Ever landed on a website where the text made your eyes hurt? Where you couldn't tell headlines from body copy, or the font was so fancy you gave up reading? That's bad typography in action—and it's costing businesses thousands in lost conversions every day.
Typography isn't just about picking pretty fonts. It's the architecture of information. When done right, you don't notice it. When done wrong, it's all you can notice.
Here's the thing about typography: it should be invisible. The moment readers start thinking about the fonts instead of the content, something's broken.
Bad typography happens when your type decisions get between readers and your message. You've picked the wrong tool for the job. Maybe you've chosen a delicate script font for legal disclaimers (good luck reading that). Or you've crammed lines so close together that sentences blur into striped wallpaper.
Three core measures tell you if typography works:
Readability answers whether people can distinguish individual letters and words. Can someone actually decode "rn" versus "m" in your chosen typeface? Can they tell apart similar characters like I, l, and 1?
Legibility goes deeper—it's about stamina. Sure, readers can parse your 200-word paragraph set in 11-point Decorativa Ultra Thin, but will they want to? Or will they bail after the second line because their eyes are working overtime?
Context match considers whether your font speaks the same language as your content. A punk rock concert pos...