Forum Moderators: mack
Serif fonts are regarded as being more 'professional' as, over time, they have proven to be easier to read - on paper at least. Special fonts have been designed to be readable on screens/monitors, eg: Verdana and Trebuchet which are sans serifs.
How about Georgia? It is a serif typeface but designed to be easily readable on screens. It is also widely available on PC/Windows machines as it was distributed with Microsoft products.
Regards
DiAMOndDavE
Ariel gets more words to the inch, has bigger gaps between the words, and is very legible. Ideal for legalise, Terms and Conditions, etc.
Verdana (IMHO) has a much more modern and slicker appearance. But it takes more space than Ariel, has less space between words, and therefore is not quite so easy to read. For use in short sentences where presentation matters most.
For larger sizes, say 12pt and over, sans serif can look clunky. Some serif fonts such as Georgia can look elegant.
But I think whatever you choose the golden rules are:
1) consistency throughout the site
2) usually no more than two styles on a page
3) use relative size fonts where there is anything lengthy to be read.
[microsoft.com...]
for example, Georgia was NOT supplied with windows95
[microsoft.com...]
or for that matter with any recent microsoft product, except for office 2000 premium:
[microsoft.com...]
Peace to all
DiAMOndDavE
Georgia for Windows:
http://www.microsoft.com/typography/downloads/georgi32.exe [web.archive.org]
Georgia for Mac:
http://www.microsoft.com/typography/downloads/Georgia.sit.hqx [web.archive.org]
Sourceforge has also agreed to carry them, which means they will be around for a long time.
An easy way to install Microsoft's TrueType core fonts on linux
[corefonts.sourceforge.net...]
sourceforge MS corefont list [sourceforge.net]
But it's still not a good idea to use it as a web font.
People will not go install a font just because your web site requires it, they will go looking for another site.
Geez - you're right, I'm obviously not thinking deviously enough! Looks like the fonts are still available?! I presume you can do the same for Verdana, Arial, Courier and Comic Sans?
Yes, you would be right if all I specified in my stylesheet was font: Georgia. What I meant to say was...
<dreaming>
it would be great knowing that most people out there had Georgia installed so web designers and developers could specify eg: font: Georgia, Trebuchet, Verdana, sans serif and be fairly sure that Georgia would display on users systems
</dreaming>
I have both Georgia & Trebuchet installed and when I come across a web page styled with one of these fonts it looks like a breath of fresh air after a sea of Verdana and Arial.
DiAMOndDavE