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Fonts - Fun or Fundamental?
Choosing the Right Font for Your Work
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Are you a default font user? Some people always stick with the default. Other people pick a font based on their moods. With the abundance of choices in software and the internet, the options with typefaces are limitless. However, fonts have a purpose. Understanding fonts can be the difference in a good document and a great document. Fonts are generally divided into two categories. Serif and san serif. Within the two categories, some fonts have a font family. This is one typeface with a collection of weights and styles. Using a font family in a layout is a good way to provide consistency and unity.Serif Fonts
Serif fonts have short strokes at the top and bottom of the letters. From a design standpoint, the strokes are included to help the eye glide across the page without losing the place. Serif types work best for smaller text with a full body. Think of the font in books. Serif fonts are used in textbooks, novels, magazines, letters and lots of other mediums. Serif fonts typically indicate the bulk of the reading. When creating an official document, a serif font with a squared serif tip and pinched, narrow curves indicates professionalism. For an informal letter, a serif font with rounded letter forms gives the page a friendly conitation. Examples of commonly used serif fonts include Times New Roman, Courier New, and Book Antiqua. An example of a font family in serif is Lucinda.
San Serif Fonts
San serif fonts- translated without serif- do not have stroke marks. The absence of stroke marks makes san serif fonts look simple and elegant. Without the serif marks, letters are harder to distinguish from one another, so san serif is a good choice of font for headlines and subheadlines. They are great in a larger type, like a centered title. If the project is a comtemporary sign display, a san serif font will elegantly match the tone of the environment. San serif fonts will tire the eyes more quickly if used in a lengthy document, because the eyes have to work harder to read the text. Common examples: Comic Sans MS, Tahoma, and Microsoft San Serif. An example of a san serif font family is Arial.

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Takeaways
- Choosing the right font
- Suggestions for serif fonts
- Suggestions for san serif fonts
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