A separating line is a line separating two different colors, colors, or images on the same page. It is depicted despite the fact that often for the same purposes a border outline is used, which serves only to frame the image externally and does not limit it, but in the case of a stripe there is no such frame and there is a color limitation. Used to visually divide space on a page. Typically used in conjunction with general headings and subheadings. Stripes are used in books, newspapers, magazines, advertising brochures, brochures, guidebooks, calendars and many other printed publications. In addition, they can be not only horizontal, but also vertical, and even inclined: horizontal stripes divide the pages horizontally; vertical - vertically; and slanted ones divide a horizontally designed page (for example, in a book) into separate blocks. Small in size located both under the title and next to it. An inclined stripe can also serve to separate vertical blocks of text. Occasionally, a strip is created without boundaries - only with the help of lines. In this case, invisible boundaries are used. To test the differences between a stripe and an outline, a special typeface, Corbel, was developed. It consists of fonts with one characteristic outline feature: either all the serifs are what would be expected in this font, none extend beyond the letter.