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Typography of Apple Inc.

Apple Inc. uses a large variety of typefaces in its marketing, operating systems, and industrial design with each product cycle. These change throughout the years with Apple's change of style in their products. This is evident in the design and marketing of the company.

Apple's first logo, hand drawn by Ronald Wayne

Marketing edit

For at least 18 years, Apple's corporate typeface was a custom variant of the ITC Garamond typeface called Apple Garamond. It was used alongside the Apple logo for product names on computers, in many ads and printed materials, and on the company's website. Starting in 2001, Apple gradually shifted towards using Myriad in its marketing. Starting with iPhone 7 in 2016, Apple switched the typeface of the word mark "iPhone" to San Francisco on products and its website.

edit

Prior to adopting the bitten Apple as its logo, Apple used a complex logo featuring Isaac Newton sitting below an apple tree. The words APPLE COMPUTER CO. were drawn on a ribbon banner ornamenting the picture frame. The frame itself held a quotation from Wordsworth: "Newton....A Mind Forever Voyaging Through Strange Seas of Thought...Alone.", taken from Wordsworth's autobiographical poem The Prelude. The logo was hand drawn and thus did not use an established font. However, the type is similar to Caslon.

Motter Tektura edit

 
The Apple logo alongside the Motter Tektura typeface

Before the introduction of the first Macintosh, alongside the Apple logo, Apple used a typeface called Motter Tektura,[1] which was designed in Austria by Othmar Motter of Vorarlberger Graphik in 1975 and distributed by Letraset (and also famously used by Reebok).[2] At the time, the typeface was considered new and modern. One modification to the typeface was the removal of the dot over the i. The s was also modified for the label on the Disk II 5.25-inch floppy disk drive.

According to the logo designer, Rob Janoff, the typeface was selected for its playful qualities and techno look, which were in line with Apple's mission statement of making high technology accessible to anyone. Janoff designed the logo in 1977 while working with Palo Alto marketer Regis McKenna.[3] The Apple logo's bite mark was originally designed to fit snugly with the Motter Tektura a.

In the early 1980s, the logo was simplified by removing computer ınc. from the logo. Motter Tektura was also used for the Apple II logo. This typeface has sometimes been mislabeled Cupertino, a similar bitmap font probably created to mimic Motter Tektura.

Apple Garamond edit

 
Apple Garamond was used in most of Apple's marketing.

Since the introduction of the Macintosh in 1984, Apple adopted a new corporate font called Apple Garamond.[citation needed] It was a variation of the classic Garamond typeface, both narrower and having a taller x-height. Specifically, ITC Garamond (created by Tony Stan in 1977) was condensed to 80% of its normal width. Bitstream condensed the font, subtly adjusted the stroke widths, and performed the hinting required to create the font, which was delivered to Apple as the Postscript font "apgaram".

In cases where the Apple logo was accompanied by text, it was always set in Apple Garamond. Aside from the company name, most of Apple's advertising and marketing slogans, such as "Think different", used the font as well.

The typeface was virtually synonymous with Apple for almost two decades and formed a large part of the company's brand recognition. It was used not only in conjunction with the logo, but also in manuals and ads and to label products with model names.

Apple has not released the true Apple Garamond font. ITC briefly sold ITC Garamond Narrow—Apple Garamond without the custom hinting—as part of its Apple Font Pack in the 1990s. A version of the font was also included under a different name in some versions of Mac OS X prior to 10.3 as it was used by the Setup Assistant installation program.

Gill Sans edit

In the marketing of the Newton/Notepad/MessagePad PDA (starting in 1992), Apple used Gill Sans instead of the regular Apple Garamond. Gill Sans Regular was used in the logo, for the model name on the computer, on the keyboard and in advertisement materials, though it was not used as a screen font (except as part of the Newton logo).

Myriad edit

 
Adobe's Myriad was used in Apple's marketing 2003–2017.

In 2003, Apple gradually started using a variant of the Adobe Myriad font family in its marketing and packaging. As new revisions of its products were released, the text changed from the serif Apple Garamond to the sans-serif Myriad Apple. The family's bolds were used for headlines, and other weights accordingly.

The Myriad font family was designed by Robert Slimbach and Carol Twombly for Adobe. Adobe's most recent version of Myriad is Myriad Pro, which has some additional enhancements and character set extensions, but is not significantly changed in design. Myriad Apple, a modification produced by Galápagos Design Group, incorporates minor spacing and weight differences from the standard varieties, and includes Apple-specific characters, such as the company logo. In 2006, Myriad Apple was superseded by Myriad Set, which contains extra ligatures and other minor changes.

As of November 2013, lighter fonts are prevalent in Apple's marketing, with headlines in Myriad Pro Light. Occasionally an even lighter variant of Myriad is used for specialized marketing materials and press releases.

San Francisco edit

 
San Francisco Font

Starting with the release of the Apple Watch, Apple has begun the usage of San Francisco as the typeface of word marks such as "iPhone", "AirPods", and "MacBook Pro" on the devices themselves. This change is also reflected in some headlines on product marketing web pages. Apple modified the majority of its website's text to use the San Francisco font on January 24, 2017, and San Francisco became the universal official font for Apple.

System fonts edit

Apple has used a variety of system fonts for the user interface of its products.

Early fonts edit

Apple's earliest computers, along with other personal computers of the period, had extremely limited graphical capabilities and could originally display only uppercase ASCII using a set bitmap font. The IIc and Enhanced Apple IIe expanded on this, supporting 40 or 80 columns of text and an extended character set called MouseText. It was used to simulate simple graphical user interfaces, similar to the use of ANSI X3.64.

The first Apple computer with a purely bitmapped display, the Lisa, shipped in 1983. It used a system font with distinctive V and W letterforms.

Chicago and Charcoal edit

The Macintosh, introduced in 1984, used a bitmap font, Chicago, designed by Susan Kare. In Mac OS 8, introduced in 1997, the system font of Mac OS was changed to Charcoal. Charcoal was designed by David Berlow of Font Bureau, to be easier to read than Chicago, while retaining similar metrics for backward compatibility with existing application software.

When released in 2001, Apple's iPod music player reused the Macintosh font Chicago as the system font. Later versions of the iPod drew from the larger character repertoire of the TrueType Chicago, adding a number of characters not present in the bitmap Chicago, such as Greek and Cyrillic. Even though the screen supported grayscale, the characters were not anti-aliased.[citation needed]

Geneva edit

For smaller user interface elements, such as the names of files displayed with icons in the Finder, Apple used the Geneva typeface, a redesigned version of Helvetica.

Shaston edit

Introduced in 1986, the Apple IIGS, had very tall pixels (pixel aspect ratio of 5:12 or 5:6, with 640 × 200 or 320 × 200 pixels in a 4:3 image), thus requiring a stout, 8-point bitmap font called Shaston 8 as the system font (for menus, window titles, etc.). Shaston was described in Apple IIGS technote #41 as "a modified Helvetica", but the similarities are not striking. The fonts of the original Macintosh were also available for the GS.

Espy Sans edit

In 1991, Apple's Human Interface Group contracted with LetterPerfect Fonts' Garrett Boge and Damon Clark, to design a family of bitmap screen fonts to replace Chicago and Geneva for the Mac OS version 7.5. The family consisted of Sans & Serif, Regular and Bold in discrete bitmap sizes of 8, 9, 10, 12 & 14 pt. The Sans, proving most useful for screen readability, was also used for the Newton OS GUI. The Newton used the font Apple Casual to display text entered using the Rosetta handwriting recognition engine in the Newton. The same font found its way into the Rosetta-derived writing recognition system in Mac OS X—Inkwell. The TrueType font can be made available to any application by copying the font file, which is embedded in a system component, to any font folder. (See List of macOS fonts for more information.) The Newton logo featured the Gill Sans typeface, which was also used for the Newton keyboard.

Espy Sans was later used as the font for Apple's eWorld online service in 1994. (eWorld also used the larger bold condensed bitmap font eWorld Tight for headlines. The metrics of eWorld Tight were based on Helvetica Ultra Compressed.) The iPod mini, released in 2004, also used Espy Sans.

Lucida Grande edit

Since its introduction in 2000 up through OS X Mavericks, Lucida Grande was the system font used in Mac OS X user interface elements, such as menus, dialog boxes, and other widgets. It was superseded by Helvetica Neue.

Podium Sans edit

Starting in 2004, the iPod photo, 5th-generation iPod, and 1st- through 2nd-generation iPod nano feature a bitmap font known as Podium Sans, displacing the use of Chicago as the iPod system font. Although originally promoted as Myriad, Podium Sans is missing Myriad's trademark features, such as the splayed "M" and distinctive "y".

Helvetica edit

Since the introduction of the 1st-generation iPhone in 2007, Apple has used Helvetica in its software design. iOS for the iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, and Apple TV employs the font, alongside its use on iPods beginning with the 6th-generation iPod classic and 3rd-generation iPod nano.

In conjunction with the iPhone 4 in 2010, Apple began using Helvetica Neue on devices with Retina display, while keeping use of Helvetica on non-Retina devices.

Around 2012, Apple started using Helvetica in macOS (then named OS X) application software. iTunes, iMovie, iPhoto, GarageBand, and Apple's professional applications started to feature heavy use of Helvetica, while the majority of the OS X (now named macOS) environment retained the comparatively more legible Lucida Grande typeface, which was designed specifically for on-screen use.

After the introduction of iOS 7 in June 2013, Apple began using an extra-thin weight of Helvetica Neue for the user interface of iOS 7, arousing numerous complaints about the less legible typography. For the final release of the operating system, Apple changed the system's font to a slightly thicker weight of Helvetica Neue, although some have complained that readability is still compromised compared to the font weight used in former versions of iOS. Older iOS devices continue to use Helvetica or Helvetica Neue in regular font weights that display with higher contrast on low-resolution displays.

With the introduction of OS X 10.10 "Yosemite" in June 2014, Apple started using Helvetica Neue as the system font on the Mac. This brought all of Apple's user interfaces in line, using Helvetica Neue throughout.

San Francisco edit

San Francisco is currently used for user interface across all of Apple's product line, including watchOS, macOS, iOS, iPadOS and tvOS (with the notable exception of subtitles on tvOS which continues to use Helvetica). The three main variants are SF Pro for macOS, iOS, and iPadOS; SF Compact for watchOS; and SF Mono for the Terminal, Console, and Xcode applications. It was first introduced alongside the Apple Watch,[4] where it was used for enhanced legibility and taller x-heights for easy reading on a small display. The design references a number of different other typefaces, notably FF DIN (used in the UI of the Camera app in iOS 7 and above), Helvetica (used in the UI in iOS 6 and below), Helvetica Neue (used in the UI of iOS 7 and iOS 8 as well as OS X Yosemite, with some devices even with iOS 4 through iOS 6), Roboto (Google's new UI typeface), and Univers (used on Apple's early keyboard designs).[citation needed]

It was widely speculated that San Francisco was going to be the long-awaited font that Apple had reportedly been developing for independent use in their products, and the font's name was leaked in November 2014 when the WatchKit SDK was released to developers. On June 8, 2015, at the WWDC 2015 conference, San Francisco replaced Helvetica Neue as the system font for both macOS and iOS operating systems.[5] The version used, known as "SF UI", was modified to make it wider than its Apple Watch counterpart, more akin to the previously used Helvetica Neue. The original version has since been renamed "SF Compact".

New York edit

In 2019, Apple released New York, a serif counterpart to San Francisco.

Keyboards edit

 
Univers on a pre-2003 PowerBook G4
 
Univers was first used as the keyboard font of the Apple IIc.

Apple's keyboards were long labeled with Univers 47 (Condensed Light Oblique), a design choice by Apple's industrial design partner, Frog Design. This began in 1984 with the Apple IIc, which had tilted front-panel buttons to match the inclination of the lettering.

Univers was eventually replaced on Apple's keyboards by VAG Rounded, which was used on all iBook models, PowerBooks introduced after 2003, and MacBooks, MacBooks Pro, MacBooks Air, and Apple Keyboards from August 2007 until early 2015. The font was developed by Sedley Place Ltd. for German car manufacturer Volkswagen and was used in much of their marketing materials.[6]

On March 9, 2015, Apple introduced a new generation of MacBook[7] that utilizes the Apple designed San Francisco typeface.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Steve Jobs Business Card from 1979", networkworld.com
  2. ^ "Reebok Classic Collection Vector logo", hdicon.com
  3. ^ "Worlds Best Logo Designer – Logo Designing – Logo Design – Logo Designer". robjanoff.com. March 22, 2018.
  4. ^ Owen Williams (November 18, 2014). "Meet Apple's new font, designed for its smartwatch Typeface". The Next Web.
  5. ^ Stinson, Liz (June 9, 2015). "Why Apple Abandoned the World's Most Beloved Typeface". Wired. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  6. ^ "Typographic Abbreviations Series #2: VAG " MyFonts Musings". Myfonts.wordpress.com. November 17, 2006. Retrieved October 13, 2009.
  7. ^ "Apple Unveils All-New MacBook". March 9, 2015.

General references edit

  • Apple Computer:
    • . Retrieved 2004-09-25.
    • (January 29, 2003). Using and Managing Fonts in Mac OS X. . Retrieved 2004-10-01.
    • (October 8, 2003). Fonts in Mac OS X . Retrieved 2004-10-04.
    • . Retrieved 2004-10-01.
    • (November 11, 2002). . Retrieved 2004-10-03.
    • (June 10, 2004). Sharing Fonts Between Mac OS X and Classic. Retrieved 2004-10-22.
    • (September 14, 2000). The Zapf table. Retrieved 2004-10-22.
    • (1996-07-06). . Retrieved 2004-10-27.
    • (November 1990). Apple II GS TN #41 — Font Family Numbers. Retrieved 2004-10-28.
    • (December 19, 2002). ROMAN.TXT, MacRoman to Unicode map. Retrieved 2004-11-09.
  • Jaques Moury Beauchap. . Retrieved 2004-10-28.
  • Michael Everson (2003-11-11). Multilingual Macintosh Support. Retrieved 2004-10-27.
  • Erfert Fenton (October 1994). Inside QuickDraw GX Fonts, MacWorld. June 14, 1997, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 2004-11-01.
  • FreeType. Freetype and Patents. Retrieved 2004-10-29.
  • Nobumi Iyanaga (2000-09-26). Unicode and Mac OS, and Code converters. Retrieved 2004-10-27.
  • Tony Kavadias (2004-07-24). . Retrieved 2004-10-28.
  • Steve Gibson (2003-04-10). The Origins of Sub-Pixel Font Rendering. Retrieved 2004-10-27.
  • Jens Hofman Hansen (July 2, 2002). . Retrieved 2004-09-22.
  • Susan Kare. World Class Cities. Retrieved 2004-09-25.
  • John Kheyt (2003-05-23). The Devil's Advocate — MS's ClearType KOs Apple's Quartz In The Lightweight Division. Retrieved 2004-10-27.
  • Microsoft (2003-03-12). Press release: Microsoft Announces Expanded Access To Extensive Intellectual Property Portfolio. Retrieved 2004-10-27.
  • Jonathan Ploudre (June 1, 2000). Macintosh System Fonts. Retrieved 2004-09-21.
  • Ed Tracy (1998-10-15). Apple and the History of Personal Computer Design. Retrieved 2004-10-27.
  • Norman Walsh (August 14, 1996). comp.fonts FAQ: Macintosh Info. Retrieved 2004-09-21.
  • XvsXP. . Retrieved 2004-10-27.

External links edit

  • Text & Fonts Apple's typography developer site
  • TrueType Reference Manual
    • LastResort glyphs: — ,
  • Unicode fonts for Mac OS X computers — Survey of Unicode fonts included with Mac OS X and Microsoft Office 2004.
  • Microsoft's ClearType website
  • Fondu – program to convert (and separate) Mac OS X dfont data fork files to TrueType, OpenType, Type 1, and Glyph Bitmap parts

typography, apple, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article December 2012 This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Apple Inc uses a large variety of typefaces in its marketing operating systems and industrial design with each product cycle These change throughout the years with Apple s change of style in their products This is evident in the design and marketing of the company Apple s first logo hand drawn by Ronald Wayne Contents 1 Marketing 1 1 Hand drawn logo 1 2 Motter Tektura 1 3 Apple Garamond 1 4 Gill Sans 1 5 Myriad 1 6 San Francisco 2 System fonts 2 1 Early fonts 2 2 Chicago and Charcoal 2 3 Geneva 2 4 Shaston 2 5 Espy Sans 2 6 Lucida Grande 2 7 Podium Sans 2 8 Helvetica 2 9 San Francisco 2 10 New York 3 Keyboards 4 See also 5 References 5 1 General references 6 External linksMarketing editFor at least 18 years Apple s corporate typeface was a custom variant of the ITC Garamond typeface called Apple Garamond It was used alongside the Apple logo for product names on computers in many ads and printed materials and on the company s website Starting in 2001 Apple gradually shifted towards using Myriad in its marketing Starting with iPhone 7 in 2016 Apple switched the typeface of the word mark iPhone to San Francisco on products and its website Hand drawn logo edit Prior to adopting the bitten Apple as its logo Apple used a complex logo featuring Isaac Newton sitting below an apple tree The words APPLE COMPUTER CO were drawn on a ribbon banner ornamenting the picture frame The frame itself held a quotation from Wordsworth Newton A Mind Forever Voyaging Through Strange Seas of Thought Alone taken from Wordsworth s autobiographical poem The Prelude The logo was hand drawn and thus did not use an established font However the type is similar to Caslon Motter Tektura edit nbsp The Apple logo alongside the Motter Tektura typefaceBefore the introduction of the first Macintosh alongside the Apple logo Apple used a typeface called Motter Tektura 1 which was designed in Austria by Othmar Motter of Vorarlberger Graphik in 1975 and distributed by Letraset and also famously used by Reebok 2 At the time the typeface was considered new and modern One modification to the typeface was the removal of the dot over the i The s was also modified for the label on the Disk II 5 25 inch floppy disk drive According to the logo designer Rob Janoff the typeface was selected for its playful qualities and techno look which were in line with Apple s mission statement of making high technology accessible to anyone Janoff designed the logo in 1977 while working with Palo Alto marketer Regis McKenna 3 The Apple logo s bite mark was originally designed to fit snugly with the Motter Tektura a In the early 1980s the logo was simplified by removing computer inc from the logo Motter Tektura was also used for the Apple II logo This typeface has sometimes been mislabeled Cupertino a similar bitmap font probably created to mimic Motter Tektura Apple Garamond edit nbsp Apple Garamond was used in most of Apple s marketing Since the introduction of the Macintosh in 1984 Apple adopted a new corporate font called Apple Garamond citation needed It was a variation of the classic Garamond typeface both narrower and having a taller x height Specifically ITC Garamond created by Tony Stan in 1977 was condensed to 80 of its normal width Bitstream condensed the font subtly adjusted the stroke widths and performed the hinting required to create the font which was delivered to Apple as the Postscript font apgaram In cases where the Apple logo was accompanied by text it was always set in Apple Garamond Aside from the company name most of Apple s advertising and marketing slogans such as Think different used the font as well The typeface was virtually synonymous with Apple for almost two decades and formed a large part of the company s brand recognition It was used not only in conjunction with the logo but also in manuals and ads and to label products with model names Apple has not released the true Apple Garamond font ITC briefly sold ITC Garamond Narrow Apple Garamond without the custom hinting as part of its Apple Font Pack in the 1990s A version of the font was also included under a different name in some versions of Mac OS X prior to 10 3 as it was used by the Setup Assistant installation program Gill Sans edit In the marketing of the Newton Notepad MessagePad PDA starting in 1992 Apple used Gill Sans instead of the regular Apple Garamond Gill Sans Regular was used in the logo for the model name on the computer on the keyboard and in advertisement materials though it was not used as a screen font except as part of the Newton logo Myriad edit nbsp Adobe s Myriad was used in Apple s marketing 2003 2017 In 2003 Apple gradually started using a variant of the Adobe Myriad font family in its marketing and packaging As new revisions of its products were released the text changed from the serif Apple Garamond to the sans serif Myriad Apple The family s bolds were used for headlines and other weights accordingly The Myriad font family was designed by Robert Slimbach and Carol Twombly for Adobe Adobe s most recent version of Myriad is Myriad Pro which has some additional enhancements and character set extensions but is not significantly changed in design Myriad Apple a modification produced by Galapagos Design Group incorporates minor spacing and weight differences from the standard varieties and includes Apple specific characters such as the company logo In 2006 Myriad Apple was superseded by Myriad Set which contains extra ligatures and other minor changes As of November 2013 lighter fonts are prevalent in Apple s marketing with headlines in Myriad Pro Light Occasionally an even lighter variant of Myriad is used for specialized marketing materials and press releases San Francisco edit nbsp San Francisco FontStarting with the release of the Apple Watch Apple has begun the usage of San Francisco as the typeface of word marks such as iPhone AirPods and MacBook Pro on the devices themselves This change is also reflected in some headlines on product marketing web pages Apple modified the majority of its website s text to use the San Francisco font on January 24 2017 and San Francisco became the universal official font for Apple System fonts editApple has used a variety of system fonts for the user interface of its products Early fonts edit Apple s earliest computers along with other personal computers of the period had extremely limited graphical capabilities and could originally display only uppercase ASCII using a set bitmap font The IIc and Enhanced Apple IIe expanded on this supporting 40 or 80 columns of text and an extended character set called MouseText It was used to simulate simple graphical user interfaces similar to the use of ANSI X3 64 The first Apple computer with a purely bitmapped display the Lisa shipped in 1983 It used a system font with distinctive V and W letterforms Chicago and Charcoal edit nbsp Chicago nbsp Charcoal The Macintosh introduced in 1984 used a bitmap font Chicago designed by Susan Kare In Mac OS 8 introduced in 1997 the system font of Mac OS was changed to Charcoal Charcoal was designed by David Berlow of Font Bureau to be easier to read than Chicago while retaining similar metrics for backward compatibility with existing application software When released in 2001 Apple s iPod music player reused the Macintosh font Chicago as the system font Later versions of the iPod drew from the larger character repertoire of the TrueType Chicago adding a number of characters not present in the bitmap Chicago such as Greek and Cyrillic Even though the screen supported grayscale the characters were not anti aliased citation needed Geneva edit For smaller user interface elements such as the names of files displayed with icons in the Finder Apple used the Geneva typeface a redesigned version of Helvetica Shaston edit Introduced in 1986 the Apple IIGS had very tall pixels pixel aspect ratio of 5 12 or 5 6 with 640 200 or 320 200 pixels in a 4 3 image thus requiring a stout 8 point bitmap font called Shaston 8 as the system font for menus window titles etc Shaston was described in Apple IIGS technote 41 as a modified Helvetica but the similarities are not striking The fonts of the original Macintosh were also available for the GS Espy Sans edit In 1991 Apple s Human Interface Group contracted with LetterPerfect Fonts Garrett Boge and Damon Clark to design a family of bitmap screen fonts to replace Chicago and Geneva for the Mac OS version 7 5 The family consisted of Sans amp Serif Regular and Bold in discrete bitmap sizes of 8 9 10 12 amp 14 pt The Sans proving most useful for screen readability was also used for the Newton OS GUI The Newton used the font Apple Casual to display text entered using the Rosetta handwriting recognition engine in the Newton The same font found its way into the Rosetta derived writing recognition system in Mac OS X Inkwell The TrueType font can be made available to any application by copying the font file which is embedded in a system component to any font folder See List of macOS fonts for more information The Newton logo featured the Gill Sans typeface which was also used for the Newton keyboard Espy Sans was later used as the font for Apple s eWorld online service in 1994 eWorld also used the larger bold condensed bitmap font eWorld Tight for headlines The metrics of eWorld Tight were based on Helvetica Ultra Compressed The iPod mini released in 2004 also used Espy Sans Lucida Grande edit Since its introduction in 2000 up through OS X Mavericks Lucida Grande was the system font used in Mac OS X user interface elements such as menus dialog boxes and other widgets It was superseded by Helvetica Neue Podium Sans edit Starting in 2004 the iPod photo 5th generation iPod and 1st through 2nd generation iPod nano feature a bitmap font known as Podium Sans displacing the use of Chicago as the iPod system font Although originally promoted as Myriad Podium Sans is missing Myriad s trademark features such as the splayed M and distinctive y Helvetica edit Since the introduction of the 1st generation iPhone in 2007 Apple has used Helvetica in its software design iOS for the iPhone iPod touch iPad and Apple TV employs the font alongside its use on iPods beginning with the 6th generation iPod classic and 3rd generation iPod nano In conjunction with the iPhone 4 in 2010 Apple began using Helvetica Neue on devices with Retina display while keeping use of Helvetica on non Retina devices Around 2012 Apple started using Helvetica in macOS then named OS X application software iTunes iMovie iPhoto GarageBand and Apple s professional applications started to feature heavy use of Helvetica while the majority of the OS X now named macOS environment retained the comparatively more legible Lucida Grande typeface which was designed specifically for on screen use After the introduction of iOS 7 in June 2013 Apple began using an extra thin weight of Helvetica Neue for the user interface of iOS 7 arousing numerous complaints about the less legible typography For the final release of the operating system Apple changed the system s font to a slightly thicker weight of Helvetica Neue although some have complained that readability is still compromised compared to the font weight used in former versions of iOS Older iOS devices continue to use Helvetica or Helvetica Neue in regular font weights that display with higher contrast on low resolution displays With the introduction of OS X 10 10 Yosemite in June 2014 Apple started using Helvetica Neue as the system font on the Mac This brought all of Apple s user interfaces in line using Helvetica Neue throughout San Francisco edit San Francisco is currently used for user interface across all of Apple s product line including watchOS macOS iOS iPadOS and tvOS with the notable exception of subtitles on tvOS which continues to use Helvetica The three main variants are SF Pro for macOS iOS and iPadOS SF Compact for watchOS and SF Mono for the Terminal Console and Xcode applications It was first introduced alongside the Apple Watch 4 where it was used for enhanced legibility and taller x heights for easy reading on a small display The design references a number of different other typefaces notably FF DIN used in the UI of the Camera app in iOS 7 and above Helvetica used in the UI in iOS 6 and below Helvetica Neue used in the UI of iOS 7 and iOS 8 as well as OS X Yosemite with some devices even with iOS 4 through iOS 6 Roboto Google s new UI typeface and Univers used on Apple s early keyboard designs citation needed It was widely speculated that San Francisco was going to be the long awaited font that Apple had reportedly been developing for independent use in their products and the font s name was leaked in November 2014 when the WatchKit SDK was released to developers On June 8 2015 at the WWDC 2015 conference San Francisco replaced Helvetica Neue as the system font for both macOS and iOS operating systems 5 The version used known as SF UI was modified to make it wider than its Apple Watch counterpart more akin to the previously used Helvetica Neue The original version has since been renamed SF Compact New York edit In 2019 Apple released New York a serif counterpart to San Francisco Keyboards edit nbsp Univers on a pre 2003 PowerBook G4 nbsp Univers was first used as the keyboard font of the Apple IIc Apple s keyboards were long labeled with Univers 47 Condensed Light Oblique a design choice by Apple s industrial design partner Frog Design This began in 1984 with the Apple IIc which had tilted front panel buttons to match the inclination of the lettering Univers was eventually replaced on Apple s keyboards by VAG Rounded which was used on all iBook models PowerBooks introduced after 2003 and MacBooks MacBooks Pro MacBooks Air and Apple Keyboards from August 2007 until early 2015 The font was developed by Sedley Place Ltd for German car manufacturer Volkswagen and was used in much of their marketing materials 6 On March 9 2015 Apple introduced a new generation of MacBook 7 that utilizes the Apple designed San Francisco typeface See also editFonts on Macintosh List of Apple typefaces List of typefaces included with macOSReferences edit Steve Jobs Business Card from 1979 networkworld com Reebok Classic Collection Vector logo hdicon com Worlds Best Logo Designer Logo Designing Logo Design Logo Designer robjanoff com March 22 2018 Owen Williams November 18 2014 Meet Apple s new font designed for its smartwatch Typeface The Next Web Stinson Liz June 9 2015 Why Apple Abandoned the World s Most Beloved Typeface Wired Retrieved September 23 2015 Typographic Abbreviations Series 2 VAG MyFonts Musings Myfonts wordpress com November 17 2006 Retrieved October 13 2009 Apple Unveils All New MacBook March 9 2015 General references edit Apple Computer Fonts on Mac OS X Retrieved 2004 09 25 January 29 2003 Using and Managing Fonts in Mac OS X PDF Retrieved 2004 10 01 October 8 2003 Fonts in Mac OS X PDF Retrieved 2004 10 04 Font Support in the Mac OS Retrieved 2004 10 01 November 11 2002 LastResort Font Retrieved 2004 10 03 June 10 2004 Sharing Fonts Between Mac OS X and Classic Retrieved 2004 10 22 September 14 2000 The Zapf table Retrieved 2004 10 22 1996 07 06 Inside Macintosh Text Built in Script Support IM Tx Retrieved 2004 10 27 November 1990 Apple II GS TN 41 Font Family Numbers Retrieved 2004 10 28 December 19 2002 ROMAN TXT MacRoman to Unicode map Retrieved 2004 11 09 Jaques Moury Beauchap Rob Janoff Graphic Designer Author of the first logo for Apple Computer Retrieved 2004 10 28 Michael Everson 2003 11 11 Multilingual Macintosh Support Retrieved 2004 10 27 Erfert Fenton October 1994 Inside QuickDraw GX Fonts MacWorld Archived June 14 1997 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 2004 11 01 FreeType Freetype and Patents Retrieved 2004 10 29 Nobumi Iyanaga 2000 09 26 Unicode and Mac OS and Code converters Retrieved 2004 10 27 Tony Kavadias 2004 07 24 Apple II User Interfaces Retrieved 2004 10 28 Steve Gibson 2003 04 10 The Origins of Sub Pixel Font Rendering Retrieved 2004 10 27 Jens Hofman Hansen July 2 2002 Apple logoets historie Retrieved 2004 09 22 Susan Kare World Class Cities Retrieved 2004 09 25 John Kheyt 2003 05 23 The Devil s Advocate MS s ClearType KOs Apple s Quartz In The Lightweight Division Retrieved 2004 10 27 Microsoft 2003 03 12 Press release Microsoft Announces Expanded Access To Extensive Intellectual Property Portfolio Retrieved 2004 10 27 Jonathan Ploudre June 1 2000 Macintosh System Fonts Retrieved 2004 09 21 Ed Tracy 1998 10 15 Apple and the History of Personal Computer Design Retrieved 2004 10 27 Norman Walsh August 14 1996 comp fonts FAQ Macintosh Info Retrieved 2004 09 21 XvsXP XvsXP com Fonts Retrieved 2004 10 27 External links editAdvanced Typography with Mac OS X Tiger Text amp Fonts Apple s typography developer site TrueType Reference Manual LastResort Font Full LastResort glyph table LastResort glyphs 236 pages PDF 5 pages PDF Unicode fonts for Mac OS X computers Survey of Unicode fonts included with Mac OS X and Microsoft Office 2004 Microsoft s ClearType website Fondu program to convert and separate Mac OS X dfont data fork files to TrueType OpenType Type 1 and Glyph Bitmap parts MacKeys online tool to convert Apple keyboard keys to their Unicode equivalents e g Cmd Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Typography of Apple Inc amp oldid 1182494058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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