

A–Z in upper- and lowercase, 0–9, and the most common punctuation marks. So I took matters into my own hands, and created rudimentary specimens for each of Microsoft’s five new typefaces (and Calibri to boot). I’m not the only one to find this curious. They’ve provided glimpses of them, but mostly at large display sizes, not text sizes, which is where they really matter in the context of Office documents. What I find weird about the whole thing is that Microsoft still hasn’t really shown any of these new fonts. The “survey”, such that it was, seemingly consisted of just reading people’s replies on Twitter.) (My guess is they’re full of shit and probably knew all along they were going to go with Aptos/Bierstadt, the obvious choice, from the start. Companies that have taste do not conduct design via surveys. I don’t know if Microsoft actually chose Aptos (née Bierstadt) based on customer feedback, but it says a lot about the company either way. But as there was a change of guard so too the Impassioned feedback and chose the one that resonated most There, as you got a chance to use them, we listened to your All of them were added to the drop-down font picker. Hope that one of them would be our next default font for Microsoftģ65. How do you replaceĬalibri? How do you find that one true font that can take itsĪs we shared before, Microsoft commissioned five new fonts:īierstadt, Grandview, Seaford, Skeena, and Tenorite. Was exciting at times, but also intimidating. To have sharpness, uniformity, and be great for display type. Perfect font for higher resolution screens began. (I’ve never once set anything in Arial, for example, but it’s a near daily irritation thanks to its ubiquity.)įor 15 years, our beloved Calibri was Microsoft’s default font andĬrown keeper of office communications, but as you know, our Thus, Microsoft’s typographic choices affect us all. But it’s impossible not to encounter documents created with Office, whether you personally use it or not. I have never regularly used any Office app other than Excel, and that was over 20 years ago.

I know this is just a lighthearted salutation, but it’s not the typing of text that exposes “everyone” to Office’s default font, it’s the reading of text. Si Daniels, principal program manager for fonts and typography, Microsoft Office design (my god do people at Microsoft have long titles), in a much-noted post last week on Medium, 1 “ A Change of Typeface: Microsoft’s New Default Font Has Arrived”:ĭear every human on earth that’s ever typed text, Aptos, Microsoft’s New Default Font for Office Documents Friday, 21 July 2023
