mm100: The Road to Clarity – New York Times

MUDGE’S Musings

[The 100th MM! Wow! Who’d have thought this guy had that kind of attention span!]

highwaysign

From the usually dependable most emailed list in this day’s NYTimes, a most fascinating story on highway signage. Take a look.

The New York Times

August 12, 2007

The Road to Clarity

By JOSHUA YAFFA

“So, what do you see?” Martin Pietrucha I asked, turning around in the driver’s seat of his mint green Ford Taurus. It was a cold day in January, and we were parked in the middle of a mock highway set on the campus of Pennsylvania State University in State College. Pietrucha is a jovial, 51-year-old professor of highway engineering. His tone was buoyant as he nodded toward the edge of the oval stretch of road where two green-and-white signs leaned against a concrete barrier.

What I saw, Pietrucha knew, was what we all may see soon enough as we rush along America’s 46,871 miles of Interstate highways. What I saw was Clearview, the typeface that is poised to replace Highway Gothic, the standard that has been used on signs across the country for more than a half-century. Looking at a sign in Clearview after reading one in Highway Gothic is like putting on a new pair of reading glasses: there’s a sudden lightness, a noticeable crispness to the letters.

The Federal Highway Administration granted Clearview interim approval in 2004, meaning that individual states are free to begin using it in all their road signs. More than 20 states have already adopted the typeface, replacing existing signs one by one as old ones wear out. Some places have been quicker to make the switch — much of Route I-80 in western Pennsylvania is marked by signs in Clearview, as are the roads around Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport — but it will very likely take decades for the rest of the country to finish the roadside makeover. It is a slow, almost imperceptible process. But eventually the entire country could be looking at Clearview.

The typeface is the brainchild of Don Meeker, an environmental graphic designer, and James Montalbano, a type designer. They set out to fix a problem with a highway font, and their solution — more than a decade in the making — may end up changing a lot more than just the view from the dashboard. Less than a generation ago, fonts were for the specialist, an esoteric pursuit, what Stanley Morison, the English typographer who helped create Times New Roman in the 1930s, called “a minor technicality of civilized life.” Now, as the idea of branding has claimed a central role in American life, so, too, has the importance and understanding of type. Fonts are image, and image is modern America.

The full article includes an interesting slide show (from which the images in this post have been captured), so why not check it out. Remember, though, it’s from the Magazine, so it’s long form, but worthy of your attention.

[Per L-HC’s reformed process, please click the link below for the complete article — but then please come on back!]

The Road to Clarity – New York Times

So, it’s about highway signs, but it’s also about one of this writer’s favorite subjects, typography. I’ve always been a collector of interesting fonts, and I’m guessing that there’s a lot of such interest out in the ‘Sphere, since there are a myriad of typography sites, both interest groups and foundries, to be found.

I’m imagining that there are many amateurs out there like me, whose Fonts file on their PC is quite full.

Just checked, and my C:\Windows\Fonts folder has 249 fonts currently; I’m surmising that there are many, many others tucked away elsewhere, since this sounds like only about half the number I’ve counted in the past (perhaps on one of MUDGE‘s earlier PCs).

Can’t possible use that many, ever. And for L-HC, I’ve used a fixed width font (very typewriter like, in case anyone remembers what a typewriter was) called, appropriately, Lucida Sans Typewriter, because it seemed a distinctive choice at the time, when many choices were made.

Only 248 to go.

Just kidding.

I think.

Why is typography such an alluring topic for so many people? Because it’s more than just black letters on a white background.

Type is just as much about psychology as geometry. A letter’s shape, its curves, the way it sits next to other letters — all these factors give a font its personality and in turn create an emotion and connotation for the reader.

Personality, emotion, connotation. And I thought it was just some designer’s clever new way of looking at something quite old, the 26 letters of our English alphabet.

Who knew?

This story is on the Times’ most emailed list because most everyone drives (except of course, in the Manhattan home of the Times!), and can relate to poorly designed signage. Quick, at 75mph, do I exit for Smithton at the first exit, or the next? There’s glare, is that route 65, or 86?

highwaysign2

Driving long distances at night is a task I seldom undertake as cheerfully as once I did, and glare and poorly worded and designed signs are part of the reason, though not the only one. But that’s a story for another time…

The lonely campaign fought by Meeker and Montalbano for so many years, is a worthy one, no question.

Of course, these days, the most pressing issue is going to be examine and FIX ALL OF THOSE GODDAMN BRIDGES ALREADY!

It’s it for now. Thanks,

–MUDGE

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5 Responses to mm100: The Road to Clarity – New York Times

  1. ClapSo says:

    Congratz on the 100th post! Is your better half making a cake I hope 😉

    There needs to be more art to our road signs then we currently have. I never could stand the old font, and I’m sorry to say I see little difference in the new font. I’m a fan of matissse Itc and Tempus Sans Itc, but I’m a bit weird.

    I also think we should print our road signs in Pig Latin, just to make em fun…

    The scientifically impossible I do right away
    The spiritually miraculous takes a bit longer

  2. Brian Mora says:

    I have seen plenty of Clearview in use in Arkansas and to some extent in Illinois, Kansas, Oklahoma, and to a lesser extent Missouri…and I have not noticed anything different from Highway Gothic, except that it looks rather unusual.
    What I HAVE noticed, however, is a number of big green signs have lots of wasted green space.
    What needs to be done, instead of a new font, is make the old font work, by using larger letters and even route markers on the BGS’s.
    If highway transport agencies would do that they would not need a new font.
    And yes I agree with you: The bridges absolutely need to be replaced, repaired, and improved.

  3. mudge says:

    Brian,

    Thanks so much for your insightful observations. Drop by any time!

  4. goth says:

    Being successful usually means finding the courage, the perseverance, along with the will to turn into the individual you believe you were supposed to become

  5. varionet says:

    Nice topic and useful information. Great work!

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