Happy Thursday, good people of the blogosphere! Today we'll talk about display fonts and answer some questions like: When to use a display font? How to identify a display font? Examples of display fonts. So grab your pens and notebooks and let's get going!
Display is defined as: Making a prominent exhibition of a thing where it can be noticed. Example of a display font:
This letterform is from the font family known as Capitular Floral. Pretty, huh?
When should you use a display font?
Much like a script font, a display font is for just that - display. They're not meant to be used in blocks of text but they make nice drop caps and decorative elements used at the start of a chapter. So stick to using them as decoration rather than text.
How to identify a display font?
If your letters do weird things when you're trying to type them out, it's probably a display font. They're usually very decorative and hard to read when combined in sets of more than one or two. Not all of them have a box around them or have really gritty details like the one above.
Some examples:
As you can see, they don't read very well when combined. Never ever use them for book design unless you're adding a single decorative letter to the beginning of something.
This concludes my font week. I hope you all learned a little bit and had some fun along the way!
What's your favorite display font?
Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!
Jo