News | National
4 Dec 2025 11:50
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    It’s not you – some typefaces feel different

    The different personalities of typefaces and how it affects our psychology.

    Andrea Piovesan, Lecturer in Psychology, Edge Hill University
    The Conversation


    Have you ever thought a font looked “friendly” or “elegant”? Or felt that Comic Sans was somehow unserious? You’re not imagining it.

    Typefaces carry personalities, and we react to them more than we realise. My work explores how the shapes of letters can subtly influence our feelings.

    When we read, we are not just processing the words. We are also taking in the typeface, which can shape how we interpret a message and even what we think of the person who wrote it.

    Researchers demonstrated this in a 2018 study using simulated text conversations. They presented participants with an ambiguous message (for example, “That’s what I do”) and altered the typeface. A cheerful-looking font seemed to encourage readers to interpret the message positively, while a harsher one pushed them toward a more negative reading.

    A similar pattern appears in email communication. In a 2014 study, the same email sent in Times New Roman made the sender seem formal and professional, whereas the more playful Kristen ITC made them appear more polite and even more attractive. Just as a voice sets the mood of a conversation, a typeface sets the mood of the page.

    Research also shows that we process words more quickly when the typeface matches the meaning we expect. In one experiment, published in 1989, people recognised the word “slow” more quickly when it appeared in Cooper Black, a typeface associated with heaviness and slowness, but took longer when the same word was shown in Palatino Italic, which conveys lightness and speed.

    A 2021 study found a similar priming effect in brand logos. After seeing a logo set in a particular typeface, participants were quicker to identify words that matched the qualities suggested by that design. When the style of the lettering aligns with the message, our brains seem to work more efficiently.

    But how is that possible?

    The answer is a mix of factors. Some qualities are built into the physical features of the typeface. Thick, straight lines signal sturdiness, while curves tend to feel softer or more approachable. Some associations may even have evolutionary roots.

    Across a range of studies, people reliably link curved shapes with positivity and angular ones with threat or negativity. A 2016 review of this research traces the pattern back to survival mechanisms.

    Sharp, angular forms in the environment can indicate danger, so our visual system has evolved to detect and prioritise them quickly. This bias appears to spill over into our perception of typefaces too, making angular fonts feel harsher or more alarming, while curved ones seem warmer and more pleasant.

    Arms coming out of old computer monitor and hands typing on keyboard.
    Some fonts just feel ‘strong’. Roman Samborskyi/Shutterstock

    Other typeface personalities have been shaped by history and use. Take Times New Roman, originally designed in the 1930s for the British newspaper the Times. Over time, its connection with journalism has become ingrained, making Times New Roman synonymous with professionalism and formality today.

    The influence of typefaces becomes even clearer when the wrong choice is made. An example comes from the European organisation for nuclear research, Cern, in 2012 when researchers used Comic Sans to announce the discovery of the Higgs boson (also called the “God particle”).

    The decision sparked widespread criticism because Comic Sans is widely seen as playful and informal, hardly befitting one of the most important scientific discoveries of our time.

    People who work in design, communication and marketing know this phenomenon well and use it deliberately. Think about the last time you bought a product you couldn’t see inside the box. What persuaded you if the product itself wasn’t visible? Most likely the packaging.

    Designers choose typefaces as well as images that communicate the qualities they think you’re looking for.

    If you’re searching for screws for a DIY project, you’re more likely to trust packaging set in bold, heavy lettering that signals strength and sturdiness. If you’re choosing a perfume as a gift, a delicate, flourished typeface might suggest elegance and femininity before you’ve even smelled it.

    In one 2006 study, people were shown a range of fonts and asked where they would feel appropriate.

    Serif typefaces such as Times New Roman and Cambria, which are recognisable by the small finishing strokes at the ends of their letters, were judged most suitable for business documents. Monospaced fonts like Courier New, in which every character takes up the same amount of space, were seen as better suited to technical materials and computer code.

    This very article is set in Baskerville, and that’s no accident. Baskerville, like Goudy Old Style and other classic typefaces, tends to be seen as professional, trustworthy and high-quality. Those are the qualities The Conversation aims to convey to its readers. The same principle applies to any professionally designed website. Every typeface has been chosen to create the right impression.

    Typefaces can also shape our experience of music. An album cover with rounded letters, for example, can make the music feel more pleasant. Designers also match typefaces to the genre: curvy, playful fonts appear on hippy music covers, conveying joy and peace, while sharp, angular lettering is common on punk albums, signalling anger and aggression.

    Sometimes we don’t know exactly why a font feels a certain way. In a 2023 article, I reviewed studies from the past century that asked people to rate how they perceived different typefaces.

    This large collection of data revealed some surprising patterns. For example, condensed typefaces, which have letters packed closely together, tend to convey a sense of sadness more than other fonts.

    Thick lines reliably signalled strength, but the opposite was not true: thin lines were not consistently judged as weak. Instead, perceptions of weakness were more strongly associated with irregular strokes and high contrast, features common in typefaces that resemble handwriting. Why do they do that? I am afraid I don’t have an answer.

    Next time you pick up a book, scroll through a website or glance at a label, take a moment to notice the font. Those subtle lines and curves are doing more than you might think, shaping your experience in subtle ways.

    The Conversation

    Andrea Piovesan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     04 Dec: A High Court jury has found a 35-year-old man guilty of murdering Dunedin man, Gurjit Singh
     04 Dec: One person's died after truck crashed into a car dealership on Lower Hutt's Rutherford Street about 5.30am
     04 Dec: Invercargill Police are probing a suspected arson that's destroyed four Treetech vehicles
     04 Dec: Spotify Wrapped ghosted NZ music again. Local artists and audiences deserve more
     04 Dec: Longtime sex offender Johnathan Tamihana will now be behind bars indefinitely - following two separate attacks at a South Auckland reserve
     04 Dec: A push for stronger protections for dairy workers, amid a rise in violent youth crime in Christchurch
     03 Dec: State Highway 1 near Waimate in South Canterbury has reopened after a crash this afternoon
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    A balancing act for the All Blacks to avoid being underdone come crunch time at the 2027 Rugby World Cup More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Fonterra is getting closer to selling off its consumer brands like Anchor and Mainland More...



     Today's News

    Law and Order:
    A High Court jury has found a 35-year-old man guilty of murdering Dunedin man, Gurjit Singh  11:37

    Environment:
    Six people arrested on suspicion of deactivating fire alarms at Hong Kong fire apartment complex 11:37

    Entertainment:
    Kim Kardashian wanted to "taunt" the people behind her 2016 Paris robbery 11:36

    International:
    New images of Jeffrey Epstein's island released as Ghislaine Maxwell flags bid for freedom 11:17

    International:
    China halts Japanese cultural events after tensions rise over Taiwan remarks 11:17

    Entertainment:
    Jackson Browne's son has died 11:06

    Business:
    Fonterra is getting closer to selling off its consumer brands like Anchor and Mainland 10:47

    Entertainment:
    The Duffer Brothers didn't want to kill off Stranger Things characters for the sake of fans' "bloodlust" 10:36

    Wellington:
    One person's died after truck crashed into a car dealership on Lower Hutt's Rutherford Street about 5.30am 10:27

    Law and Order:
    Invercargill Police are probing a suspected arson that's destroyed four Treetech vehicles 10:27


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd