- Glitter text — whO (I learned a name for people who go by a one-word moniker like that: Mononymous) created a builder for fancy SVG-based type. It’s a custom font with
, and the fancy comes in with a gradient and somewhat exotic filters that make noise and blend the noise into the color. - Optical Size tweaking for dark mode — Mark Boulton opens by questioning the usefulness of variable fonts (blaspheme!) but then finds a nice use case in adjusting the optical size in dark mode. Robin covered that right here not too long ago.
- Optical size, the hidden superpower of variable fonts — Speaking of optical size, Roel Nieskens digs into that here. It’s not just a weight thing…
This feature will make letters actuallychange the way they lookwhen shown in small or large sizes. It all happens automatically in the browser.”
- Updates to v-fonts.com — Annnnd speaking of variable fonts, Piper Haywood talks about some updates to v-fonts.com, introducing some browsable taxonomies. It takes me about 20 seconds browing this site to want to redesign everything using variable fonts.
- All you need is 5 fonts — (Matej Latin) I’ve been hearing about these mythical designers who focus all their creative energy on deep-learning how to use a very limited set of fonts. Maybe it’s kinda the same as us web nerds who only know HTML, CSS, and JavaScript and leave it at that.
- Best practices for fonts — Just like CSS, fonts affect Web Core Vitals in big ways (e.g. layout shifts and paints). Katie Hempenius is at it again here covering how to make fonts faster. I think these best practices are starting to set in a bit… preconnecting to the font host, subsetting, font-display, etc.
- SansBullshitSans — Kinda like the Cloud to Butt browser plugin, only the text replacements are done via ligatures (?) converting them into little Comic Sans badges. Some of them are angled? How the heck does that work?
- Bryan Font — Jon Hicks builds a font for his father, John Bryan Hicks, who passed away. What a loving tribute.
- Inherit ancestor font-size, for fun and profit — Lea Verou finds yet another use case for @property. I wonder if it’s an emerging best practice to register all your custom properties, since it unlocks possibilites and makes them behave more like you expect them to behave. Lea shows how you can browser test for @property in JavaScript, but if you for some reason you can’t do that and don’t mind pretty mind-bending CSS, Jane has pure CSS way.
The above is the detailed content of Some Typography Links VI. For more information, please follow other related articles on the PHP Chinese website!

For a while, iTunes was the big dog in podcasting, so if you linked "Subscribe to Podcast" to like:

We lost Opera when they went Chrome in 2013. Same deal with Edge when it also went Chrome earlier this year. Mike Taylor called these changes a "Decreasingly

From trashy clickbait sites to the most august of publications, share buttons have long been ubiquitous across the web. And yet it is arguable that these

In this week's roundup, Apple gets into web components, how Instagram is insta-loading scripts, and some food for thought for self-hosting critical resources.

When I was looking through the documentation of git commands, I noticed that many of them had an option for . I initially thought that this was just a

Sounds kind of like a hard problem doesn't it? We often don't have product shots in thousands of colors, such that we can flip out the with . Nor do we

I like when websites have a dark mode option. Dark mode makes web pages easier for me to read and helps my eyes feel more relaxed. Many websites, including

This is me looking at the HTML element for the first time. I've been aware of it for a while, but haven't taken it for a spin yet. It has some pretty cool and


Hot AI Tools

Undresser.AI Undress
AI-powered app for creating realistic nude photos

AI Clothes Remover
Online AI tool for removing clothes from photos.

Undress AI Tool
Undress images for free

Clothoff.io
AI clothes remover

AI Hentai Generator
Generate AI Hentai for free.

Hot Article

Hot Tools

mPDF
mPDF is a PHP library that can generate PDF files from UTF-8 encoded HTML. The original author, Ian Back, wrote mPDF to output PDF files "on the fly" from his website and handle different languages. It is slower than original scripts like HTML2FPDF and produces larger files when using Unicode fonts, but supports CSS styles etc. and has a lot of enhancements. Supports almost all languages, including RTL (Arabic and Hebrew) and CJK (Chinese, Japanese and Korean). Supports nested block-level elements (such as P, DIV),

Dreamweaver Mac version
Visual web development tools

Safe Exam Browser
Safe Exam Browser is a secure browser environment for taking online exams securely. This software turns any computer into a secure workstation. It controls access to any utility and prevents students from using unauthorized resources.

SublimeText3 Chinese version
Chinese version, very easy to use

PhpStorm Mac version
The latest (2018.2.1) professional PHP integrated development tool