Over at The Guardian, Frida Garza has a pleasant new piece analyzing the graphic design advertising aesthetics of gentrification. Which actually only a fancy method of claiming: why the fuck does each new luxurious rental complicated use Neutraface as its font of selection?
Neutraface – a typeface identified for its clear traces and its legibility from a distance – has been dubbed the unofficial font of gentrification, based on eagle-eyed Twitter and Instagram customers who’ve noticed the typeface (and others prefer it) on buildings across the nation.
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For a lot of of those professionals and tastemakers, the minimalism of Neutraface – with its skinny, pointy, attention-grabbing traces – provides whimsy and magnificence to a constructing. On the similar time, as Neutraface home numbers have develop into too commonplace to disregard, some now affiliate them (together with gray paint jobs) with neighborhoods overtaken by development and renovations.
That affiliation additionally lends itself to different dystopian connections: low-cost fixer-upper jobs executed on the fly, lease hikes and other people being displaced from their longtime houses. Regardless of the meanings folks make of those home numbers, Neutraface now appears each indivisible from – and an indicator of – the fixed modifications of our nation’s screwed-up housing market.
Garza seems into the historical past of the font’s improvement, in addition to the rising pattern of utilizing it for, ya know, these sorts of housing initiatives. Individually, Neutraface was one of many two official typefaces utilized in my first job out of school in 2008, which implies the font has already gentrified a sure block in my thoughts anyway. So not less than Garza’s examination of the Neutraface pattern makes me really feel rather less lonely.
The gentrification font: how a sleek typeface became a neighborhood omen [Frida Garza / The Guardian]