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Cream typography page explaining ligatures, with black active glyphs sitting inside a field of ghosted grey driver and team names in F1 Regular.
Summary
A type-specimen page for ligatures in F1 Regular: a block of explanatory copy at far left and a large lower field of driver and team names where the joined ligature pairs are picked out in black against ghosted grey letters.
Visual description
Cream (#F4F0E8) ground with the "Visual Identity / Typography" running header and rounded corner bracket; "Ligatures" sits centre with the sub-label "F1 Regular" beneath it and page "100" top-right. A narrow left column carries three short paragraphs of small black body copy defining ligatures and the 'metrics' setting. The lower two-thirds is filled with oversized words in F1 Regular ("MERCEDES", "VERSTAPPEN", "GRAND", "Mercedes", "Ferrari", "Bottas", "Section", "Vettel") that bleed off the right edge; most letters are a light grey while the connecting ligature pairs (ER, ST, ND, es, ct, ra, tta, ti) are rendered in solid black to highlight where glyphs join.
Key takeaway
Demonstrating an invisible type feature by colour-coding it: keep the full words ghosted grey and flip only the affected glyph pairs to black, so the reader instantly sees where ligatures occur without any callouts or arrows.
Reuse notes
A clean way to document type behaviour (ligatures, alternates, kerning) in a specimen. Using real brand-relevant words instead of lorem makes the page feel owned. The two-tone glyph trick is reusable for any "highlight the change" typographic explanation.
From this deck: Ligatures in F1 Regular
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