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Monday, July 29, 2013

Houston, Futura has landed.

I generally get a kick out of looking at the evidence of humanity that we have thrown around the Solar System, so with the Apollo 11 Moon landing anniversary just past I thought I would look at the the first words brought to the Moon by it – the Apollo 11 Lunar plaque.

A11_plaque

Like all of the Lunar plaques brought by the Apollo missions this is a 9” x 7 5/8” stainless steel plaque, attached to the Lunar Module’s ladder.  It features the signatures of the three astronauts, the President on the United States, and a message of peace.  Classy look message eh?  You might recognize the lettering from the titles of Stanley Kubrick’s films, or more recently Wes Anderson’s work.  Like the Saturn V rockets that carried men to the moon, the font on the plaques they brought with them, Futura, was designed by a German.

Futura_Specimen.svg

Futura was designed by Paul Renner, and release to the public in 1927.  It’s a very clean geometric font.  No extra serifs, frills, or decorations are found. Now, I’m not a font expert by any means so I can’t go into the details of what exactly sets Futura apart from other fonts of the time, and how the various child-fonts it has spawned  differ from each other.  What I can say is that despite being a 86 year old typeface it still, to me at least, looks to the future, a future perhaps when the Apollo 17 plaque won’t be the last words we left on the Moon.

File:A17-plaque.JPG

Right now this 41 year old plaque from Apollo 17 in an 86 year old typeface are the last words humanity personally left behind on the Moon.