💾 Archived View for gem.billsmugs.com › gemlog › 2021-09-25.gmi captured on 2023-11-14 at 07:57:28. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
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I'm writing this for three main reasons:
I'm not a font/typeface designer and I don't really know much about the specific terminology or technology behind fonts, this page is just a short list of my personal favourites in each category. I also generally don't worry too much about font licenses when downloading them for personal use - if I can find a free download from a relatively legitimate-looking website, I'm happy to use it. Please do your research before using any of these fonts for anything public and/or commercial! I'm working on the basis that the sample images I've created count as 'fair use'.
I don't often use serif fonts, except for reading longer text (e.g. eBooks or web pages in 'reader mode'). When I eventually get round to making my own Gemini client (or when Lagrange allows the use of arbitrary fonts), I'll almost certainly use this font for the main body text of Gemini pages.
I don't have especially strong opinions on sans serif fonts for reading text, these fonts are chosen primarily for use as UI fonts in an operating system.
This font has a very large array of different weights, I prefer Semibold for UI elements.
Download (in Mac dmg format, non-Mac users should be able to extract with programs like 7zip)
GE Inspira
Unofficial download (the font is only licensed for use by employees of General Electric)
Ubuntu
I'm a programmer and frequent terminal-user, so this is the category I have the strongest opinions on and the largest list of favourites.
This font automatically switches off anti-aliasing below a certain size, so there's two sample images here (for some reason, libreoffice has anti-aliased the 8pt line in the first image - even though it doesn't when rendering in the document itself).
Sample image (larger minimum size)
San Francisco Mono ("SF Mono")
Official download (in Mac dmg format)
Unofficial download (in otf format)
Consolas
Unofficial download (Windows users probably have this installed already)
Ubuntu Mono
Monofur
Annoyingly, the bullet point symbol (also sometimes used for password entry) in this font is a weird paw-print icon. For a while I had my own custom modified version (with a normal bullet point and no other changes), but I seem to have lost it during an OS move at some point.
I didn't know you could do this with libreoffice, so sharing it here:
soffice --convert-to png ~/Documents/FontTest.odt mogrify -trim -bordercolor "#FFF" -border 20 +repage FontTest.png
https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/138804/how-to-transform-a-text-file-into-a-picture
I noticed some of the images weren't correctly showing bold/bold-italics, they should all be correct now.