Hopefully, with the current article we’ll be able to help, not only graphic designers and publishers out there but other professionals, too. So if you are creating content, which is going to be presented to a Chinese audience and you have never done that before, you will certainly end up in a situation where you don’t have a clue which font to use. With Chinese this is even more so due to the fact that there are two written forms of the language. We know that the choice of fonts matters a lot when presenting information to a certain audience. We wanted to summarize the basic information about the Chinese scripts but with a little twist.
This article comes as a continuation of our previous insight on Chinese fonts we published a while ago. Our aim is to actually make things simple, clear, and useful for you.
Okay, maybe *quite* complicated is the right way to describe it but we do not intend to explain that in the current article. But when it comes to Chinese things are a bit more complicated. Most of us living in the West are used to the concept of 1 country=1 language=1 alphabet.