The Leica "square" font

rogerzilla

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As used on current lenses, except the cheaper Summarits, and the M9 shutter dial, among other places.

Who likes it, and who thinks it's terminally naff?

Apparently it's a proprietary font, but fairly close to Eurostile.
 
I like it but I'm not really into fonts. Although I do understand their importance.
It's like the Porsche Boxter font. It took them a long time to select the font for the instruments in that car.
 
I have that font but also one called Metrostyle which is more or less identical. I think it looks better in "extended" rather than "regular".
 
ok, I'm a bit of font geek (www, posters, DTP stuff), and I hate it, look like taken from Digilux 1. even MP with classic engraving look terrible because of this.

but thats me, I'm also paying loads of attention to girls nose.
 
It's one of the most legible fonts I've seen for digits.

I wouldn't fill a table with it, but for lone digits - such as those on a lens - it's very easy to read and understand.
 
i thought it's close to Bank Gothic than Eurostile. there was a thread a while ago on photo.net. there's a proper name for the font, specially developed for Leica.

btw, was it DIN on the older Leicas (M3, M2, M4...)? i'm not too sure
 
I'm reasonably font of it.
Dear Rob,

Shame! Shame! Aaaargh!

To me it looks rather old fashioned. The font, not the joke, which is VERY old fashioned. But to return to Leica: not old fashioned as in 100 years ago, but as in 15 years ago.

Then again, I like Caslon.

Cheers,

R.
 
The first thread I have seen for Leica fontlers. I know, but it just had to be said. Happy fontling to all.

Bob
 
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Not so fast...

Eurostile is one of the most important designs from the Italian font designer Aldo Novarese. It was originally produced in 1962 by the Nebiolo foundry as a more complete version of the earlier Microgramma(1952), a caps-only font designed by Novarese and A. Butti.
Eurostile reflects the flavor and spirit of the 1950s and 1960s. It has big, squarish shapes with rounded corners that look like television sets from that era. Eurostile has sustained the ability to give text a dynamic, technological aura. It works well for headlines and small bodies of text. The Eurostile font family has 11 weights, from roman to bold and condensed to extended.

i.e. The design is 60 years old...

But then all western fonts are Latin based and how old is that. Seems there a lot of people re-inventing the wheel to suits subjective tastes.
 
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Incidentally, it is very easy to create a custom font using fontographer. Just load any existing font and play around with some glyphs and save as your own font. This is why there are so many variations of original designs. So LG 1050 WILL be a copy of Microgramma/Eurostyle with minor glyph changes.
To all intents and purpose they look the same to me. But I prefer Metrostyle which is a copy but it has had the tops and bottoms of characters such as C O S slightly rounded making it a slightly softer looking font.
 
It's a custom font but similar to Isonorm. Teutonic and technical in form I think it's perfectly suited to its application.

Isonorm.gif
 
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