

He was instrumental in the establishment of the International Typeface Corporation, the cornerstone type foundry owned by Aaron Burns, the Lubalin Burns Corporation, and Photo Lettering. It’s rare to be able to point out a living being who actually created a typeface - Benguiat being a notable exception.īenguiat continued to work as a designer and art director for several agencies and studios, as well as on his own. While modern typography can trace its history back to Gutenberg or Aldus Manutius, the roots of digital typography are harder to find. Edward Benguiat is one of those someones.

Typography and font generation are now as invisible to us as the inner workings of a car engine - if it’s working right, we don’t even think about it.īut there was a time when someone had to draw by hand those beautiful typefaces, those elegant characters we throw around our system folders so cavalierly. We’ve reached a stage where designers - several steps removed from the nuts and bolts of their digital machinery - take a lot of the tools they use for granted. That makes Benguiat a throwback to a different era, particularly with the digital revolution now into its second generation.

But the man behind those glyphs - the one for whom the face is named - is a singular character, with an increasingly rare approach to design. The name Benguiat is familiar to many as a typeface. “I’ve never designed anything that I’ve ever been happy with when it’s finished,” Benguiat says.
