Search +350,000 Fonts

Neue Haas Grotesk FONT Download

Neue Haas Grotesk Font Download Previous: Twigs - A Handwritten Scribble Font Font Next: Magnolia Bloom: Handwritten Font Font
Download nowDesigners: Christian Schwartz, Max Miedinger
Publisher: Linotype
Neue Haas Grotesk was designed by Christian Schwartz, Max Miedinger and published by Linotype. Neue Haas Grotesk contains 22 styles and family package options. The font is currently #28 in Best Sellers. 

The first weights of Neue Haas Grotesk were designed in 1957-1958 by Max Miedinger for the Haas'sche Schriftgiesserei in Switzerland, with art direction by the company's principal, Eduard Hoffmann. Neue Haas Grotesk was to be the answer to the British and German grotesques that had become hugely popular thanks to the success of functionalist Swiss typography. The typeface was soon revised and released as Helvetica by Linotype AG.

As Neue Haas Grotesk had to be adapted to work on Linotype's hot metal linecasters, Linotype Helvetica was in some ways a radically transformed version of the original. For instance, the matrices for Regular and Bold had to be of equal widths, and therefore the Bold was redrawn at a considerably narrower proportion. During the transition from metal to phototypesetting, Helvetica underwent additional modifications. In the 1980s Neue Helvetica was produced as a rationalized, standardized version.

For Christian Schwartz, the assignment to design a digital revival of Neue Haas Grotesk was an occasion to set history straight. "Much of the warm personality of Miedinger's shapes was lost along the way. So rather than trying to rethink Helvetica or improve on current digital versions, this was more of a restoration project: bringing Miedinger's original Neue Haas Grotesk back to life with as much fidelity to his original shapes and spacing as possible (albeit with the addition of kerning, an expensive luxury in handset type)."

Schwartz's revival was originally commissioned in 2004 by Mark Porter for the redesign of The Guardian, but not used. Schwartz completed the family in 2010 for Richard Turley at Bloomberg Businessweek. Its thinnest weight was designed by Berton Hasebe.

Font Family:
· Neue Haas Grotesk Text 55 Roman
· Neue Haas Grotesk Text 56 Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Text 65 Medium
· Neue Haas Grotesk Text 66 Medium Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Text 75 Bold
· Neue Haas Grotesk Text 76 Bold Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 15 UltraThin
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 16 UltraThin Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 25 Thin
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 26 Thin Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 35 ExtraLight
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 36 ExtraLight Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 45 Light
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 46 Light Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 55 Roman
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 56 Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 65 Medium
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 66 Medium Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 75 Bold
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 76 Bold Italic
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 95 Black
· Neue Haas Grotesk Display 96 Black Italic


File Size: 18.82 MB


Tags: 1950s, business text, expensive, favorities, grotesque, helvetica, husqvarna, legible, magazine, nhg, sans-serif, signage, swiss

Release date: March 19, 2012

You can use this font for:
- Design projects: create images or vector artwork, including logos
- Website publishing: create a Web Project to add any font from our service to your website
- PDFs: embed fonts in PDFs for viewing and printing
- Video and broadcast: use fonts to create in-house or commercial video content and more
- The fonts are designed to work on MacOS (Apple) and Windows (Microsoft)
Back to the top