Narberth Native Who Designed Original Mac Fonts Named Them After Stops on SEPTA’s Paoli/Thorndale Line

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Image of Susan Kare via YouTube.

While they are now known under the names Chicago, New York, and Geneva, the first set of typefaces for Apple’s original Macintosh computer originally bore names from several local towns, including Rosemont, Ardmore, and Paoli, writes Julie Zeglen for Technical.ly Philly.

The fonts were created by Susan Kare, a Narberth native and prolific typeface and icon designer, in the early 1980s. Kare was on the team tasked with creating the operating system’s original fonts.

Kare and a colleague, Andy Hertzfeld, also from Narberth, named the fonts after stops on SEPTA’s Paoli/Thorndale Line.

Then Steve Jobs stepped in.

“Jobs thought that our idea of city names was fine, but suggested that ‘world-class cities’ would be better than suburban towns,” said Kare.

Those fonts are not Kare’s only iconic designs. Her works also include the design for Microsoft’s Solitaire, the Happy Mac icon, and the obscure Swedish symbol used by Apple for its Command key.

Today, Kare has her own firm, Susan Kare Design.

“We’ve done work recently for Facebook, Fossil, Thompson Reuters, PayPal, and AOL,” she said.

Read more about Susan Kare at Technical.ly Philly by clicking here.

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