Fun With Fonts

For those folks who read my blog as an RSS feed,  or those who read it with an older browser (such as Inter­net Explorer 5.0 or less, Fire­fox 2.0, Safari 1.0, or oth­ers), you won’t notice much of a change, but if you are look­ing at this page or oth­ers with a newer browser, you should be see­ing some inter­est­ing changes: mainly the fonts for the head­lines and body type. How did I do this? I’ve been play­ing with the type­kit ser­vice (www.typekit.com — if you don’t see any­thing yet, it’s because I got an early invi­ta­tion. They’ll be going live for the gen­eral pub­lic soon, I think. ), which has started  to post web fonts for those peo­ple design­ing and build­ing web sites, as well as the browsers that can see them, and they’ll be offer­ing a free account with 2 fonts on a sin­gle URL. I decided to use the font  “M+ 1c” for the head­lines and “Droid Serif” (which is actu­ally one of the fonts designed for onscreen read­ing on the Google Android OS) for the body copy.  I prob­a­bly will need to tweak some other set­tings and CSS (Com­ments and a few other items in the con­tent areas are still show­ing up in Geor­gia), but over­all, I’m intrigued with the prospect of web sites and blogs that use fonts other than the 6 or 7 that we’ve been see­ing reg­u­larly for the past 10 years or so. I hope this does catch on, as I think it could spur a renais­sance in web design. In the mean­time, it’s always a thrill to be an early adopter and catch some of this at the beginning.

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