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The right font choice along with the absence of sidebars and popups makes everything feel easier and better to read. It can also make you feel good!
The glass-squishing font (right) can also hide words; users reveal individual letters by imagining what happens after a set of balls and thin rods of glass are pushed or “squished” from the sides.
A new font can help lodge information deeper in your brain, researchers say, but it’s not magic — just the science of effort. Psychology and design researchers at RMIT University in Melbourne ...
The font is a sans serif style typeface, with two unusual features: It slants slightly left, which is a rarely used design principle in typography, and it's full of holes. Those holes have a ...
Questions about the authenticity of memos related to President Bush's military service have put the art of setting fonts into the spotlight. NPR's Scott Simon discusses the science of font ...
You know those sexy, sans serif fonts in the movie 2001? They appear in the credits, but also on pretty much all the technical equipment on the spaceship.
Geisler lays out his method of producing the fonts on the Kickstarter page in great detail and, when you have a look at what goes into it, pledging $15 (about £9.86, AU$18.16) to get the font ...
Fonts, or styles of typeface, that are relatively difficult to read (including the much-maligned Comic Sans) help people learn new information, according to a new study.
Science flunks experimental font used on interstate signs. After an experiment with a new font on interstate road signs, the Federal Highway Administration says its going back to its old look.
The right font choice along with the absence of sidebars and popups makes everything feel easier and better to read. It can also make you feel good!
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