
Left Image:
Bleecker Street (6)
Right Image:
14th Street (F/V)
This limited edition book is an expanded, annotated and profusely illustrated version of the acclaimed essay originally written for AIGA Voice. It takes into account new information and is supplemented by comprehensive notes, a bibliography and a chronology of the New York City subway system.
There is a common belief, reinforced by Gary Hustwit's documentary film Helvetica, that Helvetica is the signage typeface of the New York City subway system. But it is not true - or rather, it is only somewhat true. Helvetica is the official typeface of the MTA today, but it was not the typeface specified by Unimark International when they created the signage system at the end of the 1960s. Why was Helvetica not chosen originally? what was chosen in its place? why is Helvetica now used? when did the changeover occur? Paul Shaw answers these questions and then goes beyond them to look at how the subway's signage system has evolved over the past forty years. The resulting story is more than a tale of a typeface. It is a look at the forces that have molded a signage system.
Helvetica and the New York City Subway System has been awarded a Certificate of Typographic Excellence by the Type Directors Club and will appear their 56th Awards Exhibition and their annual Typography 31.
Read More | Sample Spreads | Purchase the Book
Front Cover: "Subway" stamped in white foil on black linen in Akzidenz Grotesk BQ Medium.
Back Cover: "Subway" stamped in white foil on black linen in Neue Helvetica 65 Medium.