Microgramma (typeface)


Microgramma is a sans serif font which was designed by Aldo Novarese and Alessandro Butti for the Nebiolo Type Foundry in 1952. It became popular for use with technical illustrations in the 1960s and was a favourite of graphic designers by the early seventies, its uses ranging from publicity and publication design to packaging, largely because of its availability as a Letraset typeface. Early typesetters also incorporated it.
Novarese later developed Eurostile in 1962, very similar to Microgramma. Eurostile added lower-case letters, a bold condensed variant, and an ultra narrow design he called Eurostile Compact.
Microgramma is almost always used in its extended and bold extended forms. Initially, it was a titling font with only uppercase letters. Later versions, by Linotype and URW/Nebiolo, contain a lowercase as well, making it functionally identical to Eurostile. These digital versions also include accented Latin characters, mathematical symbols, and Latin ligatures. In the URW/Nebiolo version, there are also extended Latin, subscripts and superscripts, and extended Latin ligatures.

Microgramma OnlyShadow

Microgramma OnlyShadow is a variant of Microgramma Bold that contains only the shadows of Microgramma Extended Bold, designed by URW Studio and Aldo Novarese in 1994. Although Alessandro Butti died in 1959, URW credited him as the designer of the new font.
The Euro sign in the font has a different weight, styled from a different font family, and is not shadowed.

Microgramma in popular culture

Science fiction films and TV programmes quickly started using the typeface.

''Alien'' franchise

Microgramma and its related variations are used throughout the original Alien franchise films, as well as the more recent reincarnations. Weyland-Yutani, the primary corporate conglomerate within both the earlier and recent Alien films, features use of Microgamma and its Bold Extended typeface in its corporate logo, although not exclusively.

''Star Trek''

The Microgramma Bold Extended typeface was used extensively in the Star Trek universe, such as Franz Joseph's The Star Trek Star Fleet Technical Manual. The font, in both its original and various altered forms, was incorporated into numerous displays and on ship exteriors in six of the Star Trek motion pictures, as well as depictions of "earlier technology" display screens, particularly for the "prequel" series, during the four later television series.

WWE

Following the 2016 WWE Brand Extension Draft and WWE Battleground 2016, WWE Raw unveiled a new logo which used Microgramma font, and all title cards and graphics on the show used this font as well. Coincidentally, the following night, WWE SmackDown Live also unveiled a new logo - although it did not use Microgramma, all title cards and graphics on the show used the font as well.

Movies

The Penn Central wordmark used Microgramma Bold Extended Italic.
Many automobile manufacturers in the 1980s and the 1990s, notably Chrysler, General Motors, Honda and Nissan, use Microgramma on the interior gauges and switches of their vehicles. Abarth also use the font extensively.
According to MasGrafx Racing Graphics, Microgramma is the font of several NASCAR numbers; #8, #3 and #29. Some of these are in italics.
Used by Red Bull Racing for their driver numbers.
Microgramma was also the logo font used by Alienware computers until 2016.