Goodbye, Calibri; hello, Aptos: A new default font for Microsoft Office

midian182

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What just happened? Microsoft is doing something it's only done once in 15 years: replacing its default Office font. The long-used Calibri is being swapped out for a new font called Aptos, which has been chosen based on years of user feedback.

Microsoft writes that its 15-year relationship with Calibri has come to a natural end. The font replaced Times New Roman across Microsoft Office back in 2007, but the twilight of its reign started in 2021 when the Redmond company commissioned five original, custom fonts to replace Calibri, asking users to choose their favorite default option.

Of the five chosen fonts - Bierstadt, Grandview, Seaford, Skeena, and Tenorite – Bierstadt was picked to be the default for Microsoft 365, though all of them were added to the drop-down font picker for users. The typeface, inspired by mid-20th-century Swiss typography, also underwent a name change, becoming Aptos, though it will be in the drop-down picker under its original Bierstadt name for "those who just aren't ready for the font's new name."

Si Daniels, a principal program manager at Microsoft, writes that the company is in the final phase of the change where Aptos will start appearing as the default font across Word, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Excel. It will be rolled out for all customers over the next few months.

Aptos is a sans serif, also referred to as Grotesque or Gothic, which has simple letterforms and is easily readable. It's made of varying geometric shapes and described as bold, well-defined, directive, and constrained. Daniels adds that subtle circular squares within the letters' contours allow higher legibility, especially at small sizes.

Aptos was designed by Steve Matteson, a type designer who developed the original Windows TrueType core fonts and created the Segoe font family. He has designed more than 80 typeface families including brand families for Toyota and Google. Matteson renamed Bierstadt to Aptos, after his favorite town in Santa Cruz, California.

So why change the default font now? Microsoft says it is to adapt to evolving technology, such as higher-resolution screens, for which Aptos is called the perfect font. "The font needed to have sharpness, uniformity, and be great for display type," Daniels explains.

Daniels said Aptos is part of a broader range of features coming to Microsoft 365, a push to make the software more expressive and inclusive. "There's a newly designed font picker experience, along with new themes, colors, and backgrounds," he wrote.

For those who aren't fans of Aptos, users can still change the default font to their favorite.

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Why couldn't they just add the font and let the users decide? Sounds like a silly move .....
 
They did. It's a default font, not the only font...

Exactly. People who still want Times New Roman still use it. There are still a few older professionals who swear by the look of 90's WordPerfect.

Either way, this is why default options matter. The vast majority of time: People simply adopt the new standard even when given a choice (especially when there are so many choices it seems pointless to pick.)
 
I don't know how much it really matters. Does this website use Calibre? Or is it Times New Roman? Looks like Times New Roman but I confess I'm not sure. Courier New looks nice but takes up more space, when I'm writing my own notes I do think that's a good one. For e-mails it's whatever it's defaulting to. I just checked google and it's Sans Serif. I checked my browser and it's Times New Roman, whatever that means on my end.
 
I don't know how much it really matters. Does this website use Calibre? Or is it Times New Roman? Looks like Times New Roman but I confess I'm not sure. Courier New looks nice but takes up more space, when I'm writing my own notes I do think that's a good one. For e-mails it's whatever it's defaulting to. I just checked google and it's Sans Serif. I checked my browser and it's Times New Roman, whatever that means on my end.

Clearly it's not Times Roman which is a serif font, this site is using something like Arial or Calibri I would guess.

I prefer a serif font for books, but a good sans serif font is also nice. There are more modern serif fonts I prefer to Times though.
 
So I just checked my Office 365 and it's not here yet. but I don't think I'll actually like this new font. Calibri and Segoe UI always seems too casual for me. they're okay for email body fonts but big no for documents.

Arial has always been my default (even as my subtitle font) but Roboto is actually very close. in fact if you put roboto and arial side by side you can tell they're mostly similar except for number 9 0 and the capital letter C O. here using edge I can tell that this comment box uses Arial.
 
How nice Microsoft. Im sure many appreciate this groundbreaking decision.

But could you please stop making me reinstall all my printer drivers because of an update once a year +\- !!
 
I haven't used Office for years now - how many different ribbon bars are they up to now? Have they passed the 50% point yet for how much of the page they take for GUI elements vs. your own work?
 
Exactly. People who still want Times New Roman still use it. There are still a few older professionals who swear by the look of 90's WordPerfect.

Either way, this is why default options matter. The vast majority of time: People simply adopt the new standard even when given a choice (especially when there are so many choices it seems pointless to pick.)
Actually, WordPerfect has usually and does now run circles around Word.
 
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