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There doesn't appear to be any difference between 'font-weight: normal' and 'font-weight: bold' in Google Chrome (and probably Safari). Has anyone found a way to invoke the 'font-weight: thinner' in Chrome the way that Firefox does?

3 Answers 3

4

This appears to be a known issue in Chrome fixed in latest development builds:

There is a temporary workaround you can also try:

To enable the font-weight property on a @font-face font which doesn't have a bold font defined, you need to explicitly define font-weight:normal; and font-style:normal; in the @font-face definition. Example:

@font-face {
    font-family: 'GriffosFont Regular';
    font-weight: normal;
    font-style: normal;
    src: url('fonts/GriffosFont.eot');
    src: local('GriffosFont Regular'), local('GriffosFont'), url('fonts/GriffosFont.woff') format('woff'), url('fonts/GriffosFont.\
ttf') format('truetype'), url('fonts/GriffosFont.svg#GriffosFont') format('svg');
}
0
4

Maybe you need to add this to your CSS:

* {-webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;}
-2

font-weight: lighter; was not working for me so I used font-weight: normal; instead, which worked for my purpose. not sure what's going on with chrome right now...

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  • 4
    Note that font-weight: lighter makes the font «one step» lighter, so an element that inherits bold would then be rendered with normal font-weight instead. If you have a specific font-weight in mind, it is better to specify it directly. font-weight: 200 will yield a light font.
    – Henrik
    Nov 1, 2013 at 16:51
  • I agree. For what it is worth, at the time of this post, font-weight: lighter; was not working in chrome. I could dig through my commits to find the exact version of chrome that had the bug and I'm sure it has been fixed by now (five years later).
    – teewuane
    Jun 21, 2017 at 22:21

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