Home » A Terse Taxonomy Of Transportation Typography

A Terse Taxonomy Of Transportation Typography

Cs Type Top
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Car badges! When was the last time you considered, I mean really hand-on-chin-cocked-head-slightly-nodding considered car badges? I’m going to bet it’s been too long. So let’s take care of that now, right now, and start the morning by taking some time to think about the typography of car badges, and the general categories they tend to fall into.

Of course, this is a very general sort of taxonomy – and I also just now learned that “taxonomy” usually refers to classification of living organisms, but I think we can still apply it to typography because language is alive, after all, isn’t it? Sure is!

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Essentially, what I want to explore here is how there are some broad categories of car badge typography that tend to get used for very specific categories of cars, and these conceits seem to transcend brands, nationalities, and even eras, all thanks to some unspoken and usually unacknowledged agreements.

Let’s take a look at these! First, let’s look at what sort of badging defines a “luxury car”:

Cs Type Lux 1

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There’s a few crucial traits to luxury car badging: large letterspacing, so there’s a lot of room between letters, and those letters span a pretty good distance, horizontally. Also, serif typefaces are more commonly used to denote luxury, and usually those letterforms tend to be slim and elegant.

Cs Type Lux 2

Newer luxury brands, less burdened by tradition, retain the large letterspacing of the general luxury badging, but have a bit more freedom to use san-serif typefaces, including somewhat novel and new typeface designs with more abstracted letterforms.

Cs Cheap 1

Cheaper, more mainstream cars tend to have blockier typography, very often italicized for a sense of motion, with minimal letterspacing. These, of course, can vary quite wildly, but the general traits of blockiness and directionally slanted letters are surprisingly common.

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Cs Type Landyacht

This sort of badging typography is of a very specific time and place: America, in the 1970s and early 1980s. This sort of script badging, looking like the typography used on a wedding reception invitation, was seen on American “personal luxury” cars and large land yachts and anything that needed that extra injection of “class,” the kind of “class” usually denoted by vast swaths of rich velour and dress shirts unbuttoned to navels.

Cs Type Classic

Similar, but not exactly the same, are the “classic” class of car badge typography, which was script-heavy, but less fussy and ornate than the Land Yacht Brougham badging era. The type of script could vary a good bit, but a simple, bold script was a common throughline.

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And finally we have a popular bit of modern badge typography, seen especially on SUVs and crossovers and pickup trucks and anything where the carmaker wants to convey a sense of rugged toughness: blocky letterforms, often with chiseled edges, sometimes italicized but not always by any means, and a certain kind of look that suggests the letters were punched into existence out of chunks of granite and raw beef.

There’s more categories, of course, but I think these cover a lot of the basics; if you look around, I think you’ll find most of the cars you see will fit into these categories. Also, anyone know what car I used as the generic base car for these illustrations?

 

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Harvey Spork
Harvey Spork
4 hours ago

Thanks for using “typeface” rather than font.

Comme çi, come alt
Comme çi, come alt
7 hours ago

The Infiniti I30 used an upper-case cursive “I” with a sans serif “30” in a truly grating way. I hadn’t thought about it since before the second generation left production, but I think it served as a harbinger of the marque’s impending collapse even as the G and FX series marked its apex. And recalling it for this comment made my teeth itch just as it did thirty years ago.

Lori Hille
Lori Hille
7 hours ago

I think Torch could make a family tree or taxonomy of car fonts…

It could also work for car names… did Autopian make a bracket for best car name with the animal category, the celestial category, the geography category, etc?

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
8 hours ago

I love the psychology presented here. I never thought about it before. Nice work.

Lifelong Obsession
Lifelong Obsession
8 hours ago

Also, early examples of the Volvo 740 and 760 use the “classic” font, as opposed to the block lettering of later model years.

Lifelong Obsession
Lifelong Obsession
8 hours ago

I always enjoy spotting a 2009 Volvo S60 because they are the last year of the first generation and the only year with “V O L V O” instead of “VOLVO” on the trunk lid.

On the other hand, seeing a 1990 Nissan 300ZX with its lack of a front hamburger logo unlike later years provokes an uncanny valley type of effect. (They only say “Nissan” on the bumper, and it’s off-center.)

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
10 hours ago

“Land Yacht Brougham” immediately brought to mind the JDM cars of the late 80s into the early 90s – such as the “Royal Saloon” script on the back of then-new Toyota Crown sedans, while Crown Majesta was a mix of Luxury and larger Italicized Luxury scripts.

Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
11 hours ago

Acura immediately comes to mind since at launch all they had was typography. The stylized A came a few years later

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
12 hours ago

Thank you for this! I have to go to a dreaded dinner with in-laws tonight and I’m always looking for subjects to switch the conversation to so I can get the hell out of there sooner.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
12 hours ago

I think the Classic and Script styles I prefer are out of style because most Americans can’t read-,never mind write – them anymore.

Turbeaux
Turbeaux
11 hours ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

I’m in my 30s and can read script slowly but not write it. My fifth-grade son can do neither. His handwriting is horrible, but luckily all standardized tests are done on the computer now. Kids today barely need to write in print, let alone cursive.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
11 hours ago
Reply to  Turbeaux

I’m sure there’s an AI script reader out there somewhere that renders this knowledge obsolete. Of course, we won’t know if it’s right or not …

Cerberus
Cerberus
11 hours ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

I always hated cursive writing from the doing to the appearance. As soon as the nuns stopped forcing me to use dollar-store calligraphy, I ditched it for printing.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
10 hours ago
Reply to  Cerberus

Penmanship was the only course I ever flunked in school. My handwriting was unreadable even before my writing hand was crushed in an industrial accident. So, printing for me, too.

Cerberus
Cerberus
10 hours ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Yeah, I probably don’t need to say that mine wasn’t great, either, and my dislike of it didn’t encourage me to do better than the bare minimum, like Joanna in Office Space. The argument for it was speed, but I if I’m any slower printing, it’s of no real world importance and people can actually (usually) read it. Unless I want to treat my notes to some kind of quarter-assed cryptography, I find no advantage to cursive.

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
7 hours ago
Reply to  Cerberus

If I’m angry or scared, I can cursive with the best of them.

Lori Hille
Lori Hille
6 hours ago
Reply to  Cerberus

Is cursive now considered to be flair?

Cerberus
Cerberus
4 hours ago
Reply to  Lori Hille

Yes, but I suppose it does allow one a way to express themselves.

Lori Hille
Lori Hille
13 hours ago

It might be interesting to trace the evolution of a brand’s particular font. Who’s been consistent and who’s all over the place? Probably the Germans win out for consistency (MB, BMW, Porsche.)

Baltimore Paul
Baltimore Paul
11 hours ago
Reply to  Lori Hille

Ford too

Lori Hille
Lori Hille
7 hours ago
Reply to  Baltimore Paul

Well, the Blue Oval is consistent, but not the model designation badging.

As I was driving around today, I was trying to spot the difference between a manufacturer’s logo or word mark (blue oval, Jeep, the Subaru constellation, the Toyota T in circles, the BMW propeller/Bavarian flag, etc.) and actually seeing the manufacturer’s name on the car (Subaru) in addition to the logo. Cadillacs in the past had the copperplate script AND the Wreath and Crest.

Lifelong Obsession
Lifelong Obsession
8 hours ago
Reply to  Lori Hille

Volvo has been pretty consistent since the ‘90s. Although looking through Google image results, I realize the number “6” changed halfway through the second-generation S60 and XC60’s run, and I can’t un-see it.

Lori Hille
Lori Hille
13 hours ago

I do like the mid 60s Mercury script. I guess it’s in the classic category but it’s clean and sharp.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
10 hours ago
Reply to  Lori Hille

Yes – I often would run my fingers over the “Mercury”, “Monterey” and “Custom” script badges on Mom’s old car….

Lori Hille
Lori Hille
7 hours ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Some of the 60s Pontiac cursive scripts were also nice and there was consistency across the product line.

My grandmother had a Mercury station wagon when I was a kid.

Banana Stand Money
Banana Stand Money
14 hours ago

You forgot about another very specific era. The early 90s “splash” graphics. See Ford Ranger Splash or GMC Typhoon.. often in hot pink or teal. TriangleRad knows what I’m talking about.

Baltimore Paul
Baltimore Paul
14 hours ago

There a very few square car logos

Lori Hille
Lori Hille
6 hours ago
Reply to  Baltimore Paul

Does Honda count? That big H is in sort of a square.

GM (hate the new logo! No longer the Mark of Excellence.)

There are probably others. There are more rectangles than squares.

One of my all time favorites is the MG octagon. Safety fast!

Baltimore Paul
Baltimore Paul
14 hours ago

Does JT do requests? I would like to request a deep dive on highway signs.
When DOT switched from Highway Helvetica to Clearview font for the signs, it was amazing. I didn’t even notice the difference…. Until I read an article about it. Holy Cow, what a difference. Fonts Matter, people.
If you ever see the two fonts side by side you will see what I’m talking about.

Last edited 14 hours ago by Baltimore Paul
David Smith
David Smith
11 hours ago
Reply to  Baltimore Paul

Here’s an article about what Paul is talking about:

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-01-27/the-official-u-s-highway-sign-font-is-changing-from-clearview-to-highway-gothic

Seems like Clearview lost this round.

Baltimore Paul
Baltimore Paul
11 hours ago
Reply to  David Smith

Darn

Last edited 11 hours ago by Baltimore Paul
Cerberus
Cerberus
11 hours ago
Reply to  David Smith

I do all my writing in Highway Gothic. My only complaint is a lack of interrobang.

David Smith
David Smith
10 hours ago
Reply to  Cerberus

I’ve found that, “da fk” works in a pinch.

Cerberus
Cerberus
10 hours ago
Reply to  David Smith

I’m trying to reduce the cursing in the more kid-appropriate books.

David Smith
David Smith
10 hours ago
Reply to  Cerberus

da fk

John Beef
John Beef
14 hours ago

I’ve noticed Hyundais where the lowercase U and the N are the same, just one is inverted. The new 4 Runner uses different characters, but previous versions may have done with same as the Hyundai.

Wolfpack57
Wolfpack57
15 hours ago

I think the 2018 Camry started a trend of cheaper cars going for the spaced individual letters. I think internally at Toyota it denoted something about upmarketness because they had to place each letter individually on the rather than slapping one combined badge on. Since then, it’s spread to every midsize/large crossover and lost its meaning

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
10 hours ago
Reply to  Wolfpack57

Have a look at the trunk of a 1992 Camry and get back to us.

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