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New York Times magazine unveils new logo and typefaces

New York Times magazine cover
The New York Times magazine has a new logo and fontset

You don't stay in print for 119 years without doing a few things right. And in the case of the New York Times magazine, founded in 1897, one of those things has been to regularly refresh its design.

It's now revealed its latest look, one which may not be revolutionary, but it is at least claimed to be significant.

In an editorial announcing the changes, it promises: "new concepts for columns, new writers, new ideas about how to compose headlines, new typefaces, new page designs in print and online, new ideas about the relationship between print and digital."

The redesign was led by the title's design director, Gail Bichler and art director, Matt Willey, working closely with the designer Anton Ioukhnovets.

Most notably, it includes a new logo, shown below. The previous logo (top) has been redrawn by the typographer Matthew Carter, with the new design (bottom) described by the title as being "more modern, more graciously spaced".

New York Times magazine logo
The new logo (bottom) is more "graciously spaced" than the previous version (top)

More strikingly, there's also a new short-form logo for the magazine, for use in smaller and more casual settings like its Twitter page.

New York Times social logo
A simpler logo for small screens and social media
New York Times Twitter page
The new logo on the mag's Twitter page

Bichler and Willey have also also overseen the creation of an entire suite of typefaces for the publication, shown below.

New York Times fontset
All-new typography for the mag

The magazine also promises they'll continue to experiment with new and innovative ways of presenting stories online, after pioneering the Snowfall approach to multimedia publication.

Words: Tom May

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