Font-ificating: Delivering Web-Native Fonts
Font faux pas happen all around us. Last night while you slept, someone wrote an entire sentence in Night Sky. While you ate breakfast, a notice about martial arts Shanghaied your inbox. And by the time you started work, thousands of grade school teachers typed their lesson plans in Comic Sans.
Sometimes poor typography is an honest mistake and sometimes it’s bad judgement. In the same way that I love cringeworthy headline puns, you should be free to experiment as a web typographer. However, due to the limitation of web-safe fonts, the world might be missing out on your creativity.
The Microsoft and Apple camps simply can’t agree on a catalogue of core fonts and Night Sky, Shanghai and Comic Sans do not render across all browsers without the help of a web-native font solution. For those who are unwilling to sacrifice looks for functionality, here’s an explanation of 4 solutions to make your serif’s sing.
1. sIFR (Scalable Inman Flash Replacement): sIFR is an open source typography solution that uses a combination of JavaScript, CSS and Flash to replace browser text with prettier web-native text. Essentially, you’re playing a Flash layer on top of the original web text. SIFR co-creator Mike Davidson blogs about it as being “a method to insert rich typograph
