Sans Serif Type
Developed long after the
establishment of Serif types, Sans Serif styles constitute a large number of
fonts available for a variety of both text and display applications. Speaking
chronologically, there is evidence of the first uses of movable type Sans Serif
words and letters occurring in the latter half of the 18th century, however,
the first complete type specimen is attributed to William Caslon IV who
produced Caslon Egyptian in 1816. Quite coincidentally, the popularity of Sans
Serif types parallels the development and use of Slab-Serif fonts. Both styles
were thought to be well adapted to printed materials produced for public
displays owing to the boldness of the original designs. Sans Serif letterforms
are easily distinguished by their clean simple rectangular ending of strokes.
There are two possible
directions that can be taken when referring to the classification of Sans Serif
types, the first being a historical approach, and the second being a stylistic
one. The historical approach would include categories such as Grotesque,
Neo-Grotesque, Black Letter, etc. A stylistic classifications of Sans Serif typestyles includes Classical, also called Humanist, Old Style, or Egyptian; Modern also called Transitional,
Realist, Universal, or Utilitarian; Grotesque or Grotesk, also called Gothic; Geometric also called Super-Shape; and
Italic also called Slanted or Oblique. The following takes is based on a stylistic
approach to categorizing Sans Serif types.
Misnomer Vocabulary
Grotesque
When Sans Serifs styles first
appeared, type critics and historians considered them to be unrefined and ugly,
thus christening them with the descriptive term “Grotesk” or “Grotesque”. The
term came from an association caused by the comparison of the then newly
introduced Sans Serif types to the very elegant Modern serif types that were
introduced only 20 years prior.
Black
Another term that was coined by type scholars of the early 19th century and crept into
the descriptive vernacular of Sans Serif types was “Black” or “Black Letter”. The name was
inspired by the heavy dark appearance of letters and a lack of contrast between
horizontal and vertical letter strokes.
Gothic
Sans Serif movable types of
the 1800’s represented a kind of letterform design that essentially established
a whole new form for letterform strokes. Their introduction was controversial
and difficult to classify for type critics and scholars. To deal with this
problem many looked back in history at prior styles of letterforms to help with
the classification of these new types. They saw a similarity to the thick bold
structures that were inherent in Gothic types, so another label they came up with for Sans Serif types
was “Gothic”.
Humanist/Classical/Old Style/Egyptian
Like Old Style Serif types,
Humanist Sans Serif letterforms display many of the same characteristics. One
way to identify Humanist San Serif types is by letterform proportions that
reflect those of ancient Roman letters that were based on the Golden Section.
This variety of Humanist styles are made up of letterforms that vary in width,
with letters B, E, F,
J, L, P, and S having a strong vertical 2:1 height to width ratio emphasis;
while A, D, H, K, N, R, T, U, V, X, Y, and Z are closer to a 9:8 nearly square
ratio; round letter such as C, G, O, and Q are based on a 1:1 ratio circle; and
the width of letters M and W extend beyond the height ratio to a 9:10 ratio.
Humanist
types may also exhibit one or more of the following traits; a calligraphic appearance to letters; lowercase
letterforms with a smaller waist or x-height in comparison to cap-height; and
letterforms that display a marked contrast between thick and thin strokes.
Examples of Humanist Sans
Serif fonts include Calibri, Gill Sans, Frutiger, Lucida Sans, Myriad, Optima,
Syntax, and Verdana.
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Grotesque/Grotesk/Gothic
Soon after William Caslon
IV’s Caslon Egyptian type, Grotesque types came into popularity and are still
in usage. These types differ from Humanist style types in that they do not
display calligraphically influenced letter strokes, but instead are made up of
strokes more reminiscent of Modern Sans Serif types. Appearing to be somewhat
primitive versions of Modern types, none-the-less, some Grotesque types display
minor script-inspired Humanist traits.
Grotesque types are
constructed with even-width horizontal and vertical strokes; have some angled
vertical stroke ends, as on the lower-case t and s; and stroke extensions that occur on
some letterforms such as the upper-case G and the lower-case a and y.
Examples of Grotesque types
include, Akidenz-Grotesk, Franklin Gothic, News Gothic, Standard, and Trade
Gothic.
Grotesque. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Gothic. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Gothic. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Modern/Transitional/Realist/Universal/Utilitarian
Modern Sans Serif text types
differ from Humanist styles in several respects. They are based on Modern letterform
proportioning, which relies on a common optical width on to base all the alphabet
letters. To achieve an even width appearance, Modern proportioned letterforms contain
subtle width variations to compensate for optical deceptions. This is done with
the intention of having all the letters to look as though they are the same
width. The utilitarian design of Modern
San Serif types has contributed to their universal appeal for applications that
require fonts to be highly visible and legible.
In addition to optical
proportioning, Modern Sans Serif letterforms have little contrast between thick
and thin strokes; lowercase letterforms with a taller waist relationship to
cap-height; a simple utilitarian appearance; larger more open counters; and
well defined negative spaces.
Examples of Modern Sans Serif
fonts include Arial, Folio, Haas Unica, Helvetica, and Univers,
Modern. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Modern. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Modern. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Geometric/Super-Shape
Typestyles that fall into
this category of Sans Serif classification are structurally tied to regimented geometric shapes. This requires some sacrifice of functionality when readability
and legibility are considered. Geometric types place regularity of form and
aesthetic above usability and function. For this reason Geometric types are
better suited for titling or display purposes and are seldom used for paragraphs
of text. Geometric fonts integrate particularly well when embedded into
other forms of graphical symbols and imagery.
Many letterforms
in Geometric fonts share a common structure, which is based on a standard
geometric shape or a customized shape, so different letters may appear to be
based on a common shape and display the same width; round letters like C, G, O,
and Q share a common structure, and other letters such as D, E, F, L, S, and U may
also be based on that same structure. Some Geometric fonts may be comprised
exclusively of upper-case letters, while others contain both upper and
lower-case.
Examples
of Geometric Sans Serif fonts include Avant Garde, Eurostyle, Futura, Handel, Kabel,
and Spartan.
Geometric. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Geometric. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Geometric. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Italic/Oblique
Unlike Italic Serif text
types, which in many cases were developed as stand-alone fonts, Italic Sans
Serif text types were usually the result of adapting a non-italic version of a
typestyle to an italic slant. This was done to add flexibility to font styles
for use in more complex hierarchical typographic arrangements. Sans Serif types
that were developed for specialized display purposes only have been developed
as stand-alone fonts with no non-italic version.
The main characteristic of
Italic Sans Serif types is their slanted appearance. They are accurate
representations of their original non-italic structure. Other stylistic traits
of Italic types include a slight condensing of letterforms for efficient use of
space. Sans Serif types are available in Humanist, Grotesque, Modern, and
Geometric styles.
Italic Vs. Italicized
There is a difference between an italic version of a Sans Serif font and an italicized or oblique version. In the sample of Gill Sans Italic below, the lower case a is a cursive style letter. Italic styles display an influence from hand written style while oblique fonts will display a slanted non cursive version of their regular counterparts as is evident in the Avenir Oblique sample below.
Italic Vs. Italicized
There is a difference between an italic version of a Sans Serif font and an italicized or oblique version. In the sample of Gill Sans Italic below, the lower case a is a cursive style letter. Italic styles display an influence from hand written style while oblique fonts will display a slanted non cursive version of their regular counterparts as is evident in the Avenir Oblique sample below.
There are many examples of
Italic and Oblique Sans Serif fonts including Avenir Oblique, Franklin Gothic
Italic, Futura Italic, Gill Sans Italic, Helvetica Italic, and Univers 67 Oblique.
Oblique. Layout courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Italic. Layout courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Oblique. Layout courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. |
Disclaimer: The original versions of fonts that were
designed as either hot metal movable type or film based type may be different
from the digitally formatted types that are in common use today. In many cases
these fonts have been redrawn and adapted to digital technology.
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