A style of typeface that means "without feet " Common sans serif typefaces include Arial, Helvetica, AvantGarde and Verdana The following graphic image shows sans serif typefaces
A style of typeface that means "without feet " Common sans serif typefaces include Arial, Helvetica, AvantGarde and Verdana
Literally, without serif(s), which are the extra projections from the main stroke of letters found in some type faces
A type face that does not have serifs Generally a low-contrast design Sans serif faces lend a clean, simple appearance to documents
A typeface in which the characters have no serifs (short lines or ornaments at the upper or lower end of character strokes) A sans serif typeface usually has a straightforward, geometric appearance See also serif
(See Serif) Lettering which doesn't have the extra decoration of a Serif font Verdana is an example of this
Any font or typeface that lacks serifs In most sans serif fonts, there is littledifferentiation between the width of strokes within the letter Helvetica and Futura arefamiliar sans serif fonts
A style of typeface that means "without feet " Common serif typefaces include Arial, Helvetica, AvantGarde and Verdana The following graphic image shows sans serif typefacesthe color intensity of an image An image high in saturation will appear to be very bright An image low in saturation will appear to be duller and more neutral An image without any saturation is also referred to as a grayscale image
A typeface in which the letters do not have small decorative ends; opposite of serif
A style of type face distinguished by the absence of serifs, or ticks, on the ends of strokes to top
A typeface that has no serifs, small strokes at the end of the main stroke of the character Times Roman is a serif typeface, helvetica is sans serif
Type styles which do not have serifs -- the little extra strokes found at the end of main vertical and horizontal strokes of some letterforms -- are called sans serif (without serif) An example of a sans serif type is Arial