It might be best if you explained what you expected to achieve by declaring the font. Using a font weight like 300 makes sense only if you expect the font family to contain, in the computers of your visitors, a typeface with weight 300, or with some other weight smaller than normal (400). I wonder why you would use serif as a fallback for a font that is a sans-serif font even by its name, or why you would use a very large line height for it. Trying different spellings, like Akzidenz Grotesk, might have an impact. Repeating the same name, or writing it first with and then without quotation marks, does not help. Besides, font names are protected as trade marks only as far as commercial distribution is considered, so there might be free fonts under a name like “Akzident Grotesk” that have no resemblance to the font you have in your mind. Originally named Accidenz-Grotesk the design originates from Royal Grotesk light by royal type-cutter. However, most computers in the world have no such font. Berthold first published Akzidenz-Grotesk in 1898. These values can be determined using the DTL OTMaster Light program, provided of course that you have font available in your computer. They can be found in the name table of the font as corresponding to nameID values 4 or 6. The name to be used in the font-family value is either the full name of the font or the PostScript name.
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