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Font Basics for Small Business's Logo and Brand
by Erin Ferree

Published on this site: June 8th, 2006 - See more
articles from this month

There are many components of a brand identity: logo, color palette, font
choice, and the Visual Vocabulary. There's a lot of information available
about the use of logos, colors, and Visual Vocabulary, but not much on
the effective use of fonts. So, here's some information on the creative,
practical, and technical aspects of fonts.
Font Basics
A font is a set of all the letters in the alphabet, designed with
similar characteristics. This is also known as a typeface.
Fonts are usually designed to include several style variations. This can
include styles like light, regular, bold, semibold, ultra bold, and italic.
Some fonts also include "Expert" versions, which are fonts that
include fractions and mathematical symbols.
Font families are typically packages of fonts that include all of the
different versions of a font. Using fonts with large families will give
you a wide range of fonts to use in your materials, for variety and emphasis.
There are many basic classifications of fonts. Four of the most common
classes of fonts are:
- Serif fonts, which have little "feet," called serifs, at
the ends of the lines that make up the letters. Some examples of serif
fonts include Times, Palatino, and Garamond. These fonts are more traditional,
elegant, and old-fashioned.
- Sans-serif fonts don't have those feet. "Sans serif" means
"without serifs." Arial, Verdana, Tahoma, and Helvetica are
some of the most common sans-serif fonts. These fonts are more clean
and modern.
- Script fonts are calligraphic or cursive fonts. Brush Script and
Nuptial Script are two common script fonts.
- Display fonts are decorative and often used for logos or headlines.
There are other types of fonts as well, including handwriting fonts and
all-caps fonts. However, the four listed above are the most common and
useful in business communications.
Creative Font Usage Guidelines
Each type of font has certain characteristics that translate into
that font's personality. A font might be serious or light-hearted, traditional
or modern, legible or decorative, or any number of other personality traits.
The traits of the font that you use in your marketing materials and business
communications should reflect and enhance your company's brand.
Your company should have designated fonts to use in the following situations:
- A logo font, which is typically not one of the fonts that come installed
on Windows machines: it should be more unique and interesting. Some
logos will have two or three different fonts in them. If this is the
case, then consider using one of those fonts as the secondary font as
well.
- A secondary font, used for headlines, sub-headlines, taglines, special
text such as graphics and captions, and decorative text such as pull
quotes, which are the large quotes that are used decoratively in articles
and documents. This can be the same font as is used in your logo. This
is typically an interesting and unique font as well. This may also be
used as the font for your contact information in your stationery, depending
on its legibility.
- A tertiary font is optional and may be used when the secondary font
is not always legible, for mid-length texts such as pull quotes and
contact information.
- A serif text font, for lengthy printed documents. Printed materials
are more easily read if they are in serif font rather than sans-serif
font.
- A sans-serif font, for shorter printed documents and on-screen use.
Text on a computer monitor is easier to read in a sans-serif font than
in a serif font.
- A website font, which may be the same font as is used as the main
sans-serif text font, depending on how that font translates for online
viewing.
All of these fonts should have similar or contrasting characteristics.
Choosing fonts with similar characteristics will make your fonts match
and create consistency throughout your documents. Choosing fonts with
contrasting characteristics will build visual texture and interest into
your materials. For example, you could pick all thin, sans-serif fonts
such as Arial and Frutiger to create a harmonious, matching suite of fonts. Or you could
pick fonts with contrasting characteristics to create greater interest,
such as using a serif font like Palatino for the headlines and then using
a sans-serif font like Verdana for the text.
Each piece of marketing material or document created should have a maximum
of three or four families of fonts on them. (A font family includes all
of the bold and italic variations of a particular font, so using bold
or italic effects does not count as additional fonts.) Using more than
three or four fonts is confusing, and it looks unprofessional.
Practical Font Usage Guidelines
Fonts can require special consideration when you send materials to
a professional printer for reproduction, use them on your website, or
send Word documents to others.
Here are some basics on using fonts and preserving their appearance
in these cases.
- In printed materials, it's easier to read long blocks of copy that
is set in a serif font. Sans-serif fonts are usually used in print for
short blocks of information, like headlines, pull quotes, or bulleted
lists.
When sending your materials to be professionally printed, make sure
to address your desires regarding the use of fonts. You can either include
the fonts with the files you send to the printer (which might be considered
a copyright license infringement), rasterize your artwork (convert it
to pixels, so the font data is no longer needed), or outline your fonts
(creating shapes out of the fonts, an option that's available in most
vector art programs such as Adobe Illustrator and Macromedia Freehand),
so that they can be printed accurately. Outlining the fonts is the best
way to guarantee that your fonts will remain accurate and sharp.
- Online, in websites, emails, and HTML newsletters, sans-serif fonts
look the best: they're clean, clear, and easy to read. There is one
other trick to online font use: you have to make sure that you use fonts
that will be installed on the computers of people reading your site.
Otherwise, your text will appear in the default font selected by their
browser, which is often Courier, a very plain font. That limitation
does leave you with several fonts to choose from, though, including Verdana, Arial, Tahoma,
and Trebuchet MS.
Serif fonts could also be used on websites; however, it's best to use
them in limited quantities, such as for headlines and subheads. Some
fonts that are available to use on the web include Times, Times New
Roman, and Georgia.
Another issue that commonly arises with online fonts is the difficulty
in controlling the size and appearance of those fonts. Standard font
tags in HTML don't offer precise sizing control and need to be used
several times throughout each HTML document, so making changes can be
time-consuming. You can use Cascading Style Sheets, or CSS, to precisely
control the exact size of your fonts and to make site-wide font, size,
or color changes with one simple alteration.
- In Word Documents, you also want to make sure that the fonts that
you use for the text will be available on the recipient's computer.
Good fonts to use are the standard fonts that come installed on PCs,
which include Arial, Verdana, Tahoma, Times New Roman, Georgia, Palatino,
Courier, and Trebuchet MS.
In order to insert a small amount of customized text-such as your logo,
tagline, or address information-create an image of that information
and to place it in the header and footer of the page.
Another way to preserve the appearance of text is to export your document
as a PDF file and send it to the recipient; PDF files embed the fonts
into each document so that they can be viewed on any computer and still
look right.
Some Technical Info about Font File Types
When you purchase fonts to use on your computer, you'll often be given
a choice of buying a Post Script, True Type, or Open Type font.
Here is a brief explanation of the characteristics and problems with
each of these formats:
- Post Script fonts are considered industry standard and are therefore
preferred by professional printers. There is a format of Post Script
fonts available for Macintosh computers and another format available
for Windows computers; those fonts cannot be shared between Macs and
PCs.
- True Type fonts are often found on Windows machines. These fonts
do not print as well as Postscript fonts.
- Open Type fonts are the newest type of font. They are cross-platform
compatible, but many fonts aren't yet available in this format.
With this information about the creative, practical, and technical aspects
of font usage, we hope that you can make font choices that will enhance
your brand.

Erin Ferree, Founder and Lead Designer of elf design, is a brand identity
and marketing design strategist who creates big visibility for small businesses.
Erin helps her clients discover their brand differentiators, then designs
logos, business cards, and other collateral materials and websites to
reflect that differentiation, as well as to increase credibility and memorability.
To learn more about defining your difference, check out our eBook, Stand
Out, at http://www.stand-out-branding.com
. For more information about elf design, please visit: Logo design at
http://www.elf-design.com


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