Classic Grotesque™
- Designer Rod McDonald
- Design foundry Monotype
- Source Monotype
The Monotype Grotesque typefaces were among the first sans serifs cut for hot-metal machine typesetting. Designer Rod McDonald describes them as “hidden gems that deserved to be updated.” In 2008, Monotype gave McDonald the go-ahead to draw what was to become the Classic Grotesque typeface family. In retrospect, McDonald comments, “I had no idea how demanding – and rewarding – the project would be.”
History of the Typeface
About the Designer
If Canada had a Typographer Laureate, Rod McDonald would be a worthy candidate. Since the beginning of his career in the mid-1970s, McDonald’s work – as a graphic designer, lettering artist, educator, historian and writer – has encompassed virtually every aspect of the typographic arts. Notably, he was also among the first designers to switch to drawing typefaces on the computer in the mid-1980s, and he was soon providing custom fonts to ad agencies and design studios. McDonald’s commercial typefaces include the Cartier Book design, his interpretation of Canada’s first typeface; the Laurentian family, a highly successful design originally developed for Maclean’s magazine; the Smart Sans typeface, named after Canadian design pioneer Sam Smart; the best-selling Slate and Egyptian Slate families; the ITC Handel Gothic design and the Gibson typeface, which McDonald produced in homage to the late designer, John Gibson.
About the Design
The Classic Grotesque family includes seven weights, from light to extra bold, each with a cursive italic complement – for a total of 14 styles. The family is available as OpenType Pro fonts, allowing for the automatic insertion of ligatures, fractions and the alternate two-story ‘g’ and single-story ‘a’ McDonald designed. Pro fonts also include an extended character set, which enables the setting of most Central European and many Eastern European languages



