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John Giardiniere
In All About Licenses, Licensing
Posted June 4, 2014

All About Licenses: Website Creation

Licensing fonts for website-building websites.

All About Licenses: Website Creation

This is a continuing blog series on Licensing. You can view the earlier posts about Desktop, Webfont, App and Ebook, as well as our previous custom license, product creation. Up this week: Website creating and hosting. The Website Creation [...]

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John Giardiniere
In All About Licenses, Webfonts
Posted April 23, 2014

All About Licenses: Webfont Licenses

Everything you need to know to buy fonts for your website

All About Licenses: Webfont Licenses

Welcome to Part 2 of our continued blog series on licenses.  The goal of these blogs is to take a more informal approach towards explaining licenses and how they actually work. Today’s topic is webfonts.  We’ll explore this topic in a more [...]

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Ethan Dunham
In Webfonts
Posted March 4, 2014

Layering Webfonts

The most reliable and cleanest way to layer web fonts

Hi guys, Dan here. Today we’re releasing a new video, another in our tutorial series. And this time we’re talking about layering web fonts. Layered fonts allow us to do some really neat things, giving us some unique flexibility when it comes to [...]

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Ethan Dunham
In Webfonts
Posted November 1, 2013

Font Stacking

Use multiple fonts in your html and keep your markup clean.

Watch this video on how to use multiple fonts to style your html without cumbersome markup or javascripts. This trick utilizes the browsers ability to use multiple fonts in case one font doesn’t have the characters it needs, you can dictate what [...]

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Ethan Dunham
In Webfonts
Posted October 23, 2013

Smoother Rendering in Chrome (update)

Apparently with this cat, there is a better way to skin it.

Smoother Rendering in Chrome (update)

Last year we shared an alternative @font-face syntax that offers rendering benefits in Chrome for Windows by serving the svg file to Chrome users. You can read the original post here: smoother-web-font-rendering-chrome. Since then, we have [...]

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Ethan Dunham
In Webfonts
Posted August 1, 2012

Smoother Rendering in Chrome

A little trick with some minor tradeoffs

Smoother Rendering in Chrome

* Click here to read our update to this post. * Many web-developers struggle with the quality of chrome’s web font rendering. As web fonts become an industry standard in web-design, it is only a matter of time before chrome improves their [...]

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Ethan Dunham
In Webfonts
Posted April 21, 2011

Best Practices for Serving Webfonts to IE9

Best Practices for Serving Webfonts to IE9

Our @font-face syntax has been out in the wild for a few months now. It has performed beyond our expectations…except in certain instances of IE9. And here is how to solve them. Fix IE9 on the Server Side (IIS) Microsoft’s IIS server will refuse [...]

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Ethan Dunham
In Webfonts
Posted February 21, 2011

Further Hardening of the Bulletproof Syntax

Further Hardening of the Bulletproof Syntax

For context, please read our earlier post about this syntax. A potential looming problem with the new syntax we introduced earlier this month was raised by Microsoft. The soon-to-be-released IE9 comes with a feature that allows it to render in [...]

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Ethan Dunham
In Webfonts
Posted February 3, 2011

The New Bulletproof @Font-Face Syntax

The New Bulletproof @Font-Face Syntax

Since the beginning of the ‘webfont revolution’ we’ve relied on somewhat hacky @font-face declarations to get webfonts loading cross-browser. Could there be a better way? One that’s clear and compatible with future [...]

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Ethan Dunham
In Webfonts
Posted April 28, 2010

Developer freedom, Foundry protection

Introducing WebOnly™ TrueType

Developer freedom, Foundry protection

Over the weekend we rolled out a completely new set of webfonts. All webfont packages now comes with what we call WebOnly™ TrueType. Our previous packages split TrueType fonts into two pieces to obstruct casual theft of our foundry’s [...]

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