Unica (typeface)

Unica or Haas Unica is a neo-grotesque sans-serif typeface developed at Haas Type Foundry in the late 1970s and originally released in 1980. Initiated as a project that sought to combine the strengths of both Helvetica and Univers, it had the misfortune of being released for phototypesetting just as the technology was being made obsolete by desktop publishing, and subsequent corporate mergers and a copyright dispute kept a digital version off the market. In 2015, two digital revivals were released: one by the rights holders, and the other with the blessing of the team that originally developed it.

Unica
CategorySans-serif
ClassificationNeo-grotesque sans-serif
Designer(s)Team ’77 (André Gürtler, Christian Mengelt and Erich Gschwind)
FoundryHaas Type Foundry (defunct in 1989)
Lineto (Unica77 LL)
Monotype (Neue Haas Unica)
Date released1980
LicenseProprietary
Design based onHelvetica, Univers and Akzidenz-Grotesk

Haas Unica

In 1972 the now defunct Haas Type Foundry (Switzerland) bought its french competitor Deberny & Peignot. The latter was the holder of the copyright of the Univers. Thus Helvetica (a.k.a. Neue Haas Grotesk) and Univers were from then on held by the same company. During the 1970s Haas decided to introduce an updated version of Helvetica for electronic on-screen phototypesetting. The task was given to Team ’77 (André Gürtler, Christian Mengelt and Erich Gschwind). The result was a hybrid of mainly Helvetica and Univers, which gave it the name Unica (a portmanteau of Univers and Helvetica), but they incorporated also features of other typefaces, like Akzidenz-Grotesk.[1][2] Unica was released in 1980. Because of the rise of desktop publishing software and an ownership dispute, the typeface disappeared very soon from the market. Until 2008 there was a digital implementation available from Scangraphic in the fontstore of Elsner+Flake, but this implementation had to be removed from the market because Linotype claimed the copyright of the defunct Haas Type Foundry.

Neue Haas Unica (2014-2015)

Designed by Toshi Omagari for Monotype, it is a version of Haas Unica created based on the Team  '77's Unica phototypesetting files found in the Monotype's archive in Germany.[3]

The font family includes 18 fonts in 9 weights and 1 width, with complementary italics. The Euro sign in this version has horizontal terminals as in Helvetica and Neue Haas Grotesk. This version does not offer rounded dots, but does include small caps, and a pan-European version also offers Greek and Cyrillic character coverage.

LL Unica77 (2015-2016)

LL Unica77 is a revival of Unica based on the original drawings from the 1970s. It was created in cooperation of Maurice Göldner and Christian Mengelt (who was a member of Team ’77 and authorised this implementation of Unica) for the Swiss type foundry Lineto.[4] According to the type designer, Albert-Jan Pool, Lineto is (contrary to Monotype) paying a licence fee to Team ’77.[5] Changes to Haas Unica include added Euro sign, with vertical terminals as in Univers and Neue Helvetica. This release uses stylistic alternates to offer a version with round dots and punctuation.

Initial version was released on 2015-03-07 with 8 fonts in 4 weights (light, regular, bold, black) and 1 width, with complementary italics. 6 fonts in 3 additional weights (Thin, Medium, Extra Black) were released in February 2016.

See also

References

  1. Vanhemert, Kyle. "A Legendary Redesign of Helvetica, Reborn After 30 Years". Wired. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  2. Farris, Jessica. "The History Behind Monotype's Neue Haas Unica". Print. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  3. The History Behind Monotype’s Neue Haas Unica
  4. "Unica". Lineto. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  5. "Neue Haas Unica comparison". Typography.Guru. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
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