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![vanitas font strack vanitas font strack](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/ab/e7/e6/abe7e61a78bfd4bac177261690916b07.jpg)
This applies not only to pictures representing persons or events from the life of their owner or even to ones made at specific biographical instances. Not every picture in a living space figures as an aesthetic confession however, memories almost unavoidably attach themselves to them. More importantly, they can become crystallization points for personal memories within an interior décor. Yet, pictures do not just serve to display an individual aesthetic attitude. Not infrequently, the choice and arrangement of diverse depictions articulate preferences and personal taste, whether intended to follow conventions or purposefully to thwart them. That’s not necessarily a bad thing however, as the text will feel native to the OS its being read on.Living with Pictures: Goethe’s Interiors* I Pictures-like other objects-undoubtedly shape an interior, lending expression to unequivocal individuality. Keep in mind that this will also mean that the text will look different based on what system it is being read on. The browser will then use the first one that it can find on the current system.
![vanitas font strack vanitas font strack](https://cdn.pixabay.com/photo/2017/01/24/18/08/books-2006000__180.png)
So the trick just becomes to provide all those default system font names as the value for the font-family property for the element(s) that should use a system font. Things are different now however, and every major operating systems ships with a sans serif system font that looks and reads nice. In the past that was not a very elegant solution because some popular systems didn’t come with beautiful font faces baked-in. One solution is to actually resort to using a font that’s already installed on the device of the user. What’s a savvy web designer to do to satisfy both performance as well as look and feel? Arguably, though, part of this whole issue has been resolved, thanks to the font-display property.Īdded to that is the fact that the text found on a website is almost always the most important part, so we don’t want text that doesn’t look right or that’s hard to read.
![vanitas font strack vanitas font strack](https://c8.alamy.com/comp/R713B6/sculptor-leo-paulus-johannes-strack-design-for-round-mirror-with-driven-copper-frame-mirror-interior-design-glass-copper-embossed-personifications-of-history-and-art-underneath-inscription-ars-et-historia-anno-1881-ars-et-historia-leo-p-strack-rotterd-me-fecit-rotterdam-awarded-in-1881-by-the-association-for-history-and-art-in-rotterdam-R713B6.jpg)
Plus, we need to worry about all kinds of things like the infamous Flash of Unstyled Text (FOUT). Fonts on a website can easily become a large part of the total bundle size that browsers have to download before being able to display a page in its final look and form.
![Vanitas font strack](https://kumkoniak.com/75.jpg)