On 9/15/2011 15:03, Bob Sullivan wrote:
John,
Some years ago, 'Technology Review' changed fonts to Arial (I believe)
and stopped hyphenating words, and left justified all columns instead
of centering and padding lines to justify both left and right sides.
I find this method more enjoyable and natural.  MIT, who publishes the
magazine, claimed it was technically better for the reader.
Regards,  Bob S.

On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 12:36 AM, John Coyle<[email protected]>  wrote:
Interesting discussion: a journal I edit has just been criticised for using a 
sans-serif
font (Arial 10-point) as body text.  My reaction was that it's a 
modern-looking, clean and
easy-to-read font .
Any comments?

John Coyle
Brisbane, Australia

I recently read something on line where the opinion was put forth that san serif fonts were fine / nice to read on line but that erif font's were easier to read in print - especially newsprint sized print. I tend
to agree.  Of course, I can't read 10 point in print without pain anyway :-)

ann








-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Paul 
Stenquist
Sent: Thursday, 15 September 2011 11:08 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: PESO - Healing Vibrations


On Sep 14, 2011, at 8:54 PM, Mark Roberts wrote:

Paul Stenquist wrote:

I hate comic sans.  Chalkboard is slightly better, but it's still a silly font.
As far as being an imitation goes, that's true of many, many  fonts.
Futura is an imitation of Helvetica,

Futura predates Helvetica by about 25 years. (Arial is the imitation
Helvetica.)


Well then, Helvetica is an imitation of Futura:-). In truth, I can see that 
arial is
closer to helvetica than is futura.

My point is that many fonts differ only slightly from their bretheren. There 
are so many
fonts available that choosing one over the other is usually just splitting 
hairs. I
recently had to help write specs for a magazine redesign. Since i'm no font 
expert, I
merely looked at what was used in the pubs that won awards. (The majority of  
mags use two
fonts, with a san serif in headlines and a serif in body copy, with some 
playful switching
here and there.) The resulting recommendation was adobe garamond pro  and 
arial. They are,
of course, totally different, so they're happy together


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