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  2. Canva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canva

    Canva is an Australian multinational software company that provides a graphic design platform that provides tools for creating social media graphics, ...

  3. List of monospaced typefaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monospaced_typefaces

    This list of monospaced typefaces details standard monospaced fonts used in classical typesetting and printing. Samples of Monospaced typefaces Typeface name

  4. Pastel QAnon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastel_QAnon

    This image, in Pastel QAnon style, refers to false claims that furniture company Wayfair had secret arrangements to sell and ship victims of child trafficking. [1] [2]Pastel QAnon is a collection of techniques and strategies that use "soft" and feminine aesthetics [3] – most notably pastel colors – in order to attract women into the QAnon conspiracy theory, often using mainstream social ...

  5. Applied aesthetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applied_aesthetics

    Best practices for aesthetic website design. Create visual clues based on groupings; related items or links are grouped together while unrelated items are separated. Use headings and subheadings to allow visual scanning of content. Use headings, subheadings, font sizes, bold fonts and italic fonts in proportion to the importance of the item.

  6. Dinkus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinkus

    Newspapers, magazines, and other works can use dinkuses as simple ornamentation of typography, for solely aesthetic reasons. [13] When a dinkus is used primarily for aesthetic purposes, it often takes the form of a fleuron, e.g. , or sometimes a dingbat. [14] While fleurons, dingbats, and dinkuses are usually distinct, their uses can overlap.

  7. Halfwidth and fullwidth forms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfwidth_and_fullwidth_forms

    For aesthetic reasons and readability, it is preferable for Chinese characters to be approximately square-shaped, therefore twice as wide as these fixed-width SBCS characters. As these were typically encoded in a DBCS (double-byte character set), this also meant that their width on screen in a duospaced font was proportional to their byte ...

  8. Haettenschweiler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haettenschweiler

    A 2010 Princeton University study involving presenting students with text in a font slightly harder to read found that they consistently retained more information from material displayed in fonts perceived as ugly or disfluent (Monotype Corsiva, Haettenschweiler, and Comic Sans Italic) than in a simpler, more traditional font like Helvetica.

  9. Akzidenz-Grotesk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akzidenz-Grotesk

    Akzidenz-Grotesk is a sans-serif typeface family originally released by the Berthold Type Foundry of Berlin. "Akzidenz" indicates its intended use as a typeface for commercial print runs such as publicity, tickets and forms, as opposed to fine printing, and "grotesque" was a standard name for sans-serif typefaces at the time.