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Haettenschweiler

Grotesque sans-serif typeface


Summary

Grotesque sans-serif typeface

FieldValue
nameHaettenschweiler
imageHaettenschweiler specimen (1).svg
styleSans-serif
classificationsGrotesque
creatorWalter Haettenschweiler
Robert Norton (?)
foundryMicrosoft
creationdate1954

Robert Norton (?) Haettenschweiler is a sans-serif typeface in the grotesque style that is very bold and condensed. It is intended for headlines and display text.

Schmalfette Grotesk

Versions of the font that are now commonly used are descended from an upper-case only design called Schmalfette Grotesk (German for bold condensed sans-serif) by Walter Haettenschweiler that was published in 1954.

Schmalfette was published in the book Lettera (1954) which Haettenschweiler had written with Armin Haab. The Lettera series collected lettering designs (mostly hand-painted) and original designs, and was often used by designers as a source of inspiration.

An early reuse of the design was in the German young peoples' magazine Twen. Microsoft's history of the font, possibly written by Robert Norton (see below) notes that after Lettera 4 was published the design 'was immediately picked up by designers at Paris Match who cut up pictures of it to make headlines' until it was publicly released. Similar methods were also used by British designers, as it was not available in Britain.

Adaptations and digitisation

According to Microsoft's release notes, the Haettenschweiler font in common modern use descends from a later phototypesetting adaptation by the company Photoscript, who created a lower-case for it; its owner Robert Norton would later become Microsoft's font consultant and may also have written Microsoft's unsigned article on its history. The font Haettenschweiler now bundled with much Microsoft software is a digitisation credited to Eraman Ltd. and Monotype Imaging. Haettenschweiler himself did not receive royalties for the design, and commented: "I never received a single cent, but at least they named it after me."

Aesthetic

Haettenschweiler's highly compact, tightly spaced and industrial design is a prominent example of the aggressive, menacing style of graphic design that despite its poor legibility was popular in the 1960s and 70s, and was often used for purposes besides newspapers, such as book covers.

This type of design has been criticised for having low legibility in smaller point sizes, in situations with low contrast between background and text colours, or at a distance, with (for example) 8 and 9 seeming very similar. Counters are minimal and normally fully enclosed, a common feature of 'Grotesk' typefaces, while apertures are very narrow. This folded-up effect gives it a striking appearance at the cost of legibility. The problems are particularly large in a lower-case (which, as previously noted, Haettenschweiler himself declined to design), where the fine detail of the characters mean that strokes run closer together than in the capitals.

Usage

A 2010 Princeton University study involving presenting students with text in a font slightly harder to read found that they consistently retained more information from material displayed in fonts perceived as ugly or disfluent (Monotype Corsiva, Haettenschweiler, and Comic Sans Italic) than in a simpler, more traditional font like Helvetica.

It is used in the Nottingham Forest logo, with a modified R and a lowercase E at upper-case height.

The font is also seen in the Cartoon Network show The Powerpuff Girls, as the text was used for the end credits and promos for the show.

The small YouTube channel Garfield of the Week exclusively uses this font for their videos.

Bibliography

  • Haettenschweiler, Walter and Armin Haab. Lettera 4: a standard book of fine lettering. Hastings House, 1972.

References

References

  1. "Entwerfer und Gestalter".
  2. {{cite book|isbn=0803842821}}
  3. {{cite book|isbn=9780803842823}}
  4. "Grafiker "Haetti" ist gestorben".
  5. "Walter Haettenschweiler. Obituary".
  6. "Schmalfette: Tall, dark and handsome".
  7. "Blast from the past".
  8. Neil Macmillan. (2006). "An A-Z of Type Designers". Yale University Press.
  9. "Walter Haettenschweiler 1933 – 2014".
  10. "Robert Norton - obituary".
  11. (20 April 2001). "The Mischievous Mind behind Microsoft's TrueType Fonts".
  12. "Haettenschweiler font information". Microsoft.
  13. "Die Microsoft-Schrift aus Zug".
  14. "Schmalfette".
  15. "Permanent Headline - Fonts in Use".
  16. (3 June 2014). "Why Apple's New Font Won't Work On Your Desktop".
  17. "Comments on Typophile thread".
  18. (2003). "Typographically speaking : the art of Matthew Carter". Princeton Architectural.
  19. (13 April 2016). "Charlie Rose: One of the strongest talk shows on television finally has a typographic identity that carries as much weight.".
  20. (2011). "Fortune favors the bold (and the italicized): Effects of disfluency on educational outcomes". Cognition.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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