Quick Take:

The 5-year-old female southern sea otter has been exhibiting unusual aggressive behavior toward surfers over the past...

For the second consecutive year, Cabrillo College robotics club wins first place in world competition

From topography to typography: How a graphic designer’s love of Aptos inspired the next ubiquitous commercial typeface

Graphic artist Steven Matteson at work
Graphic artist Steven Matteson is one of the most prominent names in typographical design. Among his many creations are the popular fonts Segoe, used primarily by Microsoft for its marketing, and Open Sans, which was designed to use in Google’s Android system. Credit: Via Steven Matteson

Steven Matteson’s font Aptos, named for an area of Santa Cruz County he came to appreciate deeply as an escape during a stint over the hill, will be the default for the hundreds of millions who use Microsoft products such as Word, Excel and PowerPoint. “This is kind of like a holy grail situation for people in my line of work,” the 58-year-old says. Wallace Baine explores Matteson’s work in his Sunday column.

MORE: Aptos, Microsoft’s new default font, chosen for the community’s ‘widely ranging landscape and climate’

Membership CTA

I teach poetry in the Santa Cruz jail, but it’s ‘my guys’ who are teaching me

Renee Winter teaches poetry to men incarcerated in the Santa Cruz Main Jail
Renee Winter teaches poetry at the Santa Cruz Jail Credit: Kevin Painchaud / Lookout Santa Cruz

Renee Winter started teaching poetry in the Santa Cruz Main Jail seven years ago, after retiring from her law practice. Now, once a week, she sits in a locked room with about 15 incarcerated men. She often marvels at how her “big-knuckled, burly male students can grip such tiny tools and write. But they do.” Not once in all her years, she says, has she had to press the panic button. Instead, she has found inspiration and shed her “one-dimensional” view of incarceration. Read her Community Voices opinion piece here.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Read what Santa Cruzans are saying about local issues and make your voice heard

10 hot jobs PC roadblock

New partnership re-envisions Lago di Como restaurant, turning a hidden gem into a diamond

Whole branzino prepares to be roasted in the wood-fired oven at Lago di Como

Seafood, homemade pasta and steaks aged in-house are now the focus at Live Oak Italian spot Lago di Como for Giovanbattista Spanu and Matteo Robecchi, both from northern Italy, after Robecchi and wife/partner Lindsay Rodriguez made the move following years at Seabright’s Tramonti. Lily Belli has the review.

MORE FOOD NEWS: Soif Wine Shop changes hands, closes Walnut Avenue location

SIGN UP: Get two helpings of Lily on food and all of Lookout’s other newsletters, plus breaking news alerts

United Way of Santa Cruz County newsletter ad

Follow Lookout Santa Cruz Staff on: Twitter, Instagram, Facebook