A new study shows that fonts aren’t inherently partisan—but humans are.
The designer behind Calibri weighs in on the decision to replace his font with Times New Roman as the official U.S. State Department typeface.
You see fonts every day — in books, apps, memes, signs — but you probably don’t think about them much. Still, fonts can say a lot without using any actual words. Recently, US Secretary ...
Newer Samsung smartphones running the latest version of One UI introduce a new Adaptive Clock feature, which aims to improve ...
The U.S. State Department changed its official font from the reader-friendly Calibri back to Times New Roman. Michel Martin speaks with an accessibility design expert about why fonts matter.
There’s an interesting cultural observation to be made as a writer based in Europe, that we like our sans-serif fonts, while ...
Utah's 2034 Olympics has a new - and controversial - logo. On a Monday, Gov. Spencer Cox stood in front of a crowd at t ...
"Switching to Calibri achieved nothing except the degradation of the department’s official correspondence," Rubio said in the memo. That's because the font is "informal" and clashes with the State ...
The State Department’s decision to stop using the Calibri typeface in favor of Times New Roman shook one community far removed from the workings of government: type designers. “I love it when, once in ...
The post Times New Roman Font Is Back — and History Is Rolling Its Eyes appeared first on Katie Couric Media.
Insisting that use of the more accessible Calibri was just "another wasteful DEIA program," the secretary of State recently made a bold decision to change the government's fonts.
The type designer behind Calibri says the decision to replace his font with Times New Roman as the official U.S. State Department typeface is ‘hilarious and regrettable.’ Calibri and Times New Roman ...