1.1.1 • Published 3 years ago

invisible-ink v1.1.1

Weekly downloads
60
License
CC0-1.0
Repository
github
Last release
3 years ago

Invisible Ink

Gradually loading web fonts.

Application

Create fallback web fonts to protect contents from jumping during initial page load.

The idea is that text rendered using placeholder fonts remains hidden while taking up exactly the same amount of space as when the original web font is used, so once it finishes loading and the text gets rendered with a new font, not a single pixel gets shifted.

This is a purely HTML+CSS approach to combating FOUT.

See for yourself!

Within the example directory you’ll find a basic demo. Don’t open index.html directly, but rather run make demo and then open http://localhost:5703.

npm.io]

How to install on your system

npm i -g invisible-ink

How to use in your project

  1. invisible-ink My-Font-Name.ttf > output.css
  2. Change all
    font-family: "My Font Name", …;
    in your code to
    font-family: "My Font Name", "My Font Name Placeholder", …;
  3. Add this CSS rule:
    #invisible-ink {
        font-family: "My Font Name Placeholder";
    }
    and this HTML code:
    <span id="invisible-ink"></span>
    to your page.
  4. Prepend contents of output.css to your project’s CSS codebase.
  5. Get rid of output.css …you filthy animal

Motivation

Web fonts get loaded asynchronously. The good news is that it doesn’t block the rest of the page from being loaded (unlike JavaScript). The bad news is that there’s always a chance that the CDN where your favorite font lives is just not as fast as you’d like it to be, and the font available on your system will take up different amount of space than the specified web font, when it loads.

Future of this project

This’s more of a proof of concept than a final piece of software. In an ideal world there should be a Webpack plug-in to do all this automatically.

Credits

Sample font “Alex Brush” used for the demo was designed by Robert E. Leuschke.

All photos shown on the demo’s pages were obtained from Pexels and are in the public domain along with the text by H.P. Lovecraft.

License