Angular Size
Like many things in UI design, something that appears random and subjective (like font sizes) is actually depending on remarkably sensible principle: we like to read paragraphs whose letters are about the same subjective size – namely, something like 0.3° tall, from baseline to cap height, in our field of vision.
First, why are we measuring font sizes in degrees? Frankly, it’s the most sensible way to do it when comparing across devices. What else you got – inches? If you talk about trying to make your type half an inch tall, well, great, but half an inch text is crazy big on a phone (one foot from your face), and pretty small on a TV screen (10 feet from your face). The simple truth is: when a font is twice as far away, it needs to be twice as big to compensate.
Now this is great in theory, but in practice, it’s incredibly arduous to calculate:
- Not everyone views their phone or monitor from the same distance
- Not all devices have the same size pixels
- Not all fonts are the same readability – even at the same font size, pixel-density, and viewing distance!
So while you will probably never be calculating this out by hand, I think there are two general lessons that are worth bearing in mind.
The 1/16” Rule
Across a wide variety of viewing distances, you can size your body text according to the following formula:
Font size (in inches) = 1/16" x (the number of feet between the user’s eyeballs and the device)*
*Measuring baseline to cap height, and presuming a fairly readable body font
I don’t expect you to whip out a ruler the next time you make an Android app, but this could come in handy when you take your digital design knowledge to a medium you’ve never worked with: presentation posters, TV apps, slideshows for viewing in an auditorium hall, etc.
The Pixel Density-Viewing Distance Offset
In general, smaller devices have smaller pixels*.
*By “pixel”, I mean not physical pixels, but the concept alternatively referred to as “CSS pixels” (web), “density-indepent pixels” (Android), or “points” (iOS) – in-depth explanation here.
That means smaller devices have more pixels per inch. And that means the same font size appears physically smaller on phones than tablets, and physically smaller on tablets than desktops (and so on for TVs as well, by the way).
That’s not the end of the world, since we hold phones closer to our face. But if the average phone is twice as close to our eyeballs as the average desktop, is the pixel density decrease enough on desktop to make the desktop font twice as big? Short answer: no. Longer answer: as of writing, the typical desktop now has about 33% smaller pixels than your typical mobile device. This means that it’s not stupid to make any desktop text about 33% larger than its mobile equivalent, at least on a page optimized for long form reading.
No Comments.