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Visibility Chart
Even if your letters are visible to you, if they
can't be read by your intended audience they have little value. Letters that
are too small to read are common. Some things to keep in mind:
Finish & Color Contrast: Letters that blend in with their
background become illegible at moderate distances. This applies to letters that
may reflect a similar color as the sign background, or dark letters that may
blend into a building brick or stone. Also, shiny letters will obviously
contrast more with a dull background. The amount and type of lighting, both
artificial and natural, is also important to overall legibility.
Negative Space: Simply enlarging letters does not always make them
more readable. Proper letter spacing and spacing between lines of text have
almost as much to do with legibility as size. Maintaining a certain degree of
"white space" is important to keep the letters from running together or running
into other distractions around the sign.
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Viewing Distance
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Minimum Required
Letter Height
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100 feet
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4"Letters
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250 feet
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10"Letters
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360 feet
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16"Letters
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500 feet
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22"Letters
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750 feet
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33"Letters
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1000 feet
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43"Letters
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1320 feet
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57"Letters
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This letter visibility
chart has been made for you based upon information provided
by Pennsylvania Transportation Institute, Penn State University
and the United States Sign Council (USSC). c1998
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