Bliss is a design in the British humanist style, based on the Johnston typeface of London Underground as well as Gill Sans and Syntax, but with a more uniform style with greater evenness and similarity between weights.[5][6][7][8] Tankard added some asymmetries to break from a purely geometric structure, such as sheared cuts on the capital 'E' and 'T'.[9]
Describing it, Tankard wrote that "forms were chosen for their simplicity, legibility, and ‘Englishness’, and that his goal was to create "the first commercial typeface with an English feel since Gill Sans."[10][11]
^King, Emily. "Digital Type Decade". Eye magazine. Retrieved 1 August 2016. Tankard's most visible face is the sans serif Bliss (British Midland Airways, Foxton's estate agent). The Bliss typeface is the outcome of the assessment of five sans serif faces: Gill Sans; Syntax; Frutiger; Edward Johnston's Underground typeface and Kinneir and Calvert's Transport typeface (see Eye no. 34 vol. 9). The result is a design that answered the current quest for 'a new simplicity'. It is a face that seems straightforward because it is imbued with so much that we already know.