Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

How to build your own website- More steps
To build a website, there are FOUR METHODS to choose from: FIRST METHOD: Get a PROFESSIONAL DESIGNER to build the site for you: It is expensive in creation process, site maintenance and development. SECOND METHOD: Designing the site with...

How to Use Pop Ups Without Annoying Your Visitors
At the risk of losing you before we even get started, I'm going to say a "dirty" word: Pop Up (as in Windows). If you're like me, you've been popped more times than a firecracker on the 4th of July...but that's no reason to click away in disgust. ...

It's Ugly! and Other Reasons Not to Send HTML
It's Ugly! and Other Reasons Not to Send HTML By Jessica Albon Copyright 2004, The Write Exposure Have you noticed it too? This sudden change in email newsletters? Lately, newsletters I've gotten for years in plain text format have been switching...

Using a Flexible HTML Report
A central part of taking advantage of information revolves around online business intelligence. The web introduces a whole new platform for sharing information. Via the web businesses can share information found on charts, graphs, maps, and even...

XML Is About To Rock Your World
Envision a world in which you buy a new home appliance and it introduces itself to all of your other appliances and they figure out how to work together. Went you start your movie player it orders the lights to dim, the microwave to pop the popcorn...

 
About HTML fonts

It is very tempting to use fancy looking fonts when designing a web page. After all, the fancier the font the more attractive it will be to visitors and the more likely they will be to stay at your page once they've gotten there. Actually, the reverse is often true.

Most people go to a web page because they are interested in the information that is there, either an article they want to read about something or maybe it's a product or service site that requires them to navigate through a number of pages to find the product or service that they are looking for. The last thing they want to do is have to battle with the font on the page because it is difficult to read.

There are several things that make fonts easy or hard to read and each one is equally as important. Fonts are made up of many properties but the most important of these are type, size and color. The type of font refers to how the font characters themselves are displayed. The most common fonts are Times New Roman and Ariel because they are the most easy to read. The reason they are the most easy to read is because they are plain and simple.

There is nothing fancy about them as opposed to a font like, say, Potter, which is an excellent representation of the fonts used in the Harry Potter movie series. They may look real cool but they are not easy to read.

Maybe for a word or two, no problem. But a whole page of Harry Potter fonts could become a reading nightmare for a visitor to your site.

Now, suppose your site was about Harry Potter. In that case it would be okay to maybe have some words using that font, such as maybe headings and the first word of each paragraph. But the majority of your text you would still need to be in easy to read font.

This way you capture the flavor of the Harry Potter world and still give your readers an easy to read experience.

Size is another issue about fonts. Not everybody has 20-20 vision. You don't want the fonts on your page to be too small. If they are, some people are going to have a difficult time reading the material on the page.

A good size for a paragraph font is about 12 to 14 point. Headings can be a little bigger, maybe between 16 and 20 point. By keeping the size of your font within normal parameters you give your visitors the best chance of an easy read of your page.

By keeping these few simple things in mind you assure your visitors of the most pleasant experience possible when visiting your pages.

For comments and inquiries about the article visit http://www.ucreative.com





About the author:

Florie Lyn Masarate got the flair for reading and writing when she got her first subscription of the school newsletter in kindergarten. She had her first article published on that same newsletter in the third grade.

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.