Happy birthday to cool, calm Helvetica

The font Helvetica is celebrating its 50th birthday. The BBC celebrates the font’s staying power as “the butter on the bread.”

The BBC - Helvetica at 50.We live in a world where we are surrounded 24 hours a day by adverts and corporate communications, many in typefaces chosen to subliminally complement the message.

Helvetica’s message is this: you are going to get to your destination on time; your plane will not crash; your money is safe in our vault; we will not break the package; the paperwork has been filled in; everything is going to be OK.

It is sans serif. There are no wiggly bits at the end of the letters. It has smooth, clean lines, and an unobtrusive geometry that almost suggests it was designed not to stand out.

Lars Mueller is a Helvetica devotee. He has published a book, Helvetica: Homage to a Typeface, and recently donated an original set of lead lettering to a Helvetica exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

“It has a modern attitude which lines up with the aesthetic premises of the 1950s and 60s. Helvetica is a corporate typeface, but on the other hand it’s the favourite of hairdressers and kebab shops. It is the butter on the bread.”

Hat tip: Crazy Monkey.

Site redesign: Wired gets wierd

Wired has a well-earned reputation for pushing the design envelope with its magazine. Now the same can be said for Wired‘s redesigned website. The redesign hasn’t gone over too well with some readers. Comments include:

I just opened up your site for the first time in a few days. Hate to say it but the new layout stinks.

To which middle school art class did you farm this out?

No. No. No. Bad Wired. Surely this is some cruel joke because you withheld pizza and caffeine from the html coders, yes?

If nothing else, Wired’s experiment should offer solace to college and university web designers who suffer through user complaints any time they redesign — or sometimes just tweak — their school sites.

Thanks to CyberJournalist for the tip.