In the nine - second video loop «Untitled (Touchscreen),» a still image of a smiling young couple is split into overlapping blue and red versions that flicker from place to place, alternating with moments of black; the handsome print «Untitled (Coil Whine)» puts a large, black and white image of fingers beside wavering green lines of video distortion and under a block of marbleized orange and a fragment of sans -
serif text reading «UP YOUR DAY.»
Not exact matches
Droid is the ideal font for long blocks of
text: It's easy to
read and has just the right mixture of soft and hard
serifs to give it a unique personality all of its own.
I also find that the sans
serif font choice and software changes to allow for more lines of
text makes the
reading experience noticeably better as well.
Though it's been documented for hundreds of years that serifed
text faces are more functional and easier to
read, some publishers idiotically set books in sans
serif faces.
The Kobo Wireless has 5 different
text sizes when
reading EPUB ebooks and two font types,
serif and sans -
serif.
These comments are okay because they have a little background to them, but the really thin sans -
serif and bright - white background (especially when the PR stories have their
text lighter - colored and in italics) makes
reading kinda difficult.
Sans -
serifs look fine in larger
text and are still easy to
read in smaller sizes.
However, if you're specifying type for an extended run of
text, keep in mind that
serif fonts are easier to
read than sans
serif fonts.