeface is recommended.

Old Style or Transitional serif fonts like EB Garamond or Libre Baskerville, tend to be easy on the eyes for longer reading like news and magazine articles.

20
Q

What fonts should you chose for small sizes (up to 16pt)?

A

For small font sizes it is usually recomended to use a sans serif fonts like Roboto, Montserrat and Raleway.

Sans serifs fonts tend to have a taller ‘x-height’ which makes a design more legible at small sizes.

21
Q

What fonts should you choose for medium sizes (from 16pt to 24pt)

A

At medium sizes—such as subheads, pull quotes, or smaller titles ranging from 16pt to 24pt—consider using a sans serif font in the geometric, grotesque, or humanist style. Montserrat, Lato, and Quattrocento Sans are good examples. Avoid extreme weights, neither too thick nor too thin, to keep text easy to read at-a-glance.

If instead you’d like a Serif font that’s contemporary and not too bookish, look for something without too much stroke contrast, like the Slab serif fonts Arvo, Sanchez, and Slabo.

22
Q

What language considerations should you take when choosing a font?

A

Even if you’re providing content in a single language, many people use a translate feature in browser so that content appears in their native language.

In other words, if the font you’ve chosen has only basic Latin letters, auto-translate takes the typography of your project out of your hands—shifting your layout into some other font for those letters, giving it a “ransom note effect” where individual, accented letters change and stick out. Choosing a font that includes characters for other languages, guarantees that the design of your site will remain consistent for a broader swath of your readership. This may sound like a losing battle, but there are plenty of font families that include multiscript support.

23
Q

What is a ransom note effect?

A

In typography, the ransom note effect is the result of using an excessive number of juxtaposed typefaces. It takes its name from the appearance of a stereotypical ransom note, with the message formed from words or letters cut randomly from a magazine or newspaper in order to avoid using recognizable handwriting.

Source wikipedia