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Helvetica
Homage to a Typeface
Lars Müller
Lars Müller Publishers, Zürich 2001, 128 pages, 400 illustrations, hardcover, 12,5 x 16,5 cm , ISBN 9783907044872
euro 40,00
email if you want to buy [email protected]
In 1957, Swiss typographer Max Miedinger came up with “Haas Grotesk”. Renamed Helvetica after 1960, this typeface went on to become one of the world’s most used typefaces ever. It embodies the myth of Sachlichkeit, propagated at the time by Swiss Typography. This book sings the praises of this shift-worker and solo entertainer of typefaces, of its forgotten creator and all those who have contributed to its unparalleled international march of triumph over the past forty years. The designs gathered together here in honour of Helvetica have been created by superb designers and anonymous amateurs from all over the world. They present a unique panoply of this icon of modern design. Superb applications are juxtaposed with an anonymous collection of ugly, ingenious, charming, and hair-raising samples of its use. Helvetica is not only the preferred typeface of leading professionals, it is also an all-time favourite among the multitude of codes and signals and commands that enliven urban life.
25/05/23
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Mordenist Typeface Foundary, 'Die Neue Haas Grotesk' and 'Helvetica'
HELVETICA GOES HOLLYWOOD POSTER
Photography: Gary Hustwit Helvetica Film
Typography Tuesday
What do these five publications in the top image have in common? Well, yes, they are all indeed artists’ books, but they also are all printed in Helvetica type.
Helvetica?!! You mean that dull and anonymous traffic-sign typeface?
No. Helvetica, that timeless, upright, round and open san-serif face of eminent readability.
Helvetica was the brain-child of Eduard Hoffmann, head of the Haas Type Foundry near Basel, who envisioned a new Swiss design based on the 1890 (re-cut by Haas in 1900) Schelter & Giesecke Grotesk, the official Bauhaus typeface, and entrusted the design to Max Miedinger, an expert on Grotesk typefaces. After much input from Hoffmann, the type was cut and cast, and first appeared as Neue Haas Grotesk in 1957, and renamed Helvetica in 1960 by the Stempel Type Foundry. The rest, as they say, is history.
The out-sized cultural impact of this much-heralded and much-maligned typeface is exquisitely expressed in what is perhaps our favorite documentary on typography, Gary Hustwit’s Helvetica (2007). In it, graphic designer Michael Bierut -- in what may be the most expressive part of the movie, if not the funniest -- describes what it must have been like when Helvetica first appeared on the scene:
It just must have felt like you were scraping the crud off of, like, filthy old things and restoring them to shining beauty . . . . Can you imagine how bracing and thrilling that was? That must have seemed like you’d crawled through a desert with your mouth just caked with filthy dust and then someone is offering you a clear, refreshing, distilled, icy glass of water to clear away all this horrible, kind of like, burden of history.
Bierut goes on to give examples, first showing magazine ads from the early 1950s displaying “every single visual bad habit that was endemic in those days. . . . zany hand-lettering everywhere, swash typography to signify elegance, exclamation points, exclamation points, exclamation points.” Then he shows a Coke ad when “Helvetica was in full swing”:
No people, no smiling fakery, just a beautiful, big glass of ice-cold Coke. The slogan underneath: It’s the Real Thing. Period. Coke. Period. In Helvetica. Period. Any questions? Of course not. Drink Coke. Period. Simple.
View a short clip of Bierut’s “Coke” example, or watch the full, hilarious 4-minutes of his take on the Helvetica transition.
Shown here, from the top:
Ian Tyson. Seven Motes of Zen Dust. San Diego, California: Brighton Press, 2015. Edition of 40 signed copies, with the text was set in Helvetica Neue, reworked for Sempel in 1983.
Claire Van Vliet and Margaret Kaufman. Aunt Sallie's Lament. West Burke, Vermont: Janus Press, 1988. Edition of 150 copies.
Mark Strand. Prose: Four Poems. Portland, Oregon: Charles Seluzicki; Sweden, Maine: Ives Street Press, 1987. 187 copies printed by Barbara Cash, with the text is set in Monotype Univers by Mackenzie-Harris (an Helvetica redesign by Adrian Frutiger), with titles handset in Stempel Helvetica.
Ricardo Bloch and Kevin Kling. The Incredible Servant and the Master of the Unknown. Minneapolis: R. Bloch, 1991. Edition of 2000, set in Helvetica Narrow.
Jenna Rodriguez. Overheard. Chicago: Jenna Rodriguez, 2013. Printed in Helvetica CY.
Creative Type: A Sourcebook of Classic and Contemporary Letterforms. London: Thames & Hudson, 2005. With type designer Günter Gerhard Lange’s entry on Helvetica.
BTW, this entire post was written in -- you guessed it -- HELVETICA!!
View our other Typography Tuesday posts.
Max Miedinger
Max Miedinger was a Swiss typeface designer. In 1957, he designed the “Neue Haas Grotesk”, later renamed to Helvetica. The typeface became an imediate worldwide success. Miedinger later also invented more typefaces inspired by Helvetica.
Typographie 03
Prints available here
Helvetica (1957) – Max Miedinger