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- Langues disponibles
- OpenType
- Histoire
Helvetica World® famille de polices
Conçue par Linotype Design Studio en 1961 and Max Miedinger en 1957
Jusqu'à 4 Polices de caractères / 1 Coffrets Promotionnels
Licences disponibles pour tous les styles:
Supporte jusqu'à 89 langues.
Veuillez sélectionner un format afin de visualiser les langues disponibles :
Supporte jusqu'à 19 fonctionnalités OpenType.
Veuillez sélectionner un format pour consulter les fonctionnalités disponibles :
Helvetica is one of the most famous and popular typefaces in the world. It lends an air of lucid efficiency to any typographic message with its clean, no-nonsense shapes. The original typeface was called Neue Haas Grotesk, and was designed in 1957 by Max Miedinger for the Haas'sche Schriftgiesserei (Haas Type Foundry) in Switzerland. In 1960 the name was changed to Helvetica (an adaptation of Helvetia", the Latin name for Switzerland).
Over the years, the original
Helvetica World, an update to the classic Helvetica design using the OpenType font format, contains the following Microsoft code pages:
1252 Latin 1,
1250 Latin 2 Eastern,
1251 Cyrillic,
1253 Greek,
1254 Turk,
1255 Hebrew,
1256 Arabic,
1257 Windows Baltic,
1258 Windows Vietnamese,
as well as a mixture of box drawing element glyphs and mathematical symbols & operators.
In total, each weight of Helvetica World contains 1866 different glyph characters!
Many customers ask us what good non-Latin typefaces can be mixed with Helvetica World. Fortunately, Helvetica World already includes Greek, Cyrillic and a specially-designed Hebrew in its OpenType character set. But Linotype also offers a number of CJK fonts that can be matched with Helvetica World.