In the window that opens, set Override the colors specified by the page with my selections above to Always.Some websites have custom font colors, to disable them: Select the color you want by clicking one of the colored rectangles. Clicking on any of the colored rectangles will show you the possible colors you can choose from.Under Fonts and Colors, click the Colors… button.Text Encoding for Legacy Content: The text encoding selected here will be used to display pages that don't specify which encoding to use.This is useful to prevent sites from using overly small fonts that are barely readable. You can also set the minimum web page font size.
You can also change the size for Monospace fonts. Specify the font to use for Serif, Sans-serif and Monospace fonts.Then specify the font size you want for proportional text. Select whether proportional text should be serif (like "Times New Roman") or sans-serif (like "Arial").For a language/script not in the list, choose Other Writing Systems. For instance, to set default fonts for the West European languages/scripts (Latin), choose Latin.From the Fonts for drop-down list in the Fonts dialog, choose a language group/script.In the Fonts dialog that opens, uncheck Allow pages to choose their own fonts, instead of your selections above.Under Fonts and Colors, click the Advanced… button.Some websites have custom fonts to disable them: Any changes you've made will automatically be saved. Under Fonts and Colors, use the drop-down menus to select the font and font size of your choice.In the General panel, go down to Language and Appearance.Click the menu button and select Settings. Click the menu button and select Options Preferences. This post has been updated to reflect this.In the Menu bar at the top of the screen, click Firefox and select Preferences.
Update 12:45pm : Noah Nathan’s site showcasing the new font has been taken offline, although examples of it can still be seen at It’s Nice That. But from where I’m sitting, maybe Netflix could have invested a few more of those saved millions into a better font. Then again, I’m not a typography expert or graphic designer, so maybe I’m completely wrong and this is a typographic masterpiece the likes of which we’ve never seen before. Some of the sample cards look better than others, but images like this House of Cards example, for instance, just looks really boring.
not great? There are a bunch of design notes about the logic that went into the font over at It’s Nice That ( Nathan’s site showcasing the font is currently offline) emphasizing the focus on “cinematic” uppercase letters and curves that borrow from the existing Netflix logo, but mostly it just looks like a knock-off Helvetica. Netflix Sans is poised to save the company “millions of dollars a year.”Īs for the font itself, Netflix Sans looks. Netflix has previously used Gotham for its branding efforts, but Netflix brand design lead Noah Nathan explained in an interview with It’s Nice That that the company chose to create its own font for two reasons: to give Netflix its own unique identity (technically, anyone willing to pay a licensing fee can use Gotham), and because licensing Gotham for all of Netflix’s international marketing campaigns was getting expensive. That brings Netflix into a shockingly large league of big technology companies with their own custom fonts, alongside Apple ( San Francisco), Samsung ( SamsungOne), Google ( Roboto and Product Sans, because naturally Google has font fragmentation), and Microsoft (sort of, depending on how you score Segoe). Netflix will be using it for branding and marketing purposes going forward. The font was created by the company’s in-house design team with type foundry Dalton Maag. Actually, no one has said that, but that won’t stop Netflix from unveiling Netflix Sans, its own custom typeface ( via It’s Nice That). It’s been said that a tech company hasn’t made it big until it has its own bespoke font.