Save printer ink by changing the font’s
faces.
Font creators work differently and create fonts to express specific modes and emotions through font face like:
- To convey a message
- To embellishment
- To create a Logo
- To create icons
- To decorate event invitation
All fonts carry different weights based on using the same in other message modes. The backstage story is that when the user utilises the thinner font without font stroke, the user will get less usage of ink per page. The theory is that the printer works on the pixels; in the smallest printing area, if you have a heavier font, the printer prints more room and vice versa with the thinner font.
For instance, someone
wants to write something on the wall. He has two brushes, 3” and 4” wide. The first
one uses less paint than the second one. However, both are doing the same jobs,
exact words, but the word weight differs. Although the saving is relatively
tiny, this will happen in bulk printing jobs. Users may save 10% to 5% of ink depending
on the fonts they use in their careers.
Let’s talk
about the flip side of the coin; this theory does not show a significant amount
of ink saving for the home user, as users have to print enormous pages to get the
actual visible benefit which is quite impossible for home users.
So the crux of
the story uses the tinner fonts if you want to save ink.
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