Comic Neue Google fon
Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 7:20 am
Screenshot of Google Slide font Imbue A to Z
Imbue is a condensed didone font (a genre of serif typefaces characterised by narrow characters and contrast of thick and thin lines). It’s not ideal for body text because its narrow x height makes it harder on the eyes but it makes for great titles. It’s didone characterisation takes this font back to the lineage of classical and artful treatises of the 18th century, while the thinner and irregular spacing between letters updates the genre. If you want an impactful serif font which balances professionalism and boldness, this could be a good choice for you. A lovely pairing would be with Helvetica, a classic sans serif font. Imbue was designed by Tyler Finck.
Comic Neue
Buckle your seatbelts for this exciting peru phone number example addition to Slides! Comic Neue is the reimagined successor to the much debated Comic Sans. This reinterpretation makes the Comic Sans we know and love to hate more regularly spaced and sleek while retaining its unique character. The project owners wanted Comic Neue to be a more refined version of the contentious Comic Sans. We think they’ve succeeded with this casual font that’s perfect for internal docs and presentations where legibility is key. This project was started by Craig Rozynski.
Mulish
Google Slides font Mulish A to Z
Mulish is a clean and minimalist sans serif font. Mulish was designed for both display and text typography. Its simplicity means it would complement a bolder, or more stylised, font well (check out Oi or Rowdies below for your titles!). However, it’s also great alone! Pairing an all-caps title with sentence-case body text work well in presentations with a contemporary style. Designed by Vernon Adams initially, this font was updated by Jacques Le Bailly and Allison Le Bailly after Adams’ passing in 2017.
JetBrains Mono
Screenshot of Google font JetBrains Mono A to Z
JetBrains Mono is a unique sans serif font for a simple reason — it’s designed for developers. Maximised height for lowercase characters with standard width (hence ‘Mono’) allows code lines to be an expected length. Plus, the rectangular oval shapes of the characters ensures readers can read text easily. Its readability makes JetBrains Mono a great choice for presentations despite its specificity for programming. A fun way to use this font would be to have your titles in all upper-case while having the body text in sentence case. JetBrains Mono is designed by Philipp Nurullin and Konstantin Bulenkov.
Imbue is a condensed didone font (a genre of serif typefaces characterised by narrow characters and contrast of thick and thin lines). It’s not ideal for body text because its narrow x height makes it harder on the eyes but it makes for great titles. It’s didone characterisation takes this font back to the lineage of classical and artful treatises of the 18th century, while the thinner and irregular spacing between letters updates the genre. If you want an impactful serif font which balances professionalism and boldness, this could be a good choice for you. A lovely pairing would be with Helvetica, a classic sans serif font. Imbue was designed by Tyler Finck.
Comic Neue
Buckle your seatbelts for this exciting peru phone number example addition to Slides! Comic Neue is the reimagined successor to the much debated Comic Sans. This reinterpretation makes the Comic Sans we know and love to hate more regularly spaced and sleek while retaining its unique character. The project owners wanted Comic Neue to be a more refined version of the contentious Comic Sans. We think they’ve succeeded with this casual font that’s perfect for internal docs and presentations where legibility is key. This project was started by Craig Rozynski.
Mulish
Google Slides font Mulish A to Z
Mulish is a clean and minimalist sans serif font. Mulish was designed for both display and text typography. Its simplicity means it would complement a bolder, or more stylised, font well (check out Oi or Rowdies below for your titles!). However, it’s also great alone! Pairing an all-caps title with sentence-case body text work well in presentations with a contemporary style. Designed by Vernon Adams initially, this font was updated by Jacques Le Bailly and Allison Le Bailly after Adams’ passing in 2017.
JetBrains Mono
Screenshot of Google font JetBrains Mono A to Z
JetBrains Mono is a unique sans serif font for a simple reason — it’s designed for developers. Maximised height for lowercase characters with standard width (hence ‘Mono’) allows code lines to be an expected length. Plus, the rectangular oval shapes of the characters ensures readers can read text easily. Its readability makes JetBrains Mono a great choice for presentations despite its specificity for programming. A fun way to use this font would be to have your titles in all upper-case while having the body text in sentence case. JetBrains Mono is designed by Philipp Nurullin and Konstantin Bulenkov.