Pick your font for this message!
Times (116%):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Palatino (105%):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Garamond (120%):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Arial (105%):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Helvetica (105%):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Verdana (default, 100%):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Tahoma (108%):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Calibri (115%, if installed):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Fontin (106%, if installed):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Comic Sans (100%; yay trolling!):
I'm going to ignore the Comic Sans argument altogether because I don't really understand all of the points made. I don't use Comic Sans (or Papyrus) only because I know that people who care a lot more than I do about how fonts look think it's bad, and I should probably trust their judgement.
On the topic of picking good fonts...I don't care if you say Times New Roman is a great font, I'm tired of seeing it. I'd much prefer Palatino or Garamond pretty much anywhere. On the web, though, serif fonts should definitely be in the minority. I can imagine a big news site or a design site using it in normal text in order to make a design statement, but aren't sans serif fonts generally more readable on computer screens?
The reason I was looking for a good sans serif font was that I already had what I thought was excellent - Gaiandra - but I think I only had a license from MS Visio or something and can't expect to redistribute it or suggest it to others. So, I started looking for free fonts and the best I found with a short (no more than 2 hours) search was Fontin. I'll admit that the line spacing and kerning isn't perfect, but the glyphs are amazing IMHO.
I'm really starting to hate Arial. It's just ugly. Helvetica is only marginally better for things that most people care about. I do want to register my agreement with the Calibri love going around; it's a pretty nice sans font overall. As for Verdana, I like Tahoma better. However, I did run a quick test with Chrome's "Inspect Element" to change fonts on hbgames and now I'm a true believer that Verdana is better for small sizes.
Some fonts appear smaller or larger at the same font size; I've tried to keep the relative sizes looking the same. I've got some new ideas based on this exercise. Mainly, it's really convinced me that some fonts look better at a particular size. Usually, that size is the lowest size before the letters get too closely spaced. For example, Tahoma looks pretty bad in this comparison, but without correction it looks better (by my perception anyway). However, it looks even worse at very small sizes. So, I guess Tahoma looks best at about 13px (on my 1440x900 15" screen), the size on hbgames text boxes. With correction at this size, Garamond looks better than Palatino to me, but at smaller sizes Garamond starts to become less legible.