You know you’re getting closer to the warm, wet depths of the internet when the signs begin to wobble. When Instagram starts displaying text that looks like it’s been italicized, turned upside down or even written backwards. When a platform’s clean, proprietary font starts looking slanted, with curled edges; or thicker, with a stalkier base. If you’re drifting towards its peripheries, the diacritics will be the first signs. There, you’ll find the non-Latin alphabets, where Cyrillic, Japanese or Polish come into greater prominence, one character at a time. Meme pages, fan accounts, smut posters, and aesthetic bloggers are some of the primary agents of this kind of typographic chaos. They carry the torch of a once-ubiquitous internet trend – the use of font hacks – by continuing to make their profiles cuter, sparklier, spookier or otherwise more customized despite (and increasingly, in pursuit of) the wobbly results.
|