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Oct 2014

Unless you make a silent comic, you might need to choose a font for your comic. I've seen countless authors here on Tapastic use fonts that I thought were somewhat unfortunate or even dramatic, and it's true that finding the good one is tedious. Fonts convey subtle connotations, and so I thought I'd make a little sum up of some hints to help with this.

Different fonts: different emotional impact
Something to keep in mind with fonts is that they all have a specific purpose. Just imagine if you had to read a whole novel printed with Fish in the Bathroom264... You'd probably 'nope' and flip the book in the trashbin. For comics, it's the same. You don't want to use a font that will:

  • Be hard to read
  • Be so catchy/weird that it will derail the attention from the story
  • Not match the atmosphere of your style and story (ie: a dynamic font like Anime Ace234 would fit for a story with a lot of action, but maybe not so well for something more emotive)
  • Is Comic Sans. You know this font, everybody knows this font, and if you really like it maybe you should take a look at Comic Neue333, which is a remake with neat letters instead of wobbly glyphs.

Here's a concrete example of how fonts can impact the feel of a page. It's a large pic so I suggest you to (right-click) open in a new thumbnail.

Check every single character
An important step in choosing a font is to check it has all the characters you need and to make sure they all look good. Some fonts are very nice but there's this one letter that looks a bit strange or distracting. Or sometimes it's the punctuation that doesn't look good, with dots that are too small, or not spaced enough and turning into a flat line when juxtaposed, or it can be the exclamation mark looking almost like a l.
Here are some fonts samples. Some are good, some turn out to be not so good for the aforementioned reasons.

If you found a font you like but don't know its name, you might be able to figure it out from a screenshot. Just upload it to the site Whate the Font74 and get instant results.
You can also easily create your own font on this site149 (thanks to Little Endian for the link!) It took me less than one hour to create my first font ever. It might need some fixes but for a first try it's quite satisfying.

NB: With this, you might have to type apostrophes as alt-codes (alt+39) in certain programs.

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    Oct '14
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Pretty good read. In the end, you just gotta go with what suits your comic the best, both visually and thematically. I started using a Times New Roman-like font called BitStream Charter because I liked its elegant, formal look, but it was a font so big it wouldn't work at all when dealing with comics with lots of text. I then started using Ventura Edding, a slimmer, boxy comic-book font and that's been working out nicely so far -- but now that you've shown us that website to make our own fonts, who knows if I'll stick with this font for much longer. Might as well try something over there! smiley

Thank you for your kind advices !
Also, I think the font you create is really nice, it suits your webcomic nicely. It's always hard to find a good font ! I've tried to create one myself, but it was a real struggle, my writting doesn't fit a webcomic at all. Fortunatelly, I found one that I like, and that's the one I use right now, but it took me two years to find the good one.

I think it worth it to take some time to look for another font than the anime ace (for the reasons you stated). Having your own font makes the webcomic more.... I don't know how to say it... specific ? I kind of like when I see a font that is only for one webcomic ! But there's so much fonts avaiable in the world, too many choices, ahah !

Thanks for the advice.
I've been using Book Antiqua almost all the time (and I think its time for a change) , and I'll definitely try that out.

I use a font very similar to anime ace called Ames; I got it from someone's blog a long time ago. Regretfully I don't have that link anymore! Back in the day I favored the font Go Boom! for my comics, and the font I use for my comic's logo I made by hand.

Cool beans. I've been thinking about downloading some fonts. I actually do have a font based on my hand-writing (which was generated by that site OP provided), but once I type something out it looks nothing like my handwriting at all. Hah.

All speech in my comic is handwritten. I personally prefer handwriting everything over fonts on the computer because my comic has this sketchy style and I feel like handwritten text just suits it the best. Besides, I like writing the text myself anyway. I probably might have to choose fonts for future comic projects, though. Maybe.

I made a font out of my handwriting on that site you linked but it didn't convince me, so I'm still stuck with hand lettering for now! on one hand I really enjoy handwriting my dialogues, but I've also considered switching to a font...but I still haven't found/made one that I like.

Considering that I want to translate my comic to Spanish (my first language lol), I think getting a font would be necessary!! handwriting everything TWICE is too much work x'D

As always, your post are really useful and interesting, nox.fox!

I would like to write all the comic myself and not using a font. But it's impossible because I often have to correct mistakes, typo, or completely change a sentence that sound too literary ^^;
Moreover, it was useful when I had to send my comic to print, when I needed to increase the size of all my texts !

It's true that the vectorizing of characters makes the somewhat different from the original handwritting. So far I had been handwritting all my texts like you, but my problem in that regard was that I had a hard time keeping the same style, same line width and pressure... It's not necessarily a problem but well, I wasn't very pleased with this.

Translation is indeed quite the issue. I've been publishing Singmire Haze in English and French, and it was quite a pain to redo the text of over 10 pages to catch up with English.

@LittleEndian It would be very interesting to share your experience with printing! So far I've only printed things "myself" (it was with a professional printer still).

I've been using Anime Ace and I don't think I've had too many problems with it up until now :3 I did use different font here and there for certain situations in the past, like when I drew a comic about a Dalek so of course when he spoke the letters were large and robotic x3 For just regular speech though, Anime Ace works for me and I'm hoping it works for others too ^__^

Anime Ace is very lisible and fitting for speech, so it's always a good pick. I think the major negative critique I have toward this font (well, aside the absence of lower case) and its look-alikes is that it's been so much used for manga that it led some to think its use is about mandatory when creating a manga. Or that it's the best possible font for manga/comics.

Of course, it's always a choice to make and authors should always pick the font they like and that is matching their comics best, without giving a damn about subconscious conventions^^ I'm pretty sure some manga would look refreshing with a different font, and more unique.

Note, since choosing a font requires a sensibility to typography that not everybody has, it might be better to get advice from someone with such sensibility, and if no such person is available, to stick to the fonts that are used by everybody. That would be a safe choice. It's better to go mainstream than illisible or unfitting =)

24 days later

Check Ames57. It was created specifically for webcomics and it's great smile

Thank you! Very helpful post!

I would like to see if you guys have any input about how copyright works with fonts (i.e. paid/free/open source/non profit use only).

I guess my main thing is about fonts that are for non profit use only. Right now my comic uses two, one is free (for the narrations) and one is free for non profit use only (for the dialogue). I'm not making any money off it now, but I'm about to be out of college and it'd be nice to eat frowning I know it wouldn't be source of income but if I did eventually decide to monetize my comic do you think this would be a problem?
DairyFiend11

@lira That's a great font! Thanks for sharing!

@dairyfiend If you want to be safe from trouble, the best thing is certainly to buy the font or go for one that is free (or more affordable if the one you use is beyond your budget). Then, I'm not entirely sure where profit begins to be honest. I'm a very sure that if you sell your comic, as in people must buy to read, then it's clearly profit. But if it's free to read with just encouragement to donate to the artist (like with the Support Program) or if money is made only through ads (like here on Tapastic when you generate enough revenue), I don't know if it is considered to be profit.
My vision of it is that if you generate enough money to buy the font, then you should buy it ^^

@noxfox Thank you! I definitely want to be careful about all that copyright stuff. So to be careful I actually just messaged the person who made it and he said I could use it 100% free! Thanks again!

I'm quite confused by the number of fonts used in this comic. In the first episode, the font in bold caps is very deshumanized and makes it sound as if all the characters were shouting, and I can't help but find something a little comical about it. To me it seems a little as if speech bubbles had been sewn on a tapestry illustrating an epic battle, because the font itself speaks of epicness.

The second episode is text only and with a completely different feel, to the point I wondered if it was supposed to be still part of the same story, shifting from fantasy lineart to something more sci-fi. The font reminded me a lot of the one used for warnings before movies (general audience, copyright, do not rip this movie, etc) and at first I thought it was going to be legal mentions, which was a little disturbing.

Then in the third episode the art style changes again (Comic Sans, it seems?), but changes to something more Asian-styled for the telling of a story. If you add the font for the onomatopoeia, it makes quite a number of fonts already.
I tend to go by the "less is more" advice. Each time you add a font the reader will have a stop to wonder why this change means. It can be an obvious reason when it's for SFX, but when it's still dialogue, unless the voice that speaks is different, it's best not to change. And by voice I mean a radically different voice (ie: human VS robot).
Text in a comic represents sound, so it's always good to wonder if the font looks like the sound it's supposed to represent.