Destroy Times New Roman
- Dale
- The Landlord
- Posts: 10293
- Joined: Wed May 16, 2001 6:00 pm
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
- Location: Chiff & Fipple's LearJet: DaleForce One
- Contact:
Destroy Times New Roman
Can anyone stand to look at it anymore?
- Jerry Freeman
- Posts: 6074
- Joined: Mon Dec 30, 2002 6:00 pm
- antispam: No
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
- Location: Now playing in Northeastern Connecticut
- Contact:
Times, and most other serif style typefaces, is hard to read on a computer screen. Sanserif faces tend to be easier to read on a screen. However, on paper, Times is one of the most legible fonts, whereas sanserif fonts tend to be more difficult to read on a printed page.
Times also happens to be one of the most efficient typefaces. Without looking compressed, it takes up less space in a given point size than most other fonts. Under some circumstances, this is very useful.
Best wishes,
Jerry
Times also happens to be one of the most efficient typefaces. Without looking compressed, it takes up less space in a given point size than most other fonts. Under some circumstances, this is very useful.
Best wishes,
Jerry
- Nanohedron
- Moderatorer
- Posts: 38239
- Joined: Wed Dec 18, 2002 6:00 pm
- antispam: No
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
- Tell us something.: Been a fluter, citternist, and uilleann piper; committed now to the way of the harp.
Oh, yeah: also a mod here, not a spammer. A matter of opinion, perhaps. - Location: Lefse country
What bugs me is how Gothic has now come to be known as "sans-serif". What a preposterously retrorse and mincing locution. Why can't over-mascara'd, black nailpolished angstophiles have a typeface, too?
"If you take music out of this world, you will have nothing but a ball of fire." - Balochi musician
- Jerry Freeman
- Posts: 6074
- Joined: Mon Dec 30, 2002 6:00 pm
- antispam: No
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
- Location: Now playing in Northeastern Connecticut
- Contact:
- Nanohedron
- Moderatorer
- Posts: 38239
- Joined: Wed Dec 18, 2002 6:00 pm
- antispam: No
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
- Tell us something.: Been a fluter, citternist, and uilleann piper; committed now to the way of the harp.
Oh, yeah: also a mod here, not a spammer. A matter of opinion, perhaps. - Location: Lefse country
Oh, don't bother me with the facts, Jerry.Jerry Freeman wrote:Gothic typefaces are sanserif, but not all sanserif typefaces are Gothic. There are hundreds of sanserif fonts, and the Gothic fonts are just a small group among them.
Best wishes,
Jerry
Let's bring back Irish Uncial, I say.
"If you take music out of this world, you will have nothing but a ball of fire." - Balochi musician
- dubhlinn
- Posts: 6746
- Joined: Sun May 23, 2004 2:04 pm
- antispam: No
- Location: North Lincolnshire, UK.
emmline wrote:(is anyone else wondering why Jerry knows so much about fonts? does he have a secret membership in the Priory of Helvetica or something?)
A man has to have a hobby.
Slan,
D.
And many a poor man that has roved,
Loved and thought himself beloved,
From a glad kindness cannot take his eyes.
W.B.Yeats
Loved and thought himself beloved,
From a glad kindness cannot take his eyes.
W.B.Yeats
- Jerry Freeman
- Posts: 6074
- Joined: Mon Dec 30, 2002 6:00 pm
- antispam: No
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
- Location: Now playing in Northeastern Connecticut
- Contact:
Background in marketing and marketing communications, copywriting, etc., with enough graphic design/typography to produce my own materials w/o assistance if necessary.
My father was a newsman before WWII, then advertising copy writer, then copy chief, then director of marketing communications planning for major ad agencies. My mother was an unpublished but fairly prolific fiction writer. Her second husband was copy editor for the Evansville, Indiana Courier, then photo editor and chief caption writer for Chicago Today newspaper, then chief copy editor for the Detroit Free Press. My father's second wife was a high school English teacher, master's degree in English literature.
This is the kind of stuff that's been discussed around the dinner table in my various families since before I was old enough to write my name. I used to listen to my father's dinner time tirades about "artsy fartsy graphics artists" who loved illegible masses of homogeneous sanserif type as a design element and specified "Hairy Helvetica" font.
Best wishes,
Jerry
My father was a newsman before WWII, then advertising copy writer, then copy chief, then director of marketing communications planning for major ad agencies. My mother was an unpublished but fairly prolific fiction writer. Her second husband was copy editor for the Evansville, Indiana Courier, then photo editor and chief caption writer for Chicago Today newspaper, then chief copy editor for the Detroit Free Press. My father's second wife was a high school English teacher, master's degree in English literature.
This is the kind of stuff that's been discussed around the dinner table in my various families since before I was old enough to write my name. I used to listen to my father's dinner time tirades about "artsy fartsy graphics artists" who loved illegible masses of homogeneous sanserif type as a design element and specified "Hairy Helvetica" font.
Best wishes,
Jerry
- djm
- Posts: 17853
- Joined: Sat May 31, 2003 5:47 am
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
- Location: Canadia
- Contact:
I am not keen on TNR per se, but must admit I much prefer a serif'd font than a sans-serif font. TNR is just too angular for my tastes, and the space-saving features just make it that much more dense and harder to read. Any tasty Garamond, for example, is much nicer and easier on the eyes.
djm
djm
I'd rather be atop the foothills than beneath them.