Asked by bob
What is the type classification shown in the graphic?
Responses
Decorative
Decorative
Sans-serif
Sans-serif
Script
Script
Serif
Serif
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I can’t see the graphic — please upload it or paste a clear image/shot of the lettering. Meanwhile, here’s how to tell which of those four it is:
- Serif: letters have small strokes or “feet” at the ends of strokes (e.g., Times New Roman, Garamond). Often used for body text.
- Sans-serif: no serifs; clean, plain stroke endings and generally more uniform stroke width (e.g., Arial, Helvetica).
- Script: looks like handwriting or calligraphy; letters may be connected and have flowing, cursive shapes and flourishes.
- Decorative (display): unusual or ornamental letterforms designed for headlines/logo use (highly stylized, not intended for long text).
If you describe what you see (are there little feet? are letters joined? very stylized?), or upload the image, I’ll identify the classification.
- Serif: letters have small strokes or “feet” at the ends of strokes (e.g., Times New Roman, Garamond). Often used for body text.
- Sans-serif: no serifs; clean, plain stroke endings and generally more uniform stroke width (e.g., Arial, Helvetica).
- Script: looks like handwriting or calligraphy; letters may be connected and have flowing, cursive shapes and flourishes.
- Decorative (display): unusual or ornamental letterforms designed for headlines/logo use (highly stylized, not intended for long text).
If you describe what you see (are there little feet? are letters joined? very stylized?), or upload the image, I’ll identify the classification.
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