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January 2011

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Subject:
From:
Erik Richard Sørensen <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Date:
Mon, 10 Jan 2011 01:33:55 +0100
Content-Type:
multipart/mixed
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (3070 bytes) , Font Readability.pdf.zip (398 kB)
Hello Brian

Here they are in a PDF file...

There's a single font per page in various sizes, so one can see how and 
where the specific size differ from the same size in another font. - The 
text in Danish, English and German says the same.:-)

Cheers, Erik Richard

Brian Ferguson wrote:
> WAS: Re: iText Express/Pro
> --------
> 
> Yes please Erik, I would appreciate being sent copy of your most used fonts.
> 
> I assume it does not include the 100 or so which I recall you saying you loaded at start-up     ((-:
> 
> For a long time my favourite font was Apple Garamond, but as I get older I feel its strokes are becoming too narrow and I tend towards normal Garamond. I do not need to worry about font substitution by others.
> 
> When I first started writing anything for publication, many decades ago, I read a couple of articles on layout and the concept was quite clear:
> 
> a. when the text, such as a heading, was not expected to be read very carefully, use a san-serif font.
> b. for serious printing, use a font with serifs.
> 
> I still try to go by these two rules.
> 
> How often do you merely glance at a heading, forget it and move on? All the time for me.
> 
> Why are advertisements written in san-serif? Because the advertisers do not expect anyone to read the fine-print. They may find out too much if they read the lot.
> 
> If there is one font-type I despair of, it is the san-serif where an uppercase 'L' comes out as '|' [shift-\ is the best I can do to illustrate] or  lower case 'i' is embedded/jammed between other letters. I find this is being written in Verdana Regular 13pt, not exactly sans-serif but quite readable. 
> 
> This reminds me, I must disable 95% of my fonts.
> 
> ------------------------
> Regards from brianF
> ===============
> 
> On 10/01/2011, at 2:45 AM, Erik Richard Sørensen wrote:
> 
>> Hei Doug
>>
>> Doug Browne wrote:
>>> Would you please tell me which is the easiest font to read. I generally use Gentium Book Basic, but I also use Didot.
>> Huh... That's hard to say... I think this is somewhat individual for each person and how his eyes react on a given text font...
> 
> snipped
> 
>> Else my absolutely prefered serif font is the classic Garamond - preferably the URW version because that one is a bit thicker in the downward strokes and therefore easier to read for people with reduced sight.
>>
>> I have made a PDF document with my most used fonts shown in a small text example using both the Danish//Scandinavian and German characters in various sizes for an easy comparison, so if you - or others - would like to have this, just send me a note off-list and I'll return the mail with this document attached.
>>
>> Cheers, Erik Richard
>>
> 

-- 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Erik Richard Sørensen, Member of ADC, <[log in to unmask]>
NisusWriter - The Future In Multilingual Text Processing - www.nisus.com
Openoffice.org - The Modern Productivity Solution - www.openoffice.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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