bring back verdana (does that mean I'm a monster?) —

Office default Calibri will join Clippy, Internet Explorer in Windows retirement

"Calibri in Office" could almost drive (15 years old), but a new sans serif will soon emerge.

In tech, all good defaults (that aren't the Mac startup chime, at least) must someday come to an end. Today, Microsoft announced its Office font since 2007—the everyman sans serif, Calibri—would soon join Clippy, Internet Explorer, and the Windows 8 Start button in the big Windows graveyard in the sky.

"Calibri has been the default font for all things Microsoft since 2007, when it stepped in to replace Times New Roman across Microsoft Office," the Microsoft Design Team opined in Calibri's de facto obit. "It has served us all well, but we believe it's time to evolve."

Microsoft is now on the hunt for tech's next great default font. Rather than going the reality competition route and opening up the search to any old handwritten font family, the company has commissioned five custom fonts that will now vie for this cushy gig.

Say hello to the candidates hoping to get the final rose from the Microsoft Design Team.
Enlarge / Say hello to the candidates hoping to get the final rose from the Microsoft Design Team.
Microsoft

As pictured above, the new potential default fonts are called Tenorite, Bierstadt, Skeena, Seaford, and Grandview. All five are sans serifs—shots fired at the legacy of Times New Roman—and the Microsoft Design Team made a case for each when unveiling these new options.

Tenorite appealed because it took an opposite approach from Calibri (round, wide, and crisp rather than soft corners and narrow proportions). Bierstadt is Yet Another Helvetica Impostor™ (aka, a new typeface in the "grotesque sans serif" category). Skeena and Seaford are sans serifs, each designed to mimic certain aspects of serifs. The former is based on the shape of serif typefaces; the latter is "rooted in the design of old-style serif text typefaces" to evoke familiarity. And Microsoft evidently means serious familiarity.

"To pinpoint the kind of familiarity and 'comfort' the typeface should evoke, we also looked at pictures of old armchairs: in chair terms, we were going for a practical interpretation of a beautiful family heirloom; durable upholstery, nothing overtly plushy or nostalgic," wrote designer Nina Stössinger. "And when it comes to italics, it turns out there are parallels between chair ergonomics and typography: rather than inflating it and making it softer, trust the rigid moments that are good for your back."

The last candidate stands as a personal favorite (clearly, it'd look its absolute best in lowercase surrounded by a certain hued circle). Grandview designer Aaron Bell said he was inspired by classic German road and railway signage, which emphasized readability so onlookers could understand from a distance or in poor weather.

His explanation of how this idea evolved felt appropriately and mechanically German:

Using Bahnschrift—a prototype I developed in the mechanical style of DIN [the German Industrial Standard]—as a starting point, I decided to keep the x-height large. This results in better legibility and readability at smaller sizes on low-resolution devices, which matters because Grandview is intended for body text on any computer running Windows. Then, I created a version about 20 percent wider than the original design and interpolated between them to find the exact right balance between Bahnschrift-ness and the horizontal aspect. Ultimately, I found increasing the width of the lowercase by 40 units (four to five percent) was perfect. The width of the uppercase was also increased by about 20 units (roughly two percent) to keep them in step with the lowercase.

For now, Microsoft hasn't provided a firm timetable for this font farewell to take place. (The announcement blog also isn't entirely clear whether this new default font will replace Calibri only in the Office suite or across Windows—we reached out to Microsoft for clarification and will update this post if we hear back.) Instead, it urged any Office users with fervent font feelings to... at-them on Twitter. No public vote or anything. Evidently, this is not a font-acracy; the ultimate decision will be made in Redmond.

Update, 6:15 pm EDT: We heard back from Microsoft's PR team shortly after publication to clarify any confusion from the blogpost. Segoe UI is Microsoft's Windows and Web UI font, while Calibri has been the default font for user’s content (such as with Microsoft 365 apps). Whatever new font is declared the winner, it will replace Calibri in that Microsoft 365 role specifically.

Listing image by Microsoft

Channel Ars Technica