1. Which do you prefer when reading fiction from a website?
2. When it comes to reading offline, do you use the webpage, or would you like to have a .pdf or .docx download option?
- Black font on white background?
- White on black?
- Dark Grey on white?
- blue on white?
- black on light grey?
- dark color on light color other than white?
- Another preferred color combo?
2. When it comes to reading offline, do you use the webpage, or would you like to have a .pdf or .docx download option?
no subject
Date: 2013-09-26 12:40 pm (UTC)From:Black type, please, on a very pale (but not glaring white) bg. Very pale grey [bg] is okay, as is very pale blue or green (are you old enough to remember the days when some of the paperbacks were printed on "Easy Eye" paper?).
My .02.
White on black, no; it's hard to *see*, let alone read.
no subject
Date: 2013-09-28 02:58 am (UTC)From:Oh I remember that grey-green paper. :)
Thanks for the FB, it's very helpful. :)
But could you tell me if you'd like a writer to offer alternate file downloads?
no subject
Date: 2013-09-28 06:22 am (UTC)From:Designers should be locked into a room with the Encyclopedia Britannica formatted in their preferred colors/fonts/sizes and not let out until they've read it. My two favorites so far have been...
1. Red on chrome yellow. JIMINY CHRISTMAS, PEOPLE!
2. Light pink on.... SLIGHTLY DARKER PINK! Hello, I am down with Hello Kitty TOO! But I would also like to know whether there is text on the page, or if I am just hallucinating, you know???
Opinions. I haz them.
no subject
Date: 2013-09-28 09:07 pm (UTC)From:Light pink on dark pink? Unreadable. Wouldn't even try. It'd be more useful to do those color blindness tests. ;)