{"id":37101,"date":"2018-11-25T21:46:00","date_gmt":"2018-11-25T19:46:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.grapheine.com\/graphic-design-en\/typographie-la-comic-sans"},"modified":"2019-05-20T18:00:13","modified_gmt":"2019-05-20T16:00:13","slug":"typography-comic-sans","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.grapheine.com\/en\/history-of-graphic-design\/typography-comic-sans","title":{"rendered":"Typorama #01 : The Comic Sans MS"},"content":{"rendered":"
As well as our series on the great names of graphic design<\/a>, we start here a new series on the typographies that have made their mark in the world of graphic design<\/strong>.\u00a0Here is Typorama<\/strong>, the typographic panorama to explore the world of typography.<\/p>\n Nothing predicted the Comic Sans MS to become what it is today: a font hated by graphic designers<\/strong> and yet very popular with the general public.<\/p>\n The turbulent history of this typography began in 1994 when Microsoft decided to create an intuitive, fun and illustrative interface to help users use a desktop computer. This future failure was called Microsoft Bob.<\/p>\n This interface allowed us to see our computer as the interior of a house with its different rooms, and it was by this analogy that the user had to become familiar with all the functions of the machine. This made it easier to learn how to store folders, find a program or delete files. And all this, supported by a small yellow dog named Rover, who acted as a mascot and told us how to do it.<\/p>\n It is because this dog originally communicated in Times New Roman that our story becomes interesting. A typographer passing by found this font cold and unsuitable for this purpose. He then decided to draw a new one. He was inspired by the lettering of American comic strips<\/strong>, in an attempt to mimic handwriting through round, clumsy and irregular forms. He wanted a warm typography that visually emanated a certain orality.<\/p>\n It was therefore in 1995 that this typographer named Vincent Connare created the famous Comic Sans MS<\/strong>. The particle \"Sans\" underlines its lack of wheelbases while the \"MS\" refers to its parent company: Microsoft.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The Microsoft Bob software will quickly fail and be abandoned. However, Rover, the little yellow dog, will not take the Comic Sans with him since Microsoft will integrate it as a default typography in its operating system, thus offering it a worldwide reach.<\/p>\n But what did Comic Sans do to have the privilege of being among the 50 worst inventions of all time according to Time magazine in 2010? Could this be because it has neither italics nor bold, because it has an irregular approach (the approach is the spacing between characters), or because many graphic designers consider it clumsy and childish? Probably.<\/p>\n But that's mainly because it was used in any way for anything. Her immediate popularity made her a star. It has been used everywhere, for everything and often in an inappropriate way: shop windows, e-mails, signs, books or documents of all kinds. Its overexploitation and overly general use has been mocked many times, as is the case, for example, with the site \"The Comic Sans Project<\/a>\", which uses well-known logos by replacing their font with the much-loved typography in question.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
The story of Comic Sans... It all started with a dog!<\/h2>\n
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American comics as an inspiration<\/h2>\n
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One of the 50 worst inventions of all time!<\/h2>\n