Most UX and UI designers already understand the nuts and bolts of typography. They can tell you the difference between 'font' and 'typeface', between 'mean line' and 'baseline'. They might fret over the tracking of a particular font, or cringe at subtle kerning miscues that an untrained eye would gloss over. However, fewer designers grasp how these mechanics translate to …
Most UX and UI designers already understand the nuts and bolts of typography. They can tell you the difference between 'font' and 'typeface', between 'mean line' and 'baseline'. They might fret over the tracking of a particular font, or cringe at subtle kerning miscues that an untrained eye would gloss over. However, fewer designers grasp how these mechanics translate to …
Most UX and UI designers already understand the nuts and bolts of typography. They can tell you the difference between 'font' and 'typeface', between 'mean line' and 'baseline'. They might fret over the tracking of a particular font, or cringe at subtle kerning miscues that an untrained eye would gloss over. However, fewer designers grasp how these mechanics translate to …