While lawyers write a lot of documents, they don’t often consider the style of font of the characters (letters and numbers) used to produce the document. Yet fonts (and other typography matters) are important. No lawyer would consider using the same type of script font that may be found on a wedding invitation in an appellate brief, and that’s a good thing. Yet most lawyers don’t ever consider that there are alternatives to the Time New Roman font that may be the default font in your word processing program. They should. I consider Time New Roman to be boring because by using it your document is going to look like almost every other legal document in existence. In his book, “Typography for Lawyers,” Matthew Butterick’s…