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Posted by TaliesinSoft on 02/17/07 15:59
On Sat, 17 Feb 2007 03:14:02 -0600, Toby A Inkster wrote (in article
<qjtia4-1l4.ln1@ophelia.g5n.co.uk>):
> Jonathan N. Little wrote:
>
>> http://www.littleworksstudio.com/temp/usenet/alt.html.20070216.php
>
> This: <h1><span>A</span>NSEL <span>A</span>DAMS</h1>
> <h2><span>T</span>HE <span>P</span>HOTOCRAPHER OF THE
> <span>A</span>MERICAN <span>W</span>EST</h2>
>
> Would be better as: <h1>Ansel Adams</h1> <h2>The Photographer of the
> American West</h2>
>
> and the following CSS: H1, H2 { font-variant: small-caps; }
>
> Arguably though, "The Photographer of the American West" is part of the
> main heading, in which case, you could even go to:
>
> <h1>Ansel Adams<br> <small>The Photographer of the American
> West</small></h1>
>
> Also, you don't specify a font, leading to all text displaying in the
> browser default font. I would suggest:
>
> BODY { font-family: "Georgia", "Cochin", "Times New Roman", serif; }
In the Ansel Adams website under discussion the font used on the opening page
is Trajan Pro which has the small letters represented as small caps. The
sizes used are 60 pixels for "Ansel Adams", 30 pixels for "The
Photographer....", 14 pixels for the text under the miniatures, and 18 ixels
for the attribution at the bottom of the page. In Freeway, a "non-web
standard" (my term) font is replaced by a graphic so that it will render as
intended at the receiving end.
--
James Leo Ryan ..... Austin, Texas ..... taliesinsoft@mac.com
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