Text and typography

The CSS Podcast - 036: Text & Typography

Text is one of the core building blocks of the web.

When making a website, you don't necessarily need to style your text; HTML actually has some pretty reasonable default styling.

However, text will likely make up the majority of your website, so it's worthwhile to add some styling to spruce it up. By changing a few basic properties, you can significantly improve the reading experience for your users!

In this module, we'll start with the @font-face rule, which lets you import custom fonts into your webpages. This ensures that you have the exact typography you need, independent of user-installed fonts.

Following that, we'll cover essential CSS font properties including font-family, font-style, font-weight, and font-size. These basics set the stage for manipulating text for both style and readability.

We'll also touch on paragraph-specific properties like text-indent and word-spacing, before concluding with advanced topics such as variable fonts and pseudo-elements, which further refine your typographic control.

Practical examples and tips will be provided throughout to solidify your understanding and application of these CSS techniques.

The @font-face rule

The @font-face CSS at-rule is instrumental in web design, letting you specify and use custom fonts to display text. The beauty of @font-face is in its versatility: it lets you source fonts from a remote server, or from a font installed on the user's device.

Syntax

@font-face {
  font-family: "Trickster";
  src:
    local("Trickster"),
    url("trickster-COLRv1.otf") format("opentype") tech(color-COLRv1),
    url("trickster-outline.otf") format("opentype"),
    url("trickster-outline.woff") format("woff")
}

Descriptors

ascent-override
Customizes the ascent metric, impacting the space above the baseline.
descent-override
Adjusts the descent metric, affecting the space below the baseline.
font-display
Controls the font's display behavior depending on its download status.
font-family
Names the font for use within font-related properties.
font-stretch
Sets acceptable horizontal scaling, specified as a single value or range.
font-style
Defines the font style, supporting angle ranges for oblique styles.
font-weight
Determines the font's weight or range of weights available.
font-feature-settings
Enables access to OpenType font features.
font-variation-settings
Provides fine-tuned control over variable font settings.
line-gap-override
Overrides the font's default line gap.
size-adjust
Applies a scaling factor to the font's outline and metrics.
src
Defines the font source, whether local or remote. This is required for the @font-face rule. Combining url() and local() within the src is a common strategy that uses a local font if available, reverting to a remote font file as a fallback. Browsers prioritize resources based on the order of declaration, so local() should typically precede url().
unicode-range
Limits the characters this font should be used for.

Description

@font-face frees designers from the constraints of "web-safe" fonts by letting them use custom typography. The local() function's ability to search for a font on the user's device offers a seamless experience that doesn't necessarily depend on an internet connection.

Font MIME types

Format MIME Type
TrueType font/ttf
OpenType font/otf
Web Open Font Format font/woff
Web Open Font Format 2 font/woff2

The difference between @font-face and font-family

In CSS, @font-face and font-family are often confused, but they serve distinct purposes.

As we've discussed, @font-face is a rule used to define any custom fonts you want to use in your web application. It tells the browser where to download the font, how to display it during loading (with the font-display property), and specifies which subset of characters to download (with the unicode-range).

In contrast, font-family is a CSS property used within a CSS rule to assign a particular font or a list of fonts to an element. The fonts listed under font-family can be web-safe fonts, system fonts, or custom fonts defined with @font-face.

To summarize, @font-face declares a font and gives it a name, and font-family applies this declared font to HTML elements.

Here's an example of using both:

<table>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th><p><pre>
@font-face {
  font-family: "CustomFont";
  src: url("customfont.woff2") format("woff2");
}

body {
  font-family: "CustomFont", Arial, sans-serif;
}

In this example, @font-face defines "CustomFont" and tells the browser where to find it. The font-family property then applies it to the body element, with Arial as a fallback if "CustomFont" isn't available.

Change the typeface

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use font-family to change the typeface of your text.

The font-family property accepts a comma-separated list of strings, either referring to specific or generic font families. Specific font families are quoted strings, such as "Helvetica", "EB Garamond", or "Times New Roman". Generic font families are keywords such as serif, sans-serif, and monospace (find the full list of options on MDN). The browser will display the first available typeface from the provided list.

When using font-family, you should specify at least one generic font family in case the user's browser doesn't have your preferred fonts. Generally, the fallback generic font family should be similar to your preferred fonts: if using font-family: "Helvetica" (a sans-serif font family), your fallback should be sans-serif to match.

Use italic and oblique fonts

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use font-style to set whether text should be italic or not. font-style accepts one of the following keywords: normal, italic, and oblique.

Make text bold

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 2.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use font-weight to set the "boldness" of text. This property accepts keyword values (normal, bold), relative keyword values (lighter, bolder), and numeric values (100 to 900).

The keywords normal and bold are equivalent to the numeric values 400 and 700, respectively.

The keywords lighter and bolder are calculated relative to the parent element. See MDN's Meaning of Relative Weights for a handy chart showing how this value is determined.

Change the size of text

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use font-size to control the size of your text elements. This property accepts length values, percentages, and a handful of keyword values.

In addition to length and percentage values, font-size accepts some absolute keyword values (xx-small, x-small, small, medium, large, x-large, xx-large) and a couple of relative keyword values (smaller, larger). The relative values are relative to the parent element's font-size.

Change the space between lines

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use line-height to specify the height of each line in an element. This property accepts either a number, length, percentage, or the keyword normal. Generally, it's recommended to use a number instead of a length or percentage to avoid issues with inheritance.

Change the space between characters

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use letter-spacing to control the amount of horizontal space between characters in your text. This property accepts length values such as em, px, and rem.

Note that the specified value increases the amount of natural space between characters. In the following demo, try selecting an individual letter to see the size of its letterbox and how it changes with letter-spacing.

Change the space between words

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use word-spacing to increase or decrease the length of space between each word in your text. This property accepts length values such as em, px, and rem. Note that the length you specify is for extra space in addition to the normal spacing. This means that word-spacing: 0 is equivalent to word-spacing: normal.

font shorthand

You can use the shorthand font property to set many font-related properties at once. The list of possible properties are font-family, font-size, font-stretch, font-style, font-variant, font-weight, and line-height.

Check out MDN's font article for the specifics of how to order these properties.

Change the case of text

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use text-transform to modify the capitalization of your text without needing to change the underlying HTML. This property accepts the following keyword values: uppercase, lowercase, and capitalize.

Add underlines, overlines, and through-lines to text

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use text-decoration to add lines to your text. Underlines are most commonly used, but it's possible to add lines above your text or right through it!

The text-decoration property is shorthand for the more specific properties detailed below.

The text-decoration-line property accepts the keywords underline, overline, and line-through. You can also specify multiple keywords for multiple lines.

The text-decoration-color property sets the color of all decorations from text-decoration-line.

The text-decoration-style property accepts the keywords solid, double, dotted, dashed, and wavy.

The text-decoration-thickness property accepts any length values and sets the stroke width of all decorations from text-decoration-line.

The text-decoration property is a shorthand for all the above properties.

Add an indent to your text

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use text-indent to add an indent to your blocks of text. This property takes either a length (for example, 10px, 2em) or a percentage of the containing block's width.

Deal with overflowing or hidden content

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 7.
  • Safari: 1.3.

Source

Use text-overflow to specify how hidden content is represented. There are two options: clip (the default), which truncates the text at the point of overflow; and ellipsis, which displays an ellipsis (…) at the point of overflow.

Control white-space

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

The white-space property is used to specify how whitespace in an element should be handled. For more details, check out the white-space article on MDN.

white-space: pre can be useful for rendering ASCII art or carefully indented code blocks.

Control how words break

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 15.
  • Safari: 3.

Source

Use word-break to change how words should be "broken" when they would overflow the line. By default, the browser won't split words. Using the keyword value break-all for word-break will instruct the browser to break words at individual characters if necessary.

Change text alignment

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use text-align to specify the horizontal alignment of text in a block or table-cell element. This property accepts the keyword values left, right, start, end, center, justify, and match-parent.

The values left and right align the text to the left and right sides of the block, respectively.

Use start and end to represent the location of the start and end of a line of text in the current writing mode. Therefore, start maps to left in English, and to right in Arabic script which is written right to left (RTL). They're logical alignments, learn more in our logical properties module.

Use center to align the text to the center of the block.

The value of justify organizes the text and changes word spacings automatically so that the text lines up with both the left and right edges of the block.

Change the direction of text

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 2.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

Use direction to set the direction of your text, either ltr (left to right, the default) or rtl (right to left). Some languages like Arabic, Hebrew, or Persian are written right to left, so direction: rtl should be used. For English and all other left-to-right languages, use direction: ltr.

Change the flow of text

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 48.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 41.
  • Safari: 10.1.

Source

Use writing-mode to change the way text flows and is arranged. The default is horizontal-tb, but you can also set writing-mode to vertical-lr or vertical-rl for text that you want to flow horizontally.

Change the orientation of text

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 48.
  • Edge: 79.
  • Firefox: 41.
  • Safari: 14.

Source

Use text-orientation to specify the orientation of characters in your text. The valid values for this property are mixed and upright. This property is only relevant when writing-mode is set to something other than horizontal-tb.

Add a shadow to text

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 2.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 3.5.
  • Safari: 1.1.

Source

Use text-shadow to add a shadow to your text. This property expects three lengths (x-offset, y-offset, and blur-radius) and a color.

Check out the text-shadow section of our module on Shadows to learn more.

Variable fonts

Typically, "normal" fonts require importing different files for different versions of the typeface, like bold, italic, or condensed. Variable fonts are fonts that can contain many different variants of a typeface in one file.

Roboto Flex in random combinations of Width and Weight

Check out our article on Variable Fonts for more details.

Pseudo-elements

::first-letter and ::first-line pseudo-elements

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

The ::first-letter and ::first-line pseudo-elements target a text element's first letter and first line respectively.

::selection pseudo-element

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 62.
  • Safari: 1.1.

Source

Use the ::selection pseudo-element to change the appearance of user-selected text.

When using this pseudo-element, only certain CSS properties can be used: color, background-color, text-decoration, text-shadow, stroke-color, fill-color, stroke-width.

font-variant

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 1.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 1.
  • Safari: 1.

Source

The font-variant property is a shorthand for a number of CSS properties that let you choose font variants like small-caps and slashed-zero. The CSS properties this shorthand includes are font-variant-alternates, font-variant-caps, font-variant-east-asian, font-variant-ligatures, and font-variant-numeric. Check out the links on each property for more details about its usage.

Check your understanding

Test your knowledge of typography on the web

Which of the following keywords can be used as a font-family generic fallback?

serif
Correct!
monospace
Correct!
italic
Try again. italic is a valid keyword for font-style, not font-family.
sci-fi
Try again. fantasy is a valid generic fallback for font-family, though.
sans-serif
Correct!
helvetica
Try again. "Helvetica" is not a generic keyword, but instead refers to a specific font family.

Which statement is used to convert the first letter of each word to uppercase? e.g. This is a sentence.This Is A Sentence.

text-capitalize: true;
Try again.
text-case: capitalize;
Try again.
text-transform: capitalize;
Correct!
font-style: capitals;
Try again.
font-variant: capitalize;
Try again.

True or False: Use text-orientation to align text to the left, right, or center.

True
Try again. text-orientation changes the rotation of letters in a line.
False
Correct! text-orientation changes the rotation of letters in a line. Use text-align to align text to the left, right, or center (and more!).

Which CSS property can be used to change the space between lines of text?

line-spacing
Try again.
leading
Try again. Leading is the correct term for the space between lines in typography, but it's not a valid CSS property.
baseline-distance
Try again.
line-height
Correct!

Resources