Typography on the web is a major source of difficulty for designers today. There are so few "web-safe" fonts, and there's no standard way to bring new ones into the equation. Well, Google has taken a big step toward addressing that problem, by introducing an open source font library, and an API that makes it easy to use the new fonts on your own webpage.
That means that along with Georgia, Arial and the rest, you're about to start seeing a lot more Droid Serif, Molengo, and Tangerine on the web. Along with the Google Font Directory and Google Font API, there's also a partnership with Typekit to create something called the WebFont Loader. The WebFont Loader is a JavaScript library that works with Google's API, but gives you more control over font loading, and even allows you to pull in fonts from other web-font sources.
That means that along with Georgia, Arial and the rest, you're about to start seeing a lot more Droid Serif, Molengo, and Tangerine on the web. Along with the Google Font Directory and Google Font API, there's also a partnership with Typekit to create something called the WebFont Loader. The WebFont Loader is a JavaScript library that works with Google's API, but gives you more control over font loading, and even allows you to pull in fonts from other web-font sources.
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