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
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 definefont-weight:normal;
andfont-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');
}
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...
-
4Note 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.– HenrikNov 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).– teewuaneJun 21, 2017 at 22:21