DRAFT
Once upon a time, comic sans was the most exciting font on the web. No longer.
Procuring Fonts
TODO: licensing, purchasing model
Providers
Free
Kalmuna Accounts
All usernames and passwords for these accounts are in LastPass.
Paid (no Kalamuna account)
- typekit.com (Adobe)
- linotype.com
Using Web Fonts
For Drupal
Probably the easiest way to do this in Drupal is to use the @font-your-face module. It provides an admin interface for managing web fonts and has support for the following 3rd party providers:
If you prefer to include 3rd party web fonts without @font-your-face module you should be able to find instructions on how to include the web font from your css at each of the respective 3rd party websites.
Here is how you can load this in with less overhead via a preprocess function: http://cheekymonkeymedia.ca/blog/drupal-planet/how-add-typekit-fonts-your-drupal-website :
/** * Implements template_preprocess_html(). */ function MYTHEME_preprocess_html(&$variables) { //Adds typekit js to theme drupal_add_js('//use.typekit.net/wje3ojf.js', 'external'); drupal_add_js('try{Typekit.load();}catch(e){}', 'inline', 'page_bottom'); } - See more at: http://cheekymonkeymedia.ca/blog/drupal-planet/how-add-typekit-fonts-your-drupal-website?utm_source=The+Weekly+Drop&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=The_Weekly_Drop_Issue_177_02_19_2015#sthash.qiGZa8Mf.dpuf
Self hosting
If you have a copy of a web font that you want to use and intend to host it along with the site then you can use a Sass mixin like the following:
@mixin set-font-face($font-family, $file-path, $weight: normal, $style: normal ) { @font-face { font-family: $font-family; src: url(#{$file-path}.woff) format('woff2'), /* Chrome 26+, Opera 23+ */ url(#{$file-path}.woff) format('woff'); /* Chrome 6+, Firefox 3.6+, IE 9+, Safari 5.1+ */ font-weight: $weight; font-style: $style; font-stretch: none; } }
Web fonts in email
via http://templates.mailchimp.com/design/typography/
While web fonts may be common in traditional website design, in the world of HTML email, they’re experimental at best. If you want to work on the ragged edge of email technology, however, you do have a few options. A (really) small number of email clients support the @import* CSS at-rule, which allows the use of web fonts provided through services like Google Web Fonts or Fontdeck.
Outlook2000 (crazy, we know)
iOS Mail
Apple Mail
Android (default client, not Gmail)
Thunderbird
Note: @font-face and <link> really only work on Apple desktop and mobile clients.