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The Garamond font has been around for centuries. The original typeface was created in the 1500s by French engraver Claude Garamond. It is described as an "old-style serif" font, inspired by Roman ...
It turns out Garamond is a highly contested font, with ardent supporters and fervent haters. But do fonts really have the power to change how someone reads or remembers a document?
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Creative Bloq on MSNSerif vs. sans-serif: how to choose the right font for your projectA serif is a delicate little point (aka flare or terminating flourish) at the end of a letter stroke. In the image above, ...
Word nerds be warned – when filing briefs in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, don’t type in the centuries-old Garamond font.
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Creative Bloq on MSN19 brilliant resume fonts that make a real impactThat’s why we’ve compiled a list of the 19 best fonts to use on your resume. There are lots of lists out there on the ...
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit has a vendetta against Garamond, which is purportedly too small to read and allows lawyers to skirt filing rules.
Serif fonts, like Times New Roman and Garamond, have decorative “wings” and “feet” on letters — called serifs — that make the form more distinctive.
A 14-year-old's plan to save the U.S. government almost half a billion a year is too good to be true. Font nerdery ahoy!
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