Not all typefaces are designed to be legible. Many are drawn to
create a typographic statement, or provide a particular spirit or
feeling to graphic communication. Some are even designed just
to stand out from the crowd. To the degree that a typeface has
personality, spirit, or distinction, however, it often suffers proportionally
on the legibility scale.
A TYPOGRAPHER'S VIEW
So what makes a typeface legible? The long-standing typographic
maxim is that the most legible typefaces are those that are transparent
to the reader. Additionally, the most legible typefaces are
those that have big features and restrained design characteristics.
While these attributes may seem conflicting, actually they are not.
“Big features” refers to things like large, open counters, ample lowercase
x-heights, and character shapes that are obvious and easy to
recognize. The most legible typefaces are also restrained, in that
the weight changes within character strokes are subtle; and serifs,
if the face has them, are not a dominant part of the character.
As far as being “transparent” is concerned, this is a metaphor
coined by Beatrice Ward, Monotype’s famous marketing manager
of the 1930s and ’40s. She once wrote that good type was like
“a crystal goblet” which allows content to be more important than
the container. Ward’s contention was that the best types are those
that do not get in the way of the communication process: faces
that are virtually invisible and allow words—not the type—to
make the statement.
A NEW FRANKLIN
David Berlow of The Font Bureau had typographic legibility at
the forefront of his mind when he began the redesign of Franklin
Gothic for International Typeface Corporation. In addition to
their popular “retail” fonts, the Font Bureau has a successful business
designing, manufacturing, and providing specialized typefaces
to newspapers and periodicals. While the company has a
suite of typefaces they rely on as the design foundation for these
projects, they wanted to add a Franklin Gothic series to their
offering. They could have started from scratch, but Berlow figured,
“Why start from a blank screen, when you can build on an
established foundation?” ITC was approached for two reasons:
they had one of the best examples of Franklin Gothic in their
library, and Berlow had previously worked with ITC on the development
of the Franklin Gothic Condensed series.
While ITC’s original Franklin Gothic was released as two
designs, one for display setting and one for text, early digital interpretations
were developed as “text/display” solutions. This is a
nice idea that provides for the same fonts to be used from 6-point
to billboard sizes (sort of like men’s socks: one size fits all). This
can also be problematic: Compromises in a typeface design that
allow it to perform within a wide range of sizes almost always limit
its level of performance at any given size.
Font Bureau’s proposal was straightforward yet all encompassing:
“Let us rework the ITC Franklin Gothic family; enlarge it
into separate text and display designs, then let us sell it and use it
for our custom design projects.”
NO QUICK FIX
A short time into the project, however, both parties learned that
what was supposed to be a relatively simple reworking and respacing
of the existing letters to perform well within a specific size
range became a major design project. “Franklin is a face that’s so
familiar and so straightforward that you would think that you
almost can’t help but maintain its legibility in a sensitive interpretation,”
says Berlow. “The reality, however, is much more complicated.
The devil is in getting every detail of contrast, angle,
intersection, and overlap synchronized within each style, across
the range of widths and weights, and between the roman and italic
designs. In truth, a monumental task.”
Berlow dove deeply into the task of adding new weights and
proportions to the family, taking advantage in the display range to
make very light and very bold condensed faces that wouldn’t work
below 20 to 24 point. The connection between the bowl and stem
of lowercase characters was designed to have a crisper feel.
He also discovered that the ITC Franklin Gothics required a
mountain of work to become the optimum text designs he and ITC
wanted. The end result is, in fact, two text designs: one for use from
about 8 point to 14 point, and another for use at very small sizes.