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The LA28 typography is made of 4 custom fonts
The LA28 typography system, featuring four custom fonts, represents a significant shift in brand strategy for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, embracing the city's diverse visual culture rather than adhering to a universal design language. This eclectic approach not only captures the essence of Los Angeles but also aims to create a unique identity that resonates with both locals and visitors, showcasing a more expressive and varied typographic landscape.
FastCompany: The last time Los Angeles hosted the Olympic Games , designers had a relatively simple typographic system. It used the italic sans-serif Univers 66 as its logotype along with a blocky stencil-style “LA84” mark that appeared on venue and urban signage. More than 40 years later, the 2028 Los Angeles Games will use an entire bespoke four-font book. The typeface of the 2028 Games brand and design system developed by Koto Studios is called LA28, and it’s inspired by strip mall signage and hand-painted street lettering across L.A.
The typeface comes in four distinct styles, Display, Sans, Serif, and Super, and together they represent a much more eclectic approach to typography than we’re used to seeing from Olympics-related design . “Each one has a distinct personality and purpose within the system,” Geoff Engelhardt, head of brand design for LA28, tells Fast Company . The goal with the fonts is to capture the feeling of Los Angeles rather than produce a literal depiction of it, he says.
“We wanted the typography to feel like it could only belong to Los Angeles.” LA28 Display is inspired by the block lettering of L.A.’s original city street signs, and it’s meant for things like numerals, captions, and wayfinding. [Image: LA28] LA28 Sans is designed for clarity, legibility, and accessibility for text-heavy use cases. [Image: LA28] Then there’s LA28 Super, which is just the opposite. A charismatic, stylized, calligraphy-style font, Super is reserved for expressive moments and large-scale impact, as in graphic collateral that previews the brand, showing a billboard that reads “Bienvenidos” (“Welcome” in Spanish).
Its letterforms mix sharp angles and shapes with smooth curves and distinctive flairs. [Image: LA28] LA28 Serif is a counterpart to Sans, a serif workhouse font for heavy copy. Both are ADA compliant, meaning they meet the accessibility requirements of the Americans With Disabilities Act. [Image: LA28] Together the fonts create a typographic system that’s more complicated than we’ve seen for Games of decades past. But it fits the wider approach organizers have employed to form the visual identity of LA28, taking inspiration from the diversity of the city.
“There’s a whole visual culture living on the streets of Los Angeles, in the storefronts, the hand-lettered murals, the block lettering on original street signs, and we wanted to honor that rather than import something that felt foreign to the city,” says Ric Edwards, VP of brand design and executive design director for LA28. The 1984 Los Angeles Olympics used a vibrant color palette expressed through assets like a recurring confetti pattern and venue staging. The broader look and color palette of the 2028 Games is an updated homage called Superbloom , drawn from Southern California flora and the city’s official flower, the Bird of Paradise.
That same sense of expressiveness is being brought to the 2028 Games customizable logo, which replaces the A in LA28 with other graphics, and in the multi-font typography. [Image: LA28] Past Olympics often branded themselves in a universal style built on grids; a unified, cohesive visual language; and sans-serif typefaces like Helvetica. That style was singular and could be ported over to the visual brand or logos of any other Games anywhere. Designers for forthcoming Olympics are taking a more experimental route.
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The LA28 typography system represents a significant evolution in branding for a major global event, making it impactful and relevant, while its unique approach to custom fonts adds a level of novelty.
