Digital Media Convergence Ch 8

Font! You cannot have digital media without it. What font we use can say a lot about us or what we are trying to say. Some fonts come off as serious and professional (shout out to you Times New Roman). Other fonts might make more sense on a princess tea party invitation (classic Curlz MT) and then there are the ones that look more like hieroglyphics than actual letters.

 

There is a lot that goes into creating a font. You have the amount of contrast; a low contrast font is typically thicker than high contrast.  There is a serif and sans serif. A serif is the little “feet” that pop up on the ends of letters. A font with serifs is Times New Romans. Sans serifs mean that there are no little “feet”. This blog is using a sans serif font.

 

Fonts are no longer just black and white. They can be enlarged, filled, and just generally changed with a double click of the mouse. Last semester I took a graphic design class and that focused on the adobe suite. One of my favorite things I learned how to use was gradient tool. I loved creating gradients for backgrounds and in random shapes. Nothing quite compared to the level of wonder when my professor showed the class how to transfer a gradient into a font. I full-on reverted to my 5-year-old-self playing with Microsoft Paint. I really had to reign myself in so to not use it in every project for that class.

 

Do you have a favorite font? Let me know in the comments below!

 

~Anne with an “e”



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