+<a name="icon_backgrounds">
+<h2>Icon Selection Backgrounds</h2>
+</a>
+
+<p>rEFInd identifies the current selection by displaying a partially-transparent icon "between" the OS or tool icon and the background image. The default icon works reasonably well on both solid and image backgrounds, but if you like, you can customize it by creating new icons in PNG or in Microsoft's <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMP_file_format">BMP format.</a> You should create both 144x144 and 64x64 images and tell rEFInd about them by using the <tt>selection_big</tt> and <tt>selection_small</tt> tokens, respectively, in <tt>refind.conf</tt>. (If you scale your icons, you may want to adjust the selection tile images appropriately. The big image is 9/8 the size of its matching icons, while the small tile is 4/3 the size of its icons.) If you omit the large icon, rEFInd will stretch the small icon to fit the larger space; if you omit the small icon, rEFInd will use the default small icon. Because BMP doesn't support transparency (alpha channels), you must use the PNG format if you want your selection background to show the underlying image beneath it. (You can create the illusion of transparency on a solid background by matching the colors, though.)</p>
+
+<a name="fonts">
+<h2>Fonts</h2>
+</a>
+
+<p>rEFInd's default font is a 14-point (12-point in 0.6.5 and earlier) serif monospaced font. I also include a handful of alternatives in the <tt>fonts</tt> subdirectory. rEFInd's font support is extremely rudimentary, though; it reads a PNG file that holds the glyphs from ASCII 32 (space) through ASCII 126 (tilde, <tt>~</tt>), plus a glyph that's displayed for all characters outside of this range. Thus, rEFInd can't currently display non-ASCII characters or use proportional (variable-width) fonts. You can change the font from one monospaced font to another and change the font size, though.</p>
+
+<p>If you want to create your own fonts, you can do so. If you're using Linux, the <tt>mkfont.sh</tt> script in the <tt>fonts</tt> subdirectory will convert an installed <i>monospace</i> font into a suitable format. (This script works properly for most fonts, but if a font is unusually thin or wide, you will have to adjust the <tt>let CellWidth=</tt> line near the end of the file.) You can use it like this:</p>
+
+<pre class="listing">
+$ <tt class="userinput">./mkfont.sh Liberation-Mono-Italic 14 -1 liberation-mono-italic-14.png</tt>
+</pre>
+
+<p>The result is a PNG file, <tt>liberation-mono-italic-14.png</tt>, that you can copy to your rEFInd directory and load with the <tt>font</tt> token in <tt>refind.conf</tt>, as in:</p>
+
+<pre class="listing">font liberation-mono-italic-14.png</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>mkfont.sh</tt> script takes four arguments:</p>
+
+<ul>
+
+<li><b>The font name</b>—Type <tt class="userinput">convert -list font | less</tt> to obtain a list of fonts available on your computer. Note, however, that rEFInd requires <i>monospaced</i> (fixed-width) fonts, and most of the fonts installed on most computers are variable-width.</li>
+
+<li><b>The font size in points</b></li>
+
+<li><b>A y offset</b>—Many fonts require an adjustment up (negative values), or occasionally down (positive values) to fit in the PNG image area. You'll have to use trial and error to get this to work.</li>