Psychology of Font

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Across
  1. 2. The “t-shirt and jeans” typeface; simple, readable, and widely used.
  2. 3. New Roman Classic authority; most read and renowned font.
  3. 7. Geometrically driven; based on circles, squares, and triangles.
  4. 9. Evokes Disney ideals; family-friendly and fun.
  5. 10. New Roman Commissioned by IBM; associated with academia and term papers.
  6. 11. MT “Font to hate”; bubbly and often seen in middle school notes.
  7. 13. Sans Hit the streets in 1995; widely disliked by designers.
  8. 14. Whacky line between discord & rhyme; youthful and cartoonish.
Down
  1. 1. The “little black dress” of typefaces; elegant and versatile since 1957.
  2. 4. Tall, thick, bold; ideal for front-page headlines.
  3. 5. Used in the Declaration of Independence; elegant and historical.
  4. 6. Script Captures personal style and attitude.
  5. 8. Opinionated and wise; good for headlines with subtlety.
  6. 11. Black Bold, funky, retro; honors classic design.
  7. 12. Introduced in 2000; used in Obama’s 2008 campaign; linked to change and innovation.