All Caps
Avoid using all‑caps as it reduces readability and slows scanning. It works best when applied sparingly and paired with sufficient spacing and contrast.
All caps are harder to read because uniform letter shapes reduce word recognition.
Avoid using all caps for long headings, paragraphs, or instructions—reserve it for brief labels, buttons, or acronyms.
- All caps can feel like shouting in some contexts, so use it intentionally and with tone in mind.
- Ensure strong color contrast and adequate size, since all‑caps text can appear visually denser and heavier.
Recommended to increase letter‑spacing (tracking) slightly to improve legibility when all caps are necessary.
Italics
Use italics sparingly and for emphasis, not as a primary typographic style.
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- Avoid serif body text at small sizes, where details blur and slow reading.
- Serifs can be effective for large headings or brand‑driven typography.
All Caps
Avoid using all‑caps as it reduces readability and slows scanning. It works best when applied sparingly and paired with sufficient spacing and contrast.
All caps are harder to read because uniform letter shapes reduce word recognition.
Avoid using all caps for long headings, paragraphs, or instructions—reserve it for brief labels, buttons, or acronyms.
- All caps can feel like shouting in some contexts, so use it intentionally and with tone in mind.
- Ensure strong color contrast and adequate size, since all‑caps text can appear visually denser and heavier. Recommended to increase letter‑spacing (tracking) slightly to improve legibility when all caps are necessary
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