888
02:55:08 ace\\any\pronouns
goodnight!!!
888
02:55:00 ace\\any\pronouns
same thing here but fuck it ill stay up
Cascadia
02:54:28 PNW
It's almost 1 am here. Time for me to HIT the hay!

Have a good night/day everyone!
888
02:52:41 ace\\any\pronouns
went from 75 horses to 34
Cascadia
02:52:34 PNW
I've never grown my own hay. Looks like I'm missing out.
888
02:52:10 ace\\any\pronouns
lol
Cascadia
02:51:47 PNW
This mare is stubborn! I'm trying to establish a White dressage line but she refuses to give me White foals!

-HEE Click-
888
02:51:24 ace\\any\pronouns
ah

i bought about 20k worth of hay a while back, and i still havent had any issues since i got hay bales and hay other thingies (i forgot the name)
Lucky Ducky Lane
02:50:02 
Yeah, my herd is also halved right now. Most of them died but I also did a huge downsize before I went inactive for 6 months lol Hay fields are fantastic, I don't have to buy hay and end of the month I can mass breed color PONs and stash them away
888
02:49:36 ace\\any\pronouns
i have five EEE geldings at the moment, but im working up
Cascadia
02:48:54 PNW
OK! My Gelding Army keeps growing, but I think I'm going to limit it to 200 (because that's the most my barn manager is willing to manage). They save my stable from financial failure.
888
02:46:57 ace\\any\pronouns
no no its a good thing! also now i spend less on hay lol
Cascadia
02:46:15 PNW
Ace, oh no!
888
02:46:14 ace\\any\pronouns
ive cut my normal amount of horses in HALF, which is great since now i only have my good stat ones and my companion babies
888
02:45:29 ace\\any\pronouns
mine are making me about 1k
Aussie Stables
02:45:06 I'm a guy
hmm my guys are making me 20k a day.
not enough *breaks out whip*
lol
888
02:44:47 ace\\any\pronouns
guys so remember how i was downsizing?
Cascadia
02:43:07 PNW
Congrats! It's always so satisfying when the geldings bring home the bacon like that!
Lucky Ducky Lane
02:36:03 
Oh sweet, 40k profit and they made back what I spent on a barn. I love my geldings supporting my spending habits 😂😂
Cascadia
02:24:33 PNW
Awesome!
You must be a registered member for more
than 1 day before you can use our chatbox.

Rules   Hide
You are in: Main Chat
View Sales



 Year: 179   Season: Summer   $: 0 Sat 03:31am CDT  
 Forecast: Steady Rain all Day


Forums

→ Horse Eden is a fun game! Sign Up Now!

My Subscriptions
My Bookmarks
My Topics
Latest Topics
Following
Forums > Member Help > Guides
  1

Readability guide - Font introduction May 31, 2020 12:33 PM


Shivering Sea
 
Posts: 669
#695550
Give Award
Hello people!
I am a graphic design student and I would like to share with you some of the knowledge that I got regarding the basics of fonts. So let’s start!

First, I would like to quote Jeri:
‘‘Just because you can change the font, doesn’t mean you should’’
And this is one of the greatest truths ever said in HEE chat, as sometimes the fonts chosen is far from adequate for the use.

But, let’s go to the beginning: Font types.
The classification of fonts is big and the way to classify them is cause of their trace.
I won’t show you the whole classification because is not necessary for this. However, I want you to know what’s a serif, sans serif and script font.

The serif is the slight flair finishing off a stroke of a letter, making them more distinct. Here I give you an example with the serif in red.
jKaVjD.png
Verdana is a sans serif font, therefore you won't find the serif that you can see in the times new roman.

Now we go with the Script font.
The script is the cursive letter that resembles handwriting.

jKa9qq.png

Now we arrive to the important part.
What should you use and for what?
Not all the fonts are suitable for everything, unless you want to give people a hard time reading.
The general rule is, the more different the letters of a font are, the better the readability. Nowadays, there is the whole issue of what’s better: serif or sans serif? For long texts, is much better to use a serif font. However, there are some sans serif that can also be perfectly readable. I will tell you this though: on each type you are going to find fonts that are good and bad fonts. That’s why choosing is so difficult.

When it comes to HEE, we have a screen. For screen, sans serif are proven to be better as they adapt better to the pixel shape that is completely squared and they are faster to read. Serif fonts lose what makes them so easy to read on paper due to pixelation and reading speed drops.

Take the example of credits. How do you make credits readable?
Use sans serif font for this, ALWAYS. You want to make the credits small so the smaller the font goes, the more the pixelation will be. That’s why serif fonts are so bad for this. Arial, Verdana, Helvetica are some very good fonts for this. And please, don’t add borders or any sort of effect. Just black or white, one colour in big contrast with the background.

Regarding script fonts. Script fonts work for fantasy and such, but use them for one or two words, not more. They are terribly hard to read. They are not at all to be used on palettes - big no. It may look fancy, but understand the person using the palette is going to be using the website daily and you have to make it easy to read and script doesn’t do that.
Same goes for art shops with their price list and rules - never use script for vital information that people need to read and understand. It’s a font for decoration: stable names, one fancy short phrase - but that’s it. Decoration.

Additionally,

The same applies to the use of italic. If you write a whole paragraph in italic you are causing the same reading issue that if you were using a script font. That's why, only use italic for small sentences or words to emphasize and provide contrast. If you use it on the whole text you are not only causing an eyeshore to the person reading, but also driving the attention away from the content.

You should pay a lot more attention at how the text breaths. Like - don't put all together making it difficult to separate the different sections of your post. Leave spaces that are enough for the text to have some air, but not so big that it takes ages for the whole thing to read. See my text for example? Each paragraph tells you about a certain thing. Once that topic is done, you have a gap so you can process what you read and you can come back to it easily and read it again if needed. If I had put the text together with no spaces, everything would be harder to find and more tedious to read.

So that's basically it. I hope this helped :D


Edited at December 19, 2020 05:02 AM by Shivering Sea
Readability guide - Font introduction January 13, 2021 07:25 AM

Former Stable
 
Posts: 0
#836081
Give Award
I find it worth mentioning that while many people have a hard time reading script fonts, so I agree a good rule of thumb is to only use script fronts for headers, important notes, etc. But leave the body as an easily readable serif or sans serif font. However, I personally adore having script fonts in my body text for myself only, or when someone asks me to make them a palette. It is considered good practice to fulfill the clients wishes but also maintain a balance for the public.
Midnight rambles 101 😂
Readability guide - Font introduction January 23, 2021 02:34 AM


Shivering Sea
 
Posts: 669
#841122
Give Award

The Nine said:
I find it worth mentioning that while many people have a hard time reading script fonts, so I agree a good rule of thumb is to only use script fronts for headers, important notes, etc. But leave the body as an easily readable serif or sans serif font. However, I personally adore having script fonts in my body text for myself only, or when someone asks me to make them a palette. It is considered good practice to fulfill the clients wishes but also maintain a balance for the public.
Midnight rambles 101 😂


xD that's what I called it a readability guide.
I am very aware that a lot of people like script because it's fancy, however is not healthy. Things you use frequently, that you need to pay attention, are simple. Could you imagine a textbook all written in script? I think I would burn the whole book LOL a living nightmare. More than one person would end up with a headache and they might not even know it comes from this sort of lettering.
Of course there is always the client side to have in account. I do find it a bit bothering when you end up in someone's else stable page and all you see is blinding colours and script fonts. If you want people to look at your horses, you won't get it with that :P
Readability guide - Font introduction February 2, 2021 10:45 AM

Former Stable
 
Posts: 0
#845634
Give Award
omg so true though

Forums > Member Help > Guides
  1

Refresh



Copyright ©2009-2024 Go Go Gatsby Designs, LLC    All Rights Reserved

Terms Of Use  |   Privacy Policy   DMCA   |   Contact Us
Help Me (0)  |   Game Rules   |  Reset Palette