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10 Fonts That Will Cause a Lasting Impact on Your Book Layout


Believe it or not, fonts can make your book more attractive to readers. In fact, the right font can make your book look more professional and polished. Remember that if your font is too small or too difficult to read, people will likely put your book down and never pick it up again.




With that said, here are ten fonts that will cause a lasting impact on your book layout:


Baskerville

Baskerville is a classic serif font that is perfect for any formal document or book. It is easy to read and has a very elegant appearance.


Times New Roman

Times New Roman is another classic font that is perfect for books. It is easy to read and has a simple, yet professional appearance. It also happens to be the standard font for most word processors.


Helvetica

Helvetica is a sans-serif font that is perfect for any document or book that needs to look modern and sleek. It is easy to read and has a very clean appearance. With more elegant accents and an overall more rectangular (or less rounded) shape, it offers a more angular, crisper look.


Arial

Arial is another elegant sans-serif typeface that may be used in a variety of print and digital media. Clean lines make it simple to read. You may use it for everything from reports and presentations to magazines and books, making it an exceedingly versatile typeface family.


Garamond

It is frequently employed for printing body text and books. The letters with an organic structure simulate handwriting with a pen, but with a more rigid and upright appearance.


Sabon

Sabon is a sleek, attractive, and legible typeface that is commonly used for body text. The usage of this typeface is common in books, periodicals, newspapers, and brochures, as it is more conservative.


Janson

Janson is a collection of old-style serif types from the Dutch Baroque period and twentieth-century revivals. Janson is a popular body text serif font with a clean, high-contrast design.


Bison

Bison has a good mix of straight lines and flowing curves. Each typeface in the family can stand on its own as a dynamic and authoritative font.


Bembo

When it comes to serifs, Bembo uses short, bracketed ones with cupped bases, as well as angled ones on the lower-case ascenders. It has a thin and thick stroke weight variation.


Franklin Gothic

A combination of tiny irregularities, tapering of strokes at the junctions of letters, and a bolder weight makes Franklin Gothic a unique font.


Indeed, it's important to choose the right font for your book. The wrong font can make your book look unprofessional and unpolished. However, the right font can make your book look more sleek, modern, and professional.


So, be sure to choose a font that will have a lasting impact on your book layout.

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