this post was submitted on 23 Feb 2022
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Open Source Fonts

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A place to talk about free and open source typography, to show your discoveries or creations or to talk about anything else related to this theme.

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In 1999, as an educational therapist, Dr. Bonnie Shaver-Troup, working with clients, began observing that reading issues masked the individual’s true capability and intelligence.

In 2000, Bonnie theorized that reading performance would improve through use of:

  • A sans-serif font to reduce cognitive noise -Expanded scaling to improve potential for character recognition -Hyper-expansion of character spacing, which creates a greater lag time and reduces potential crowding and masking effects

These changes led to the development of seven specially-designed fonts, which create an immediate improvement in reading performance.

This is where Lexend was formed.

[Github] https://github.com/googlefonts/lexend

[Website] https://www.lexend.com/

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[–] Fakefunk@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago (2 children)

A typeface designed to aid reading comprehension, but with a single-storey a and a straight lowercase L? I don’t get it.

[–] Troll@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

A typeface designed to aid reading comprehension, but with a single-storey a and a straight lowercase L? I don’t get it.

Lower case "L" is different from upper case "i":

It also seems that dyslexic people prefer round lowercase a... though you are right for some it can be confused with the "o".

[–] Fakefunk@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago

Lower case “L” is different from upper case “i”:

Next to each other they sure are different :) Didn’t know about the dyslexic people preference for round lc a… I just know it’s a no-no for legibility in general.