Fast company logo
|
advertisement

CO.DESIGN

Helvetica, the world’s most famous typeface, gets a makeover

Helvetica is one of the most popular typefaces on the planet. Here’s why Monotype decided to remake it.

Helvetica, the world’s most famous typeface, gets a makeover

[Image: Monotype]

BY Mark Wilson2 minute read

Helvetica was dreamed up as a universal typeface in 1957 and it’s still incredibly popular –you see it on everything from clever T-shirts to NYC subway signs. But there are all sorts of things Helvetica cannot do well: It can be too plain in some contexts. It can require all sorts of chopping and squeezing of its letters when scaled up. And perhaps most importantly, 61 years after Helvetica was invented, we spend much of our day on tiny screens where its cramped characters are nearly illegible.

But, Monotype–the owner of Helvetica–has spent the past two years creating a fix for Helvetica’s shortcomings. The result is called Helvetica Now, and it’s available for licensing, well, now.

[Image: Monotype]
Helvetica Now is the product of two dozen type designers, and when you see everything it can do, you’ll see why. First and foremost, Helvetica Now offers three separate “masters” (or three separate Helvetica variations) for various use cases. Its “Micro” version is for small screens. “Display” is for signage. And “Text” is for more standard sizes in written materials. Each of these options will cause the letters to be both drawn and spaced differently.

“Helvetica Now Micro solves the decades-old spacing and legibility shortcomings” of Helvetica, by splitting the single typeface into three, says Charles Nix, type director at Monotype.

On top of that, Now features a slew of different weights from very thin to quite bold. Playing with all of these options on Monotype’s own demo site, cranking up and down the sizes and weights, the typeface feels less like the buttoned up Helvetica you know–which often doesn’t look as wonderful on the screen as you might imagine it in your head–and more like the typographical equivalent of a self-healing cutting board. Try as I might, I couldn’t break the font. The trifecta of micro, display, and text really do feel like they cover everything.

[Image: Monotype]
Helvetica Now isn’t the typeface’s first major update. It’s gone through several iterations over the years. Most notably, it would be digitized in 1983 as Neue Helvetica. Monotoype wouldrefineNeue Helvetica (aka Helvetica Neue) as our digital tools evolved and the needs of displaying text did alongside them. It’s a typeface Appleactually used in iOS and MacOSfor a brief period before it created its ownSan Franciscotypeface that has since taken over its platforms. Indeed, over the past few years, we’ve seenGoogle, Apple,Airbnb, and evenCoca-Colaall develop their own typefaces–most of which are spiritually similar to Helvetica–for a world in which text needs to scale from tiny to giant without breaking a sweat.

Aside from its balance and legibility across contexts, one other feature in Helvetica Now will be welcomed by graphic designers. Helvetica’s Now reintroduces alternative forms of some characters, including a “G” without the little dangling “beard” off its chin, or a “u” without its asymmetrical serif hanging off the right edge. These are not just tiny details that might drive some designers crazy. They offer options to make Helvetica feel different in different contexts. “Each of these changes holds the power to dramatically alter the entire family aesthetic, and yields countless design possibilities,” says Nix.

Together all of these changes, from new characters to more weights, mean that Helvetica will be more universal applicable than ever before–without necessarily always needing to look the same.

To test Helvetica Now for yourself, try it here.

Recognize your company's culture of innovation by applying to this year's Best Workplaces for Innovators Awards before the final deadline, April 5.

CoDesign Newsletter logo
The latest innovations in design brought to you every weekday.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Privacy Policy

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mark Wilson is the Global Design Editor at Fast Company. He has written about design, technology, and culture for almost 15 years More


Explore Topics