Web Fonts

What's More Canadian Than Cree?

Submitted by mgifford on

I was pointed to this great resource on Plains Cree (nêhiyawêwin) links but it still doesn't have much information about presenting this language on the web.

Since hearing the story about the creation of Cree & Inuit syllabics, I've been interested in how colonization introduced written language to an oral culture. Since working on several Arabic/Hebrew/Farsi sites over the years, I've been curious as to how this applies to the web.  Being a unilingual person, I can't do more than look at the characters in any of these languages and I certainly have no education in linguistics.  However, I find the challenge of implementing aboriginal languages on the Internet to be quite a fascinating one. 

Cree is the most widely spoken native language in Canada and it's a people that span much of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and the Northwest Territories. However, I was surprised to see how little content I could find on the Web that was written in Cree.  Much of what was available was presented either as images or through Flash, neither of which can be copied, easily searched and certainly would be inaccessible to assistive technologies. The lack of examples to learn from certainly made this exploration more difficult. 

Dyslexia, Fonts & Open Source

Submitted by mgifford on

It's important to note that there is considerable controversy around whether or not fonts can provide any benefit for people with dyslexia. In 6 Surprising Bad Practices That Hurt Dyslexic Users there is a list of some basic things that can be done which are more likely to improve readability. I can see means which a Drupal module could be built to strip out unneeded spaces which impact the river effect, eliminate double spacing after periods, allow for an adjustable background, warn about long unbroken paragraphs. With many WYSIWYG editors it is possible to remove or filter out justified text & italics already. Choosing a serif font for the body of your message is clear, but inside that there is a huge variety of options.

A recommended book Reading in the Brain: The Science and Evolution of a Human Invention from @lizditz who has been having a very good discussion with me on & @Diane_Duff Twitter.

Abelardo Gonzalez created a font licensed under the creative commons which he made available via Dafont.

I've been trying to learn more about how to support people with dyslexia and so have been reading up about good font options. There are a few which have been recognized as being better than others to help people distinguish the difference between b's & d's. The most interesting work I've seen on this is from Christian Boer of Studiostudio who created the font Dyslexie. The focus of most fonts geared for dyslexic people has been print and sadly there still aren't any strong, reliable options for the web.

Historically, any interesting fonts would have needed to be embedded within images or flash files because there were less than 10 fonts that you could rely on your users having installed on their computer. Using Flash or images to convey text always complicates things for accessibility, plus maintaining a library of old image files was also a pain. This has changed with modern web browsers, and there are now a number of ways to introduce more fonts to the web.

Subscribe to Web Fonts