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#11
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What kind of research do you think might be possible? |
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But overlaid on all of these 'usefulness' criteria, there is the question of taste, and it's really hard to specify a research project that is about taste. |
#12
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On Fri, 11 Aug 2006 16:40:40 -0400, Chris F.A. Johnson wrote: Printed material does not necessarily use serif faces. The studies I have seen showed serif typefaces to be marginally easier to read than sans-serif, bit not by a significant amount. In my own experience (I used to be a graphic designer), readers like sans-serif as much as, if not more than, serif. Being a graphic designer, did you design adds with slogans <h1> or you worked on reading material (books, newspapers etc.)? |
#13
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Printed material does not necessarily use serif faces. |
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The studies I have seen showed serif typefaces to be marginally easier to read than sans-serif, bit not by a significant amount. |
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In my own experience (I used to be a graphic designer), readers like sans-serif as much as, if not more than, serif. |
#14
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In article <8j6vq3-8l1.ln1 (AT) xword (DOT) teksavvy.com>, Chris F.A. Johnson <cfajohnson (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote: Printed material does not necessarily use serif faces. Most printed material does, if there's a lot of prosed to read. The studies I have seen showed serif typefaces to be marginally easier to read than sans-serif, bit not by a significant amount. I once knew of similar studies -- for print media only. The serifs on fonts are intended to guide the eyes along the line of text, to prevent your eyes from jumping accidentally to adjacent lines of text in a paragraph. |
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The effectiveness of serifs relies in part to the high resolution available in print media. |
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Video displays, on the other hand, have a poor resolution, with pixels big enough to see. On video displays, serifs do little more than introduce clutter into the text. In my own experience (I used to be a graphic designer), readers like sans-serif as much as, if not more than, serif. Sans-serif is certainly more readable on a video display when rendering paragraphs of prose. |
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Serif is more readable when doing it on paper. |
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For headings, or single lines by themselves, it doesn't really matter. |
#15
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Serif is more readable when doing it on paper. Neither studies nor personal experience support that. |
#16
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Chris F.A. Johnson <cfajohnson (AT) gmail (DOT) com> scripsit: Serif is more readable when doing it on paper. Neither studies nor personal experience support that. You appear to be trolling. |
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You refute a statement that has very often been mentioned in this group and other discussions and sometimes backed up with references. Yet you give no citations or references whatsoever. |
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If you are not trolling, we can expect a bunch of references from you. There _have_ been studies on this matter, with varying results as can be expected ("readability" itself is a vague concept), but generally in the direction that supports the statement that common serif fonts are more readable than common sans-serif fonts, on paper. |
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You'd need quite a many sources to even question this seriously. |
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But if you're trolling, you don't need references and don't have one. |
#17
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What is you favourite font family choice for pages with predominant text content? Which one is the most readable, with regards to body text <p> and what for h1>? I tend to use serif for <p> and sans for <hx>. Regards. |
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