So
far I have discussed Black Letter, Old Style, Transitional and Modern
typefaces.
Here’s
a quick breakdown:
Black Letter: the first typeface – its
paradigm was the scrolls of medieval scribes. It has thick vertical lines and
thin horizontal connectors. Today we regard this kind of typeface as good for
headlines, but not for body text.
Old Style: letters with thick serifs
and low contrast between thick and thin strokes. These first roman types
arrived in the fifteenth century as an alternative to Black Letter and were an
instant hit for readability.
Transitional: letters with thinner
serifs and a higher contrast between thick and thin strokes. Popular in Europe
and the U.S., these are still used today.
Modern: the styles of these typefaces
include very thin serifs and extreme contrast between thick and thin strokes.
Like the others mentioned above, these are still in use and in fact currently
popular with designers for marketing pieces.
HOWEVER…all
these typefaces did have one thing in common: Serifs.
William
Caslon’s great grandson, William Caslon IV, decided change was in order. He
designed a typeface without serifs. This new kind of typeface is now known as
sans serif. It took a while to catch on
but as we all know, sans serif fonts are now extremely popular. One of their
first uses was in billboard advertising where letters had to be wide and tall,
and sans serifs were a good fit for this. As well, they are a good contrast to
serif types, with many documents today containing a mix of two or more
different typefaces for effect.
Could you read a page of this? |
After
this innovation, many would-be typographers got in on the act and a slew of new
sans serif faces appeared, some of them completely illegible due to being too
chunky or abstract.
However, we also have this period to thank for some timeless new typefaces, both serif and sans serif. For instance, slab serifs – also known as Egyptian because of the thick, block-like serifs that simulate those seen on hieroglyphics – are huge today and we see variations of them on TV, in books, in advertising and on business pieces. They make catchy headings that stand out in aesthetically pleasing ways. Rockwell is an example of a slab serif.
Later
still came another artistic creation in the design of typeface, the geometric
sans. Futura, designed by Paul Renner, has a foundation of geometric
principles: squares and circles.
Gill
Sans, by Eric Gill, is similar but not as stark – with its softer curves it
became known as humanist sans.
More
recently still – fifty years ago – the sans serif Helvetica was developed by
Max Miedinger and Eduard Hoffmann to fulfill a need for a typeface that could
be used for various purposes and in various weights.
Helvetica has many fonts, from bold to light, from Black to condensed; it is extremely versatile, because with just one type family a designer still can create an eye-catching document using various fonts for headers, tables, etc.
Trivia Break:
Helvetica
is one of the most global typefaces in the sans serif style. Even Japanese,
Hebrew, Greek, Chinese and other non-Western alphabets have a version of
Helvetica for use in their own languages.
Today
The
advent of computers meant easier typeface design, at least after the early problem
years were behind us (when early screens with their obvious and clumsy-looking pixels
hindered such development). Now there are thousands of new typefaces that are
easy to buy and download.
We
no longer need to consider issues of the old printing press days, such as
fitting a last spare line onto a full page, for we can now kern and track our
letters, reduce a type size or the leading and so on. We can choose typefaces that
fit different functions. Life in the printing, marketing and design worlds has never
been easier.
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