Friday, October 12, 2012

Team Helvetica


I will admit I do have a bit of an obsession when it comes to fonts. Not in that I love them all or use many of them, but in the sense that I am very particular about which ones I use and what they can bring to a project or even take away. Helvetica is one of the fonts I used most often and have grown to admire over the years. I believe for me it started back in high school when I worked on the yearbook staff. For the first time I was really exposed to the world of graphic design and started thinking about typography.

It doesn’t get much better than Helvetica. I love clean lines and for things to be perfectly organized, and Helvetica does that for me. For example, the thin sleek simplicity of Helvetica light is an amazing achievement in my opinion. It evokes a feeling of class and style. It’s chic.

As Michael Bierut stated in the film, Helvetica, it is much more than just a font. Helvetica is a vehicle for saying what you want to and getting the message across to people. It’s nothing more and nothing less, it doesn’t get in the way and it’s isn’t messy; it’s just your message.

But even with my appreciation for typography and fonts, their origins aren’t something I’ve ever really thought to consider. Of course I can recognize many of them in various designs, commercials, advertisements, etc. As the young graphic designer, Tobias Frere-Jones talked about in the film, once you begin working with typography and it’s something you understand and are aware of, it can begin to take over your life in a way. For instance, his example of how he remembered one specific restaurant was because it was located near the drycleaner with the horrible font on their sign. It’s things like that which you become more aware of and stick out in your mind when you work with typography.

But why all these fonts were created in the first place and how they have been used historically hasn’t ever crossed my mind. If find it very interesting that Helvetica is 55 years old, that’s older than my parents! I suppose I never realized what the production process of things like ads and magazines was like before computers and modern printers. The film Helvetica really opened my eyes to how old the fields of graphic design and advertising are and where my future career actually originated.

Helvetica was created in 1957 and developed by Max Miedinger and Eduard Hoffman in Switzerland. Never in a million years would I have guessed that Helvetica’s first name was Neue Haas Grotesk, or that it was later named after the Latin word for Switzerland “Helvetia.”

But I definitely have come to agree with designers like Massimo Vignelli and his take on Helvetica. It’s something iconic, yet simple, it changed the world of advertising and graphic design. It’s something that yes, may be over used but that’s only because Helvetica is such an amazing font!

So yes, you can count me in! I am pro-Helvetica and all that this unique and modern font has to offer to those typography nuts like me!

1 comment:

  1. You're a good writer Tyler. I've enjoyed reading all your posts. And I'm pleased to see that you have a love of fonts as well. Keep up the good work.

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