Lucida Grande

Lucida Grande
Category Sans-serif
Classification Humanist
Designer(s)

Charles Bigelow

Kris Holmes
Foundry Bigelow & Holmes
Date released 2000

Lucida Grande is a humanist sans-serif typeface. It is a member of the Lucida family of typefaces designed by Charles Bigelow and Kris Holmes. It has been used throughout Mac OS X user interface from 1999 to 2014, as well as in Safari for Windows up to the browser's version 3.2.3 released on 12 May 2009. As of OS X 10.10 Yosemite, the system font was changed from Lucida Grande to Helvetica Neue.[1] In OS X El Capitan the system font changed again, this time to San Francisco.[2]

The typeface looks very similar to Lucida Sans and Lucida Sans Unicode. Like Sans Unicode, Grande supports the most commonly used characters defined in version 2.0 of the Unicode standard.

Three weights of Lucida Grande: Normal, Bold, and Black, in three styles: Roman, Italic, and Oblique, were developed by Bigelow & Holmes. Apple released the Regular (Normal Roman) and Bold Roman with OS X.

In June, 2014, Bigelow & Holmes released four weights: Light, Normal, Bold, and Black, in three styles: Roman, Italic, and Oblique. B&H also released Narrow versions of those twelve weight/styles, plus four Lucida Grande Monospaced fonts in Regular, Bold, Italic, and Bold Italic styles, with narrow versions of the four monospaced weight/styles.[3]

Lucida Grande fonts directly from Bigelow & Holmes contain the pan-European WGL character set.

Scripts and Unicode ranges

Lucida Grande contains 2,826 Unicode-encoded glyphs (2,245 characters) in version 5.0d8e1 (Revision 1.002).

Language support by version:

3.7d8 5.0d8e1 revision 1.002[4] 6.0d10e1 revision 6.004 (OSX 10.5)[5] 6.1d4e1 (OSX 10.6)
Afrikaans No Yes Yes Yes
Albanian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Azerbaijani No Yes Yes Yes
Basque Yes Yes Yes Yes
Belarusian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Bulgarian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Catalan Yes Yes Yes Yes
Cornish Yes Yes Yes Yes
Croatian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Czech Yes Yes Yes Yes
Danish Yes Yes Yes Yes
Dutch Yes Yes Yes Yes
English Yes Yes Yes Yes
Esperanto No Yes Yes Yes
Estonian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Faroese Yes Yes Yes Yes
Finnish Yes Yes Yes Yes
French Yes Yes Yes Yes
Galician Yes Yes Yes Yes
German Yes Yes Yes Yes
Greek Yes Yes Yes Yes
Hausa No Yes Yes No
Hawaiian No Yes Yes Yes
Hebrew No Yes Yes Yes
Hungarian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Icelandic Yes Yes Yes Yes
Indonesian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Irish Yes Yes Yes Yes
Italian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Kalaallisut No Yes Yes Yes
Kazakh No Yes Yes Yes
Latvian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Lithuanian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Macedonian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Malay Yes Yes Yes Yes
Maltese Yes Yes Yes Yes
Manx Yes Yes Yes Yes
Norwegian Bokmål Yes Yes Yes Yes
Norwegian Nynorsk Yes Yes Yes Yes
Oromo Yes Yes Yes Yes
Polish Yes Yes Yes Yes
Portuguese Yes Yes Yes Yes
Romanian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Russian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Serbian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Slovak Yes Yes Yes Yes
Slovenian Yes Yes Yes Yes
Somali Yes Yes Yes Yes
Spanish Yes Yes Yes Yes
Swahili Yes Yes Yes Yes
Swedish Yes Yes Yes Yes
Thai No Yes Yes No
Turkish Yes Yes Yes Yes
Ukrainian No Yes Yes Yes
Uzbek No Yes Yes Yes
Vietnamese Yes Yes Yes Yes
Welsh No Yes Yes Yes

Similarity to Lucida Sans

Almost all glyphs in Lucida Grande (and Lucida Grande Bold) look identical to their matching counterparts in Lucida Sans (and Lucida Sans Demibold) as well as Lucida Sans Unicode, with the very few exceptions of:

These slightly different characters look clearer in small font sizes in display and user interface (especially graphical and web-based) uses.

Uses

Apart from Mac OS X, many websites and blogs use Lucida Grande as the default typeface for body text, for example Facebook and many phpBB message boards. Since this typeface is usually absent from other operating systems like Windows and Linux, the style sheets of these websites often include Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, or even Lucida Sans Unicode in case Lucida Grande is not available for rendering.

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lucida Grande.
  1. http://www.theverge.com/2014/6/2/5773838/apple-os-x-yosemite-changes-system-font-for-first-time
  2. "Fonts". Apple Developer. Apple Inc. Retrieved 2015-06-13.
  3. A Brief History of Lucida Grande
  4. "Mac OS X 10.4:Fonts list". Apple Computers. 6 November 2011. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
  5. "Mac OS X 10.5:Fonts list". Apple Computers. 7 November 2011. Retrieved 10 January 2012.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.