Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Helvetica: The Font Of The 20th Century

 
 

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Helvetica: The Font Of The 20th Century

via Consumerist on May 27, 2007

Helvetica.jpgThe miscellany gods at Slate have compiled a slideshow describing how companies such as American Airlines, Sears, Target, ConEd, Verizon, and the New York Subway system use the font Helvetica to convey a sense of "modern efficiency with a human face."

Ultimately, Helvetica is a cipher--and this is the key to its success. It can be authoritative or ironic, sober or idealistic, corporate or cozy. It's the tofu of typefaces: bland in itself but ready to absorb whatever flavors you add to it. It's clean, legible, and well-designed, but its real power lies in its uncanny mutability.
Though we seldom think of many of the companies using Helvetica as efficient, it's nice to know what they were striving for when they chose their font. -- CAREY GREENBERG-BERGER

The Helvetica Hegemony [Slate]
(Photo: dantegeek)


 
 

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