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WEB RESOURCES: ♥ Fonts ♥ Special Characters ♥ 

FONTS - Martha's Web Resources

Font Families - Serif, Sans-Serif, Monospace, Script, Fantasy
How to Decide Which Font Family to Use
By Jennifer Kyrnin, About.com
Some Rules-of-Thumb

   1. Don't use more than 3-4 fonts on any one page.
   2. Don't change the font in mid sentence unless you have a very good reason.
   3. Sans serif for online, serif for print.
   4. Monospace for typewriter and code.
   5. Script and fantasy for accents.

Sans-serif Fonts are the Basis of Your Site

Sans-serif fonts are those fonts that have no "serifs": the little hooks on the end of the letters....

Always use sans-serif fonts for your Web page main copy.

Some examples of sans-serif fonts are:

    * Arial
    * Geneva
    * Helvetica
    * Lucida Sans
    * Trebuchet
    * Verdana

Verdana is a font family that was actually invented for use on the Web.

Use Serif Fonts for Print

While serif fonts are hard to read online, they are perfect for print. If you have print friendly versions of your site, this is the perfect place to use serif fonts. The serifs, in print, make it easier to read, as they allow people to differentiate the letters more clearly. And because print has a higher resolution, they can be seen more clearly and don't appear to blur together.

Always use serif fonts for your print-friendly pages.

Some examples of serif fonts are:

    * Garamond
    * Georgia
    * New York
    * Times
    * Times New Roman

Monospace is for Code Examples

Even if your site isn't about computing, you can use monospace to provide instructions, give examples, or imply typewritten text. Monospace letters have the same width for each character, so they always take up the same amount of space on the page. Typewriters typically used monospace fonts.

Some examples of monospace fonts are:

    * Courier
    * Courier New
    * Lucida Console
    * Monaco

Do Not Use Fantasy or Cursive for Body Text

Fantasy and cursive fonts are not as wide-spread on computers, and in general can be hard to read in large chunks. While you might like the effect of a diary or other personal record that using a cursive font might give, your readers might have trouble. This is especially true if your audience includes non-native speakers. Also, fantasy and cursive fonts don't always include accent characters or other special characters which limits your text to English.

Use fantasy and cursive fonts in images and as headlines or call-outs. Keep them short and be aware that whatever font you choose will probably not be on a majority of your readers' computers.

Some examples of fantasy fonts are:

    * Copperplate
    * Desdemona
    * Impact
    * Kino

Impact is the font family most likely to be on Mac, Windows, and Unix machines.

Some examples of script fonts are:

    * Comic Sans MS
    * Lucida Handwriting
    * Zapf Chancery