Font CategoriesBasic | Sans Serif

Download free Haettenschweiler font - My Dafont

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Download free Haettenschweiler font free for Personal Use. Style list: haetten.ttf, Haettenschweiler Regular.ttf, Haettenschweiler.ttf, HATTEN.TTF,
  • Haettenschweiler font
  • Haettenschweiler font
  • Haettenschweiler font
  • Haettenschweiler font
  • Haettenschweiler font
  • Haettenschweiler font

Haettenschweiler font belongs to the grotesque sans serif typeface family that is a special font for headlines and displays texts. This typeface is extremely compact, tightly spaced, and industrial design and in spite of its poor legibility was very prominent between the 1960s and 70s. It was highly used for the purposes of newspaper and book covers.

Haettenschweiler was designed in 1954 by Walter Haettenschweiler for Microsoft. This font family contains grotesque styles that are bold and condensed. In addition, the design comprises 3 weights including regular, bold, and italic. It would be very suitable for adding a traditional touch to the headlines and display projects with the combination of Gruppo Font.

It can be found within Adobe and Google font. This font that is similar to Blackpink font provides 654 glyphs with 2048 units per em along with massive language supports and many other interesting characters including Latin-Extended A, all case letterings, punctuations, numbers, and many special characters. It can be also specified in the CSS. So, you can get this amazing typeface on your PC without purchasing any license when used within personal projects.

This font is free for PERSONAL AND COMMERCIAL USE.

Haettenschweiler Font

Download font

Free for Personal Use

This fonts are authors' property, and are either shareware, demo versions or public domain. The licence mentioned above the download button is just an indication. Please look at the readme-files in the archives or check the indicated author's website for details, and contact him if in doubt. If no author/licence is indicated that's because we don't have information, that doesn't mean it's free.

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  • haetten.ttf
    Haettenschweiler Regular font | haetten.ttf
  • Haettenschweiler Regular.ttf
    Haettenschweiler Regular font | Haettenschweiler Regular.ttf
  • Haettenschweiler.ttf
    Haettenschweiler Regular font | Haettenschweiler.ttf
  • HATTEN.TTF
    Haettenschweiler Regular font | HATTEN.TTF

Haettenschweiler Regular | haetten.ttf

  • Font family: Haettenschweiler
  • Font subfamily identification: Regular
  • Unique identifier: Haettenschweiler
  • Full font name: Haettenschweiler
  • Version: Version 1. 50
  • Postscript font name: Haettenschweiler

Haettenschweiler Regular | Haettenschweiler Regular.ttf

  • Font family: Haettenschweiler
  • Font subfamily identification: Regular
  • Unique identifier: Haettenschweiler
  • Full font name: Haettenschweiler
  • Version: Version 2. 00
  • Postscript font name: Haettenschweiler

Haettenschweiler Regular | Haettenschweiler.ttf

  • Font family: Haettenschweiler
  • Font subfamily identification: Regular
  • Unique identifier: Haettenschweiler WGL Char Set
  • Full font name: Haettenschweiler
  • Version: Version 2. 10
  • Postscript font name: Haettenschweiler

Haettenschweiler Regular | HATTEN.TTF

  • Font family: Haettenschweiler
  • Font subfamily identification: Regular
  • Unique identifier: Haettenschweiler
  • Full font name: Haettenschweiler
  • Version: Version 2. 30
  • Postscript font name: Haettenschweiler
  • Description: Haettenschweiler derives from a more condensed typeface, called Schmalfette Grotesk, first shown in the early 1960s in a splendid book called Lettera by Walter Haettenschweiler and Armin Haab. Schmalfette Grotesk was a very condensed, very bold alphabet of all capitals  schmalfette means "bold condensed " in German, and grotesk indicates it is without serifs. It was immediately picked up by designers at Paris Match who cut up pictures of it to make headlines. Soon everybody wanted it. In due course, extra-bold extra-condensed faces for families like Helvetica began to appear, looking remarkably like the original Schmalfette. Photoscript had made a lowercase version quite early on. Later, they made a less condensed version and called it Haettenschweiler Extended as a tribute to a designer whose idea so greatly affected the graphic scene in the second half of the century. Use this distinguished face in large sizes for headlines.

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