There are some basic approaches, guidelines and goals to consider when working with type on the Web. Overall, the medium of Web typography involves readability, accessibility, usability, and brandability. On the Web, these aspects function together to accomplish design’s goals of communication and user interaction.
There are many ways to approach Web typography in order to create effective and expressive results. Let’s take a closer look at some principles, rules and ideas for approaching Web typography decisions — you can use them as a starting point for learning how to achieve effective type setting on the Web.
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There are some basic approaches, guidelines and goals to consider when working with type on the Web. Overall, the medium of Web typography involves readability, accessibility, and usability. On the Web, these aspects function together to accomplish design’s goals of communication and user interaction.
There are many ways to approach Web typography in order to create effective and expressive results. Let’s take a closer look at some principles, rules and ideas for approaching Web typography decisions — you can use them as a starting point for learning how to achieve effective type setting on the Web.
1. Approach Web Typography Decisions Systematically
In web design every typographic decision needs to simultaneously accomplish a variety of results. Each headline you create should be set in text that is legible and search engine friendly, while the typeface should fit within the guidelines of the company’s brand. Furthermore, typography should fit to the graphic style of the site and meet user expectations of being able to copy and paste text. As you can see, that’s a wide array of needs for a headline to accomplish.
In some cases, this poses a problem. For instance, styling and branding guidelines may require from the designer to use specific typefaces which can’t be used online directly. So a decision needs to be made:
deviate from the brand guidelines to maintain optimal search engine friendliness or
use an image replacement solution which embeds the required font in an image (statically or dynamically) or
consider using sIFR, a rich Flash-based dynamic font embedding technique which allows not only for embedding fonts into content presentation but also interacting with them (almost) as you would do with plain text.
In many cases, the myriad of goals Web typography needs to serve will be conflicting with each other. With each client and for each project you need to prioritize and define which goals are more important than the others. Some clients will be more concerned with maintaining brand identity, and others will put search engine friendliness higher.
All typographic decisions function within the scope of the problem at hand. Different sites will have various needs. There isn’t always one answer for each problem. It requires careful consideration of the strengths and weaknesses that each solution poses to the various areas that web typography effects.
As part of your research and studies look at how other sites handle the same issues that come up in your work. Typography For Headlines is a collection of links and screenshots of over 100 headlines around the Web, each approaching this issue in a unique and creative way.