The best website for free high-quality Novecento Sans Wide Book fonts, with 27 free Novecento Sans Wide Book fonts for immediate download, and 50 professional Novecento Sans Wide Book fonts for the best price on the Web. 27 Free Novecento Sans Wide Book Fonts. Novecento Sans, font by Synthview Type Design. Novecento Sans can be purchased as a desktop and a web font. Novecento Sans Wide Book. Novecento Sans Wide Normal. Novecento Sans Wide Medium. Novecento Sans Wide DemiBold. Picture a mom, surfing Amazon one morning. Maybe she’ll buy your picture book? Akruti software. It’s perfect for her kids. The cover sure looks promising, she thinks. She clicks on it to Look Inside. She skips through a couple of pages, and suddenly, she’s shaking her head. Something’s clued her in. She’s figured out that your book is self-published and she suddenly has no desire to read any further. What went wrong??? Readers don’t usually know exactly what’s turned them off about a self-published book. But a lot of the time, badly-chosen fonts are the culprit. Maybe your fonts are amateurish? Maybe you’re using cruddy novelty fonts that make your book hard to read or dizzying on the page? Today, there are so many great great FREE font choices out there. Your book doesn’t have to be the one she clicks shut. It could be the one she clicks Buy for instead and eagerly waits for it to show up in her mailbox so she can share it with her kids. You may not be a professional graphic designer, but you should have some understanding of the basics of what makes a good font combination. The fonts of your book should be: • clear • readable (for adults and kids) • normal, ie not attract TOO much attention I’m sure you’ve seen children’s stories that look like this. The text is muddled and hard to read: So how can you rescue your book from falling into the same trap? Ten free font combos to the rescue! These 10 winning font combos are superheroes of the modern design world. They’ll help you perk up any kids’ book and create just the right mood for your story. These 20 fonts are all free, so there's no excuse to stick with Calibri, Times New Roman, Papyrus or (gasp!) Comic Sans anymore. Droid Serif (body) with ChunkFive (titles) I’ve used this lots of times, because it’s great for everything from nonfiction to short picture books. It is clear and easy to read but there’s an element of fun here nonetheless. ( for this pairing.) • • 2. Alegreya (body) with Yeseva One (titles) Yeseva One is one of those fonts you see all over the place but don’t really notice because it’s a trickster. At first glance, it’s totally traditional, and then you notice those curves, like the little flick at the base of the Y. And Alegreya is one of those tried-and-true classics that will go with anything. (Thanks to Joel Friedlander for the idea for this pairing; use it in his.) • • 3. Crimson (body) with Mountains of Christmas (titles) This Mountains of Christmas font reminds me of a Roald Dahl book, and for good reason. The letters are playful and fun, without sacrificing readability. Crimson is a terrific standby, a modest font whose very traditional rounded curves make a great pairing with any more avant-garde font. (Thanks to Joel Friedlander for the idea for this pairing; use it in his.) • • 4. Leander (body) with Permian Slab (titles) I love crackly, falling-apart looking fonts. But you have to be careful with them, because some can be very unclear. I love the way this Permian Slab font is matched up with a body font that is extra-clean and careful, with strong, bold lines, without being overwhelming. ![]() (Thanks to Joel Friedlander for the idea for this pairing; use it in his.) • • 5. Josefin Sans (body) with Dancing Script (titles) This is actually a slightly riskier, more feminine pairing, probably the most adventurous of all the pairings shown here. Try it and see you can always substitute a more standard serif font for the sans-serif Josefin Sans if you don’t like the overall effect. Book Antiqua (body) with Idolwild (titles) Everything about this combination says kids, adventure, fun. Even with a lousy story excerpt like this one, I’m totally eager to find out what happens next.
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