Coolvetica is a scratch built, sans serif font, based on an American chain store logos circa 1970. This was an era where everyone was modifying Helvetica.
Typography in email is arguably more important than other design elements since type is the one thing that is consistently rendered across different email clients. Most email clients block images from first-time senders by default, so your subscribers will almost always see the print content of your email before anything else. Cross-platform Fonts Unfortunately, you can’t just go and use an excellent font like Gotham for your copy. Like anything else with HTML email, there are some limitations. Here, you’re pretty much stuck with the basic, cross-platform fonts: Sans Serif Web Safe Fonts These are your best bets for sans serif fonts. If you include these in your font stacks, most people will see the page correctly. Arial.
Arial Black. Tahoma. Trebuchet MS. Verdana These choices will give you good coverage, but you should include a more common one as a backup in your font stack. Century Gothic. Geneva. Lucida.
Lucida Sans. Lucida Grande Serif Web Safe Fonts These are your best bets for serif fonts. Courier. Courier New. Georgia.
Times. Times New Roman These choices will give you good coverage, but you should include a more common one as a backup in your font stack. MS Serif. New York. Palatino.
Palatino Linotype Monospace Fonts There are not as many monospace fonts with wide, cross-platform support. These are your best bets. Courier.
Courier New These fonts have some coverage. Lucida Console.
Monaco It’s best to stick with a small list of fonts known to work across all platforms, and your ideal, bullet-proof font stacks should look something like this. sans-serif: Helvetica, Arial, Verdana, Trebuchet MS.
serif: Georgia, Times New Roman, Courier Here’s a list of all widely-supported cross-platform fonts: Helvetica, Arial, Arial Black, Comic Sans, Courier New, Georgia, Impact, Charcoal, Lucida Console, Lucida Sans Unicode, Lucida Grande, Palatino Linotype, Book Antiqua, Palatino, Tahoma, Geneva, Times, Times New Roman, Trebuchet MS, Verdana, Monaco. Experimenting with Web Fonts While web fonts may be common in modern site design, in the world of HTML email, they’re experimental at best. If you want to work on the ragged edge of email technology, however, you do have a few options.
![Helvetica neue font family css Helvetica neue font family css](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125663157/384989304.png)
A (really) small number of email clients support the use of web fonts provided through services like. Outlook2000 (crazy, we know). iOS Mail. Apple Mail. Android (default client, not Gmail). Thunderbird So long as the client itself supports the use of, @import, or @font-face, your choice of web font can be served with those methods and not with JavaScript, there’s a pretty good chance web fonts will show up just fine. The actual use of web fonts is pretty straightforward, using standard HTML and CSS syntaxes.
If you prefer the HTML approach, is your best option.
. Comparisons. In and, a CSS font family property is used to specify a list of prioritized font/generic family names; in conjunction with correlating font properties, this list determines the particular font face used to render characters. A font family is a grouping of fonts defined by commonly shared design styles. Fonts sharing a common design style are commonly grouped into font families; Font Families' members are differentiated by a character's shape display (stroke weight, slant, relative width, etc.); A font face is the unique combination of a specific font family, and some of its members properties (CSS font properties). A font face attribute, combined with other font presentation attributes may be applied in the HTML using the font element.