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#lang pollen
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◊title-block{◊topic{Verdana alternatives}
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◊short-rule{Don't use a screen font for print}}
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◊make-font-alternative-list{
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Concourse
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Alright Sans
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Amplitude
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Colfax
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}
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Verdana was designed for the computer displays of the 1990s, so it’s great for the websites of the 1990s. For everything else, not so great. ◊xref{Concourse}, ◊xref{Alright Sans}, ◊xref{Amplitude}, and ◊xref{Colfax} are sans serif fonts that work well in print and on today's screens. Alright is called a ◊em{humanist} sans serif because it relies on the proportions of traditional serif fonts. Amplitude draws from the spirit of ◊em{agates}, newspaper fonts designed to be readable at very small sizes (so it works especially well on ◊xref{business cards}). Colfax is called a ◊em{geometric} sans serif because it’s built on basic mathematical shapes. Concourse is a blend of geometric and humanist.
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