Originally drawn by Walter Haettenschweiler in 1954, derived
from an assignment by Ernst Keller at Kunstgewerbeschule Zürich,
and made as an improvement over Commercial-Grotesk
(Haas, 1940). No lowercase. [Swiss Type
Design] Included in Lettera vol. 1, an alphabet
source book edited by Alex Stocker and Armin Haab. Also known
simply as Schmalfette (“Bold Condensed”).
Adopted by Photoscript for phototype and shown as
Schmalfette Grotesk, Schmalfette Outline,
and Haettenschweiler Extended, all with lowercase.
[Photoscript
1968] Photo-Lettering’s Swiss
Gothic (before 1965) is another phototype adaptation and
extension.
The digital Haettenschweiler
(Ascender/Microsoft, 1993–1995) appears to be based on
Photoscript’s less condensed extension. “I never received a single cent, but at least they
named it after me.” — Walter
Haettenschweiler
Schmalfette CP (CounterPoint Type More…
Originally drawn by Walter Haettenschweiler in 1954, derived from an assignment by Ernst Keller at Kunstgewerbeschule Zürich, and made as an improvement over Commercial-Grotesk (Haas, 1940). No lowercase. [Swiss Type Design] Included in Lettera vol. 1, an alphabet source book edited by Alex Stocker and Armin Haab. Also known simply as Schmalfette (“Bold Condensed”).
Adopted by Photoscript for phototype and shown as Schmalfette Grotesk, Schmalfette Outline, and Haettenschweiler Extended, all with lowercase. [Photoscript 1968] Photo-Lettering’s Swiss Gothic (before 1965) is another phototype adaptation and extension.
The digital Haettenschweiler (Ascender/Microsoft, 1993–1995) appears to be based on Photoscript’s less condensed extension. “I never received a single cent, but at least they named it after me.” — Walter Haettenschweiler
Schmalfette CP (CounterPoint Type Studio, 2016), used for the sample, is a more faithful (although likewise unauthorized) revival made by Jason Walcott at the suggestion of Rob King. Jeremy Mickel also made a custom version in 2016 for Pentagram. In 2022, Carsten Wolff released his digitization named Fleckhaus, together with a looser interpretation named Wolff.