![]() ![]() įutura is another font that is great for readability and one of the reasons it’s excellent in presentations, an elegant font that has a real personality. Futuraįutura is a Sans-serif typeface (meaning it has no serifs), designed between 19 by typeface designer Paul Renner and created during the Bauhaus period, commissioned by the Bauer type foundry.Ī fun fact for you: the Apollo 11 astronauts left a commemorative plaque on the moon in 1969. There have been many later versions of Garamond created, including numerous variations (trying to improve on the original version) such as a custom variant of the ITC Garamond typeface, called Apple Garamond. The original typeface created for a French King called Francis I in the 1540s. Garamond has a rich history behind it and one of the reasons I love it! Claude Garamond, a French publisher from Paris, created the font and was one of the leading type designers of his time. It is a typeface that always remains professional with quite a clean, sharp appearance. ![]() I like Garamond for its more mature qualities. Not a typeface many would automatically go for but a great font all the same. (Plus, I would have frowned upon by a few of my designer buddies had I selected Arial above others on this list.) 2. I am also a big fan of Arial, but it didn’t quite make this top 5 list. I found an excellent comparison of the two typefaces for you to compare. To the non-typography connoisseur’s eye, it is hard to tell the difference between the two. Some people may confuse Arial with Helvetica due to their number of similarities. It is also effortless to read at different sizes and weights. In presentations, Helvetica is powerful and can add real impact, but it doesn’t take over the limelight. Here are 40 Excellent Logos that use Helvetica. Helvetica has been extremely popular typeface with corporations.Īmerica Apparel, for example, uses it for their logo. Interestingly, Helvetica was originally named Die Neue Haas Grotesk (I’m sure that name went down well with the cool kids). ![]() The font Helvetica was designed and created by Max Miedinger & Eduard Hoffmann in the late 1950s. ![]() If I could summarise Helvetica in one sentence, it would be: “Clarity with complete simplicity.” The beauty of Helvetica is in its neutrality, a font that can blend to any style, like that of a chameleon in but in the font world. It is a flexible, diverse and robust typeface. Quick, somebody, please alert the Helvetica police! You’ve probably heard it recommended time and time again, but Helvetica rocks this world. These are the five classic presentation fonts that will look good in any PowerPoint or Keynote presentation if you know how to use them correctly! 1. ![]()
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January 2023
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