Friz Quadrata | |
Style: | Serif |
Classifications: | Incised |
Creator: | Ernst Friz Victor Caruso |
Foundry: | ITC/Linotype |
Releasedate: | 1965 |
Friz Quadrata is a glyphic serif typeface designed by Ernst Friz and Victor Caruso for Visual Graphics Corporation in 1965. VGC worked with the International Typeface Corporation to create an additional, bold weight.[1] It is currently available from the ITC and Linotype foundries. Because of its level of detail and graphic weight, it is often used as a display font, for short texts and headlines.
Friz Quadrata is highly recognizable, and its strong, classic look has been used by a range of institutions and entities; the regular version was used for all official logos of the Chilean government until 2010. It is the typeface for the Quebec wordmark and on the identifying signage of 1 Police Plaza, the headquarters of the New York City Police Department. The Computer Entertainment Rating Organization of Japan uses the bold font for its logo, with Helvetica Black used for letters in its game ratings. The New Mexico Democratic Party uses the font for its logo, as did the now-defunct Progressive Conservative Party of Canada from 1996 until the party's dissolution in 2003. The town of Stony Plain, Alberta uses the font for their current logo, and signage around the town. The City of Portland, Oregon also uses the font in its street name blade signs for the Skidmore-Old Town Historic District.
The logos of the University of Arizona, the University of Wisconsin - Madison, the SUNY Polytechnic Institute,[2] Bond University, Loyola University New Orleans, Sepuluh Nopember Institute of Technology (full name part of logo only) and Polish private university Wyższa Szkoła Zarządzania i Bankowości are in Friz Quadrata — along with Austin Community College in Austin, TX; the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks, ND;[3] and King's College in Charlotte, NC. The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama formerly used Friz Quadrata while the University of Cincinnati uses it for its sports teams, as (until 2015) did the Phoenix/Arizona Coyotes of the NHL for the names on its uniforms. The italic version is used by the University of Cincinnati Bearcats on athletic uniforms and logos.
Because of its actual usage by the New York City Police Department, Friz Quadrata appears in the titles and credits sequences of the TV series Law & Order and its numerous spin-offs. The font was also used in the end credits of most movies made by DreamWorks Animation, as well as serving as the credits of the 1983 film Scarface. The font is often used by Quentin Tarantino for starting and end credits.[4] For almost ten years it was used for the TV One logo in New Zealand. Recording artists Steely Dan use the bold version of the font on the title treatment for their album Gaucho. The font can also be seen in the logos of rock and punk bands The Offspring, Black Flag, and Bad Religion, whilst singer Mariah Carey used the typeface on many album covers.[5] The Indonesian music recording label and publisher Nagaswara used the typeface for its logo, as well as its websites and social media accounts which appear in its latest music videos. The font was also used in the logo for the 2019 film Doctor Sleep. It is also used by American singer Selena Gomez when promoting the album Rare; it appears on all versions of the album's cover and also on covers of its singles, plus on the cover of the single "Feel Me". Recently, it was used for the logo of VTV Can Tho, a specific channel for the Southwest Region of Vietnam.
Digital Research used Friz Quadrata for its logo during much of the company's history. The Dell Computer Company used Friz Quadrata for its first logo from 1984 to 1990. The font can be seen in Blizzard Entertainment's 2002 RTS Warcraft III and 2004 MMORPG World of Warcraft to display character names and item information, as well as in the logo of the MOBA video game League of Legends up until 2019. A modified version is in the video-game series Fate. It was the primary typeface for Shadowrun role-playing game books from 1989 to 2013, except for the game's fourth edition in 2005, which employed Garamond Premier. It has been the title font for from 1991 to present. It was the title font for Bungie's Pathways into Darkness and was the logo and heading font in the original printing of the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd edition role-playing game.