Franklin Gothic
Franklin Gothic and its related faces are a large family of sans-serif typefaces in the industrial or grotesque style developed in the early years of the 20th century by the type foundry American Type Founders and credited to its head designer Morris Fuller Benton. “Gothic” was a contemporary term meaning sans-serif.
Franklin Gothic has been used in many advertisements and headlines in newspapers. The typeface continues to maintain a high profile, appearing in a variety of media from books to billboards. Despite a period of eclipse in the 1930s, after the introduction of European faces like Kabel and Futura, they were re-discovered by American designers in the 1940s and have remained popular ever since. Benton's Franklin Gothic family is a set of solid designs, particularly suitable for display and trade use such as headlines rather than for extended text. Many versions and adaptations have been made since.
Probably the best-known extension of Franklin Gothic is Victor Caruso's 1970s ITC Franklin Gothic, which expands the series to include book weights similar to Benton's News Gothic in a high x-height 1970s style. It is in part bundled with Microsoft Windows.
History
Franklin Gothic itself is an extra-bold sans-serif type. It draws upon earlier, nineteenth century models, from many of the twenty-three foundries consolidated into American Type Founders in 1892. Historian Alexander Lawson speculated that Franklin Gothic was influenced by Berthold’s Akzidenz-Grotesk types but offered no evidence to support this theory which was later presented as fact by Philip Meggs and Rob Carter. It was named in honor of a prolific American printer, Benjamin Franklin. The faces were issued over a period of ten years, all of which were designed by Benton and issued by A.T.F.- Franklin Gothic
- Franklin Gothic Condensed + Extra Condensed
- Franklin Gothic Italic
- Franklin Gothic Condensed Shaded
- Franklin Gothic Wide designed by John L. “Bud” Renshaw
- Franklin Gothic Condensed Italic designed by Whedon Davis
Hot metal copies
copied the face as Gothic #1, while both Linotype and Intertype, called their copies Gothic #16. Monotype’s copy kept the name Franklin Gothic, but because of the demands of mechanical composition, their version was modified to fit a standard arrangement. The Ludlow version was known as Square Gothic Heavy.Cold type copies
Due to the post-war popularity of Gothic faces, most producers of cold type offered their own versions of Franklin Gothic. These included:- Franklin Gothic — Alphatype, Autologic, Berthold, Dymo, Star/Photon, Mergenthaler, MGD Graphic Systems, Varityper
- Franklin — Compugraphic
- Pittsburgh — Graphic Systems Inc.
Digital copies
While ITC Franklin Gothic is the most common release, it has been criticised for modifying the structure of the family considerably. Calligrapher and design historian Paul Shaw argued that it was a failure for "mucking about with the distinctive Franklin Gothic g. In ITC Franklin Gothic...the ear on the g keeps popping up like a schoolchild overly eager to answer a question."
An open source interpretation of Franklin Gothic has been made by Impalari Type as Libre Franklin. is available on Google Fonts.
Alternate Gothic
Alternate Gothic was designed by M.F. Benton for A.T.F. in 1903. It is essentially a moderately bold condensed version of Franklin Gothic, made in three numbered widths. No.1 is the most condensed, 3 the least.Hot metal copies
This face was copied by Monotype under the same name, #1 by Ludlow, Linotype and Intertype as Gothic Condensed. Ludlow’s Trade Gothic Condensed is very similar as well. Two variants were made:- Alternate Gothic Modernized, added thirteen alternate characters drawn by Sol Hess.
- Condensed Gothic Outline, is essentially an outline of Alternate Gothic #2.
Cold type copies
Digital copies
Digital copies have been made by URW, Elsner+Flake, and Monotype as CG Alternate Gothic #3.Micah Rich and several contributors of The League of Moveable Type have made a popular OFL-licensed version of Alternate Gothic #1, League Gothic.
Open source versions
League Gothic is a condensed sans-serif typeface released by The League of Moveable Type. The design of League Gothic was based on Alternate Gothic, a typeface originally designed by Morris Fuller Benton in 1903. Both No. 1 and No. 2 are available, each in a single semi-bold weight.Oswald, by Vernon Adams, is a screen-optimized adaptation of Alternate Gothic No. 2, with three weights.
Both Oswald and League Gothic are licensed under the SIL Open Font License.
Monotone Gothic
Monotone Gothic was designed by M.F. Benton for A.T.F. in 1907. It is essentially a lighter, more extended version of Franklin Gothic. Only one weight was made and it was apparently never copied under that name by any other foundry. Digital versions of Franklin Gothic Light Extended are essentially knock-offs of this face.News Gothic
News Gothic was designed by M.F. Benton for A.T.F. in 1908 as a continuing effort to consolidate and systematize the 19th-century Gothic faces inherited from the company’s predecessors. It is essentially a medium weight companion to Franklin Gothic.- News Gothic
- News Gothic Condensed
- News Gothic Extra Condensed
- News Gothic Extra Condensed Title
- News Gothic Bold designed by John L. “Bud” Renshaw
- News Gothic Condensed Bold designed by Frank Bartuska
Benton Sans is a notable, and extremely comprehensive, modern revival.
Lightline Gothic
Lightline Gothic was designed by M.F. Benton for A.T.F. in 1908 as a lighter version of News Gothic, which makes it an ultra-light version of Franklin Gothic. Only one weight was made and it was apparently never copied under that name by any other foundry. Digital versions of Franklin Gothic Ultra-Light are essentially knock-offs of this face.Hot metal variants
In 1921, M.F. Benton had the capitals of this face cast in different sizes on identical bodies, thus creating, ex nihilo, a lining Gothic which was sold under the name Lightline Title GothicUsage
- New York University lists Franklin Gothic as an official font.
- Franklin Gothic Condensed was the typeface used for subtitles in the Star Wars films, but contrary to some reports, News Gothic and Univers are used for the opening crawl. The "A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away...." title card is set in Franklin Gothic, however.
- Columbia College Chicago implements Franklin Gothic in its primary branding.
- A custom cut of the font is used to display player numbers on the player kit in Indian Premier League.
- Some stations on the Malaysian Railway network use the Franklin Gothic typeface on some of its stations' signages. Some stations used Arial instead, while RapidKL stations use Trebuchet MS. MRT Sungai Buloh-Kajang Line meanwhile adopts the font.
- The video game series You Don't Know Jack uses Franklin Gothic for almost all text.
- Texas Vehicle Registration Plates from 1990 to 2000 used Franklin Gothic for the state name.
- Microsoft used Franklin Gothic Heavy and Franklin Gothic Book for the Windows 95, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 98, Windows 2000 and Windows ME logos.
- The band logo of American hip-hop group Run-DMC is rendered in Franklin Gothic Heavy.