A bunch of demos for different web font loading strategies. Some of these are included on A Comprehensive Guide to Font Loading Strategies, some of them are more experimental.
Demos are hosted at https://www.zachleat.com/web-fonts/demos/
As web fonts are a progressive enhancement and with increasing support for the CSS Font Loading API, we can look forward to a time in which we won’t need to inline a polyfill into the header (for even faster font loading). The simplified CSS Font Loading API recipes are the defaults, but polyfilled versions are included for broader browser support—notably only the polyfilled versions will show web fonts in Internet Explorer and Edge web browsers (which do not have support for the CSS Font Loading API).
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo** (4 web fonts)
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo** (4 web fonts—1 preloaded)
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo (4 web fonts)
- or using a polyfill—Demo (4 web fonts)
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo (5 web fonts, two are the same—but only loaded once)
- or using a polyfill—Demo (4 web fonts)
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo (5 web fonts—1 subset)
- or using a polyfill—Demo (5 web fonts—1 subset)
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo (5 web fonts—1 subset inline Data URI)
- or using a polyfill—Demo (5 web fonts—1 subset inline Data URI)
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo (5 web fonts—1 subset)
- or using a polyfill—Demo (5 web fonts—1 subset)
“The Compromise”: Critical FOFT with preload
, with a polyfill fallback emulating font-display: optional
- Code
- TODO Documentation
- Builds on the eBay method described in the experiments below.
- Demo (5 web fonts—1 subset) (polyfill is lazy loaded when CSS Font Loading API is not supported)
- Currently in use on zachleat.com and smashingmagazine.com
You’ll probably see blog posts on these at some point.
- Metric compatible web fonts
- Show how fonts can look without FOUT reflow if they are metric compatible.
- FOUT metric matching with a Variable Font
- Reduction in FOUT reflow (reduce text movement on web font render)
- Related: Font style matcher from @notwaldorf
- Emulate
font-display: optional
with JS (the eBay method)- Notable in that it lazy loads the font loading polyfill only if the CSS Font Loading API is not supported
- FOUT without a class
.style.fontFamily
method (only works well with one family per page), first saw this in a tweet from @simevidas- CSS Font Loading API
.add()
method: Doesn’t require any modification of the CSS, injects the web fonts using JS programmatically (the Asynchronous Data URI method below also does this). Documented in the Webfont Handbook from @bramstein.
- System fonts
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo (0 web fonts)
- Unceremonious Web Fonts
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo** (4 web fonts)
- Unceremonious Faux Web Fonts
- Code
- Demo** (1 web font): Bold and italic variants are rendered using font-synthesis
- Unceremonious Web Fonts, WOFF2 Only (Cutting the Mustard)
- Code
- Old browsers used to render FOIT without a timeout, which in practice made web fonts a single point of failure. Using WOFF2 only cuts the mustard to modern browsers that have a three second FOIT timeout for web fonts. Three seconds is still way too long for me to implement this in production, but it’s worth noting.
- Demo** (4 web fonts)
- Inline Data URI
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo (4 web fonts)
- Asynchronous Data URI
- Code
- Documentation
- Demo (4 web fonts)
- Anything that injects a new
<style>
with@font-face
blocks inside. Really bad repaint cost—seriously, don’t do this.
- Asynchronous CSS
- This is a common thing people try. Heck, this is what I used to do on nebraskajs.com. Read more at Lazy Loading Web Fonts is Probably Not What You Want
- Failed: lazy loading the CSS only delays the start of the FOIT. Does nothing to prevent it.
- Code
- Demo (4 web fonts)
@supports
andfont-display
** Take note that these methods will FOUT in Internet Explorer and Edge by taking advantage of their default font loading behavior.