Re: Regular font for human beings to learn to write

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Well I watched your video and I think the person who made it has NOT
idea about what typography is and less about its history. To begin,
typography is idealized writing. It is, to some extent, abstract,
impersonal. Not attempts to imitate handwriting as when Gutenberg
printed his famous Bible of 42 lines.


It is also true that the font has a calligraphic foundation, but
typography isn't calligraphy, after 5 centuries of use, typography has
become a way we visually familiar. It's the same samples in the video
that is intended to correct (sic).

When you say "Beginners learning the English language" I'm not sure
who you mean. I don't know if you mean to foreign adults who need to
learn English as a second language or native children who have to
learn to read. In either of both cases I think the approach is wrong.

While there are calligraphic fonts designs that partially match the
settings shown in the video, especially in designs lower case letter,
it has nothing to do with how people learn to read.

When a person starts reading, thinking about those who use the Latin
alphabet, not only in English, not a calligraphic letter faithfully
copy the stroke of the handmade letter , but requires a letter whose
lines are clear and not cause confusion. That's why Ed suggested
Grashenko Comic Sans, because even when it was created to simulate the
text in dialogue balloons in comics, has a design that has been used
in interesting ways in people with dyslexia. Of course there are
studies about different designs of fonts to Comic Sans seeking help
reading for these people, but I haven't heard of any completed and in
a commercial stage even, but that was three years I checked ago,
perhaps now there is something more finished .

In my experience doing children's books and literacy materials for
adults, rather than emulate the calligraphic stroke of writing, it
seeks to use a typeface that avoids ambiguity or designs with a sight
line that beginners may be confused. It is intended that letters like
a and d, and g, b and d, I (capital i) and l (el), h and n, m  and r n
are well designed. I don't know if this answer helps in something, or
I have misunderstood your question. I hope to be the first case.

Regards.
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