Cem Eskinazi revitalizes an old favorite by Cyrus Highsmith. Read about it in the design notes.
Cyrus Highsmith • design • March 13, 2024
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Cyrus Highsmith • design • March 12, 2024
Occupant Fonts • in-use • January 29, 2024
Cyrus Highsmith • design • April 27, 2023
Occupant Fonts • design • April 27, 2023
Marie Otsuka • design • November 14, 2021
Occupant Fonts • design • August 25, 2021
Cem Eskinazi • design • May 09, 2021
Cyrus Highsmith • publication • March 09, 2021
Occupant Fonts • publication • September 13, 2020
Occupant Fonts • in-use • August 11, 2020
June Shin • design • August 02, 2020
Occupant Fonts • design • January 26, 2020
Marie Otsuka • editorial • December 29, 2019
June Shin • editorial • December 17, 2019
Cyrus Highsmith • editorial • October 31, 2019
Cem Eskinazi • design • October 31, 2019
Elizabeth Leeper • in-use • July 22, 2019
Occupant Fonts • in-use • May 07, 2019
Elizabeth Leeper • publication • March 31, 2019
Cyrus Highsmith • design • July 29, 2018
Cyrus Highsmith • editorial • April 22, 2018
Cyrus Highsmith • editorial • February 28, 2018
Cyrus Highsmith • design • April 16, 2017
Occupant Fonts • design • June 23, 2016
Cyrus Highsmith • editorial • June 08, 2016
Occupant Fonts • design • June 07, 2016
Occupant Fonts • publication • May 19, 2016
Cyrus Highsmith • editorial • April 26, 2016
Occupant Fonts • announcement • February 04, 2015
Occupant Fonts • in-use • December 17, 2012
Occupant Fonts • publication • August 30, 2012
Cyrus Highsmith’s Allium series is a humanist sans serif with a pan-European character set. It’s a calm, maybe even quiet design, drawn for headlines and deck sizes. Highsmith named it after a genus of flowering plants that includes onions, leeks, and garlic.
Allium
Allium Text Allium Rounded
Marie Otsuka grew Allium Rounded from Cyrus Highsmith’s humanist sans serif series, Allium. In addition to rounding the stroke endings, Otsuka cultivated the original proportions to suit the new design. It’s a nutritious design that works best at headline and desk sizes.
Allium Rounded
Allium Text Allium
Cyrus Highsmith culled his Allium family down to size, engineering a text version that shines in the 8 to 24-point range. In addition to adjusting the proportions and spacing, Highsmith accentuated the contrast between inside and outside of letters to increase their broadcast range. June Shin and Cem Eskinazi assisted.
Allium Text
Allium Rounded Allium
The cross between calligraphy and sans serif is rare, inhabiting territory between Hermann Zapf’s Optima, classical sans structure with a calligraphic spirit, and Warren Chappell’s Lydian, classical calligraphy without serifs. Cyrus Highsmith claims adventurous new ground with Amira, a letterform that pops from the page with an angled vitality. Amira both welcomes and surprises readers with bright new rhythms and texture. In 2023, Cem Eskinazi expanded the character set to include small caps plus Greek & Cyrillic.
Amira 2
Cyrus Highsmith’s Antenna is a versatile industrial sans serif that projects confidence and deliberation. He slowed down his usual fast curves and shifted the emphasis to pattern of white shapes formed inside and between characters. With seven weights in four widths and matching italics, Antenna is ready for almost anything.
Antenna
Antenna Serif
Antenna Serif is the slab counterpart to Cyrus Highsmith’s Antenna. Developed with David Jonathan Ross, it weighs in at 56 styles—seven weights in four widths, each with italics. Antenna Serif plays well in print and digital formats.
Biscotti is Cyrus Highsmith’s response to the prompt, “I want a typeface that makes me feel pretty.” It was drawn in 2004 for Brides magazine to set headlines and pull quotes. Biscotti is a simplified 21st century take on the traditional English roundhand calligraphy.
Biscotti
Cyrus Highsmith began work on Daley’s Gothic in 1997, experimenting with a steel brush and ink on paper. He went on to draw many variations, and in 1998 finally settled on three weights with matching italics, designed for compact headlines. He named the family after his mother, who taught him how to draw.
Daleys Gothic
Cyrus Highsmith created Dispatch in his search for an industrial-grade slab serif to serve as text and display. It’s a taut amalgam of letterforms found in typescript, on engineering blueprints, and shipping labels. Use it for heavy commercial lifting. Cem Eskinazi assisted with its re-release as Dispatch 2.
Dispatch 2
Dispatch Mono
Dispatch Mono is a monospaced version of Cyrus Highsmith’s industrial strength slab serif, Dispatch. He originally made it for his own personal use on shipping labels and printing out PostScript code. Now it’s available to everyone in regular and bold weights with corresponding italics.
Trapped in a seemingly endless meeting, Cyrus Highsmith sought refuge in his ever-present sketchbook. As he attempted to doodle his way to freedom, the idea for Eggwhite began to emerge. It’s an experiment in unconventional weight distribution that comes in a pair of playful weights.
Eggwhite
Cyrus Highsmith began Gasket as a single font to accompany his illustrations in a children’s book. The amiable series moves with a gentle hop thanks to the slight slant and subtly staggered endings. He added weights, italics, and small caps for Gasket’s release into the world.
Gasket
Gasket Unicase Gasket Uncial
The most famous example of uncial lettering is found in The Book of Kells, circa 800 CE. However, the uncial script dates all the way back to the fourth century. Cyrus Highsmith updates this ancient calligraphy in Gasket Uncial. He hopes his Irish ancestors would be proud.
Gasket Uncial
Gasket Unicase Gasket
For the busy typographer who cannot be bothered to decide which case to use, Cyrus Highsmith drew Gasket Unicase. It features extralarge lowercase forms designed to fit with the capitals. Gasket Unicase contains no ascenders or descenders.
Gasket Unicase
Gasket Uncial Gasket
Steadfast and no-nonsense, Heron Sans is always ready to go to work. Cyrus Highsmith galvanized its mechanically inspired letters with warmth and energy. It’s a versatile family, capable of doing the job in both headlines and text.
Heron Sans
Heron Serif
Heron Serif is the slab serif counterpart to Cyrus Highsmith’s Heron Sans. It’s a versatile design, capable of doing the job in both headlines and text. Cem Eskinazi added Greek and Cyrillic alphabets.
Cyrus Highsmith found inspiration for his Ibis series by combining unlikely sources, Justus Erisch Walbaum’s 1919 Walbaum and Hermann Zapf’s 1952 Melior. For the display version, he thinned the serifs and compacted the fitting. It comes in a robust range of weights and widths with corresponding italics.
Ibis Display
Ibis Text
Cyrus Highsmith found inspiration for his Ibis series by combining unlikely sources, Justus Erisch Walbaum’s 1919 Walbaum and Hermann Zapf’s 1952 Melior. He drew Ibis Text for use in his own typography textbook, Inside Paragraphs. It comes in a robust range of weights, small caps, and corresponding italics.
Way back in 1997, Cyrus Highsmith bought a box of magentic letters from a variety store. Many years later, the colorful plastic shapes inspired him to make Icebox. It’s a modular sans serif for headlines and short blurbs of text available in three weights plus a bonus Magnet style. It requires no refrigeration.
Icebox
Icebox Magnet
Way back in 1997, Cyrus Highsmith bought a box of magentic letters from a variety store. The colorful plastic shapes inspired him to make Icebox many years later. It’s a modular sans serif for headlines and short blurbs of text available in three weights plus a bonus Magnet style. It requires no refrigeration.
In 1938, French designer Charles Loupot drew a groundbreaking logotype to promote St. Raphaël aperitif wine. Half a century later, the logo inspired New York designer and illustrator Laurie Rosenwald to work with Cyrus Highsmith on expanding it into a typeface. At once industrial and calligraphic, Loupot is one of the few scripts that offers a successful all-caps setting.
Loupot
Magmatic is a massive sans serif series from Cyrus Highsmith and June Shin. Its nuts-and-bolts character remains steady through an extensive range of widths and weights. The design was loosely inspired by Japanese Showa-era typefaces found on shipping labels, machinery, and buildings.
Magmatic
Mantar is a psychedelic Scotch Roman designed by Cem Eskinazi. After stumbling upon a phototypesetting specimen, Cem was inspired by the warmth of the letters. Mantar is a soft display face with curvy and elongated endings. It comes in 12 styles including a funky Ultra weight.
Mantar
Occupant Gothic typograhically embodies Cyrus Highsmith’s caffeinated sketching style circa 1998. It’s a frantic angular design with no clear function in two weights plus italics. The name predates the founding of Occupant Fonts and sounds beautiful in Highsmith’s Wisconsin accent.
Occupant Gothic
Occupant Oldstyle is a 21st century text face from Cyrus Highsmith, assisted by June Shin. The rounded triangular endings are the result of a long fermentation process that combines ingredients from Japanese Mincho style typefaces, rounded sans serifs, electronic music, and toys. Highsmith calls them ‘child-safe serifs’.
Occupant Oldstyle
In Pentameter, Marie Otsuka explores the polyrhythmic potential that usually stays dormant inside the limitations of monospaced typefaces. As an “upright italic,” the letterforms create a lively pattern while their uniform metrics remain steady. The result is an inventive design on a syncopated beat that resonates with the poetics beyond code.
Pentameter
Spanish for press, Prensa is a dynamic series for text from Cyrus Highsmith. He arrived at this family’s character through his process of “wrapping outside curves around the inside, deliberately creating tension between the two,” a technique epitomized in Electra, a 1935 bookface by 20th-century master W.A. Dwiggins. This tension really appears in the italics, which stray from the traditional forms to balance simplicity with vitality.
Prensa
Prensa Display
Cyrus Highsmith designed Prensa Display to accompany his popular textface, Prensa. The display cut shares Prensa’s distinctive tension within the letterforms but has sharper features and a more compact fit. It also includes additional narrow widths for really packing in powerful headlines.
“Kiosk” in Spanish is Quiosco, also the name of a text family designed by Cyrus Highsmith. It’s part of his exploration of the work of W.A. Dwiggins and the contrast between the inside and outside of letterforms. Quiosco brings a lively texture to narrow columns of text and permits compact wordspaces with no loss of readability.
Quiosco
Quiosco Display
Cem Eskinazi took Quiosco and sharpened it for headlines. As he redrew Highsmith’s textface, Eskinazi imagined transforming it from something made of clay into something chiseled in stone. In addition, he also extended the weight range and drew a special set of figures to go with the small caps.
Rapport is a grotesque sans serif that exudes warmth. It was born on the walls of RISD Museum when June Shin designed the exhibition Altered States in 2017. She took inspiration from one of the artworks on display, the frontispiece of the 1862 publication of Charles François Daubigny’s etchings. Rapport’s whimsical features and general wideness contribute to the design’s quirky, friendly character.
Rapport
Relay is as close as Cyrus Highsmith has gotten to drawing a geometric sans serif. It zigs and zags between European art deco, American sign lettering, and modernist geometry. It comes in five weights and three widths with matching italics for setting headlines and text of all kinds.
Relay
Cyrus Highsmith created the extensive Salvo series to help unify three different magazines under one typographic umbrella. Salvo Sans is an energetic, optimistic design in five weights and three widths with corresponding italics. It works for headlines, pull quotes, as well as short text.
Salvo Sans
Salvo Serif
Cyrus Highsmith created the extensive Salvo series to help unify three different magazines under one typographic umbrella. Salvo Serif is an outspoken slab design in five weights and three widths with corresponding italics. The heavy serifs help to form unified words that catch the reader’s eye and draw them into the text.
Cyrus Highsmith drew Scout to meet the evergreen request for an industrial sans serif that resembles DIN 1451 but not too much. He mixed in ingredients from Venus, Cairoli, as well as his own graphic sensibilities. It comes in a robust range of weights and two widths plus italics for headlines, captions, and sidebars. June Shin added Greek and Cyrillic alphabets.
Scout
Scout Text
Scout Text was drawn to accompany Cyrus Highsmith’s popular utilitarian sans serif Scout. He optimized it for small sizes by increasing the x-height, opening the spacing, and adding tails to the lowercase ‘l’ and ‘a’ for better legibility. It comes in 4 weights plus italics.
Cyrus Highsmith is known for his all-round workhorse families like Antenna, Scout, and Salvo. In Serge, he lets loose the reins and raises a show pony. It’s an acrobatic design for decorative blurbs, signs, and headlines. The family has three weights, from Regular to Black, but all are equally light on their feet. A set of swash caps adds a subtle flair.
Serge
Stainless was originally derived from Cyrus Highsmith’s slab serif, Dispatch. It began as a simple experiment but evolved into its own series. It’s been used in headlines and pull quotes in publications around the world from Señor Fútbol to the Wall Street Journal. Cem Eskinazi assisted with its re-release as Stainless 2.
Stainless 2
Tick and Tock reflect Cyrus Highsmith’s long love affair with stencils as well as modular alphabets. Tick came from cutting paper and includes a randomizing feature that gives words a natural handmade appearance. It comes in only one weight but it gets the job done when you need a word or two to attract the reader’s attention.
Tick
Tick and Tock reflect Cyrus Highsmith’s long love affair with stencils as well as modular alphabets. Tock is the mechanized version of the kit of parts established in Tick. It would be at home on a Bauhaus poster or on the side of a bulldozer. Like Tick, it comes in just one mighty weight.
Tock
Cyrus Highsmith’s Zócalo series was part of Eduardo Danilo’s 2002 redesign of the leading Mexico City newspaper, El Universal. It was inspired by Nicholas Kis’s oldstyle as well as Highsmith’s impressions of México itself. Zócalo Banner is a stylistic variation of Zócalo Display with simplified serifs for headlines and decks.
Zócalo Banner
Zocalo Text Zocalo Display
Cyrus Highsmith’s Zócalo series was part of Eduardo Danilo’s 2002 redesign of the leading Mexico City newspaper, El Universal. It was inspired by Nicholas Kis’s oldstyle as well as Highsmith’s impressions of México itself. Zócalo Display is a sparkling, compact design for headlines and decks.
Zócalo Display
Zocalo Text Zocalo Banner
Cyrus Highsmith’s Zócalo series was part of Eduardo Danilo’s 2002 redesign of the leading Mexico City newspaper, El Universal. It was inspired by Nicholas Kis’s oldstyle as well as Highsmith’s impressions of México itself. Zócalo Text derives its sturdy proportions from Chauncey Griffith’s classic newsface, Ionic No.5.
Zócalo Text
Zocalo Display Zocalo Banner