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Harris/Walz 2024 US Presidential Campaign

A move to the center: Kamala Harris takes a more conventional typographic approach in her second bid for the White House.

Contributed by Stephen Coles on Sep 5th, 2024. Artwork published in
July 2024
.
Harris/Walz 2024 US Presidential Campaign 9
Source: www.flickr.com Kit Karzen/Harris for President. License: All Rights Reserved.

The Kamala Harris 2024 campaign identity, designed by Wide Eye Creative, is built around Sans Plomb, a condensed gothic not unlike the Bureau Grot used by Wide Eye for Harris’s 2020 primary bid – in turn inspired by Shirley Chisholm’s 1972 campaign. This time, though, the typeface is from a French foundry, rather than from Anglo-American origins (Stephenson Blake via Font Bureau).

The logo for Kamala Harris’ 2020 campaign used  and an atypical asymmetrical layout.
Source: fontsinuse.com License: All Rights Reserved.

The logo for Kamala Harris’ 2020 campaign used Bureau Grot and an atypical asymmetrical layout.

It’s not clear to me why they made the switch. From a design point of view, the caps aren’t significantly different from Bureau Grot. Perhaps they liked the more constructed, “modern” feel? Personally, I would have gone back to Chisholm’s pick, the all-American Franklin Gothic, which has no shortage of contemporary versions for any use case. (At the risk of friendship bias, I recommend the interpretation from Fonts In Use cofounder Nick Sherman.)

The symmetrical layout for “Harris/Walz” is a much more conventional approach compared to Harris’s 2020 logo, which took a different road than most US presidential campaigns. The new look reflects her move to the center (no pun intended) for a broader audience.

Not the best kerning on this rally sign (AY). The font, Sans Plomb Super, doesn’t deliver that big of a gap out of the box, so something went awry in the typesetting.
Source: www.flickr.com Eric Elofson/Harris for President. License: All Rights Reserved.

Not the best kerning on this rally sign (AY). The font, Sans Plomb Super, doesn’t deliver that big of a gap out of the box, so something went awry in the typesetting.

Harris/Walz 2024 US Presidential Campaign 1
Source: kamalaharris.com License: All Rights Reserved.
Harris/Walz 2024 US Presidential Campaign 3
Source: kamalaharris.com License: All Rights Reserved.
Harris/Walz 2024 US Presidential Campaign 5
Source: store.kamalaharris.com License: All Rights Reserved.

The supporting face for “WALZ”, running text, and other small bits like “YES SHE CAN” merch is Balto, Tal Leming’s contemporary take on the American gothic genre, such as Franklin Gothic and News Gothic.

The Harris web store adds Sara Solskone and Jonathan Hoefler’s Decimal, a continuation of the Biden/Harris 2020 campaign. Seeing Solskone’s name makes me wonder if maybe there was a missed opportunity to also choose a typeface by an American woman for the main mark. For example, Program by Zuzana Licko, or Utile Narrow by Sibylle Hagmann.

Harris/Walz 2024 US Presidential Campaign 4
Source: store.kamalaharris.com License: All Rights Reserved.
The logo used in this web pop-up is the early version before it was redrawn (see below).
Source: kamalaharris.com License: All Rights Reserved.

The logo used in this web pop-up is the early version before it was redrawn (see below).

A refined version of the Harris/Walz logo (white outline) launched around August 11. The biggest changes were relieving the pinched curve at the top of the S and enlarging “WALZ” just slightly to the left for optical centering.
Source: www.instagram.com Jonathan Hoefler. License: All Rights Reserved.

A refined version of the Harris/Walz logo (white outline) launched around August 11. The biggest changes were relieving the pinched curve at the top of the S and enlarging “WALZ” just slightly to the left for optical centering.

Hoefler, whose typefaces (or those of Hoefler & Co.) have been part of the logo for “every Democratic president in the twenty-first century”, recently revealed that the mark was refined on August 10–11, a few weeks after its initial launch. The work – which involved some redrawing and better “WALZ” centering – was done by Leming and Scott Dadich under the direction of Wide Eye’s Alayna Citrin.

Hoefler also commented that, “Trump has used Gotham for years, and NEVER bought a license. Color me surprised! We talked to a white shoe lawfirm in NYC about taking action, and was told, with a laugh, ‘take a number.’”

Ironically, it was Barack Obama’s 2008 run that made Gotham (and its lookalikes) a default for US political campaigns, regardless of party. At least Harris is diverting a bit from that 15-year-old trend.

Typefaces

  • Sans Plomb
  • Balto
  • Decimal

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