UK’s left-wing The Guardian has now taken on the shape of a tabloid with simple black lettering in its re-designed masthead – a move agreed on seven months ago as part of a drive to reduce operational costs, international media wrote.
"Our move to tabloid format is a big step towards making The Guardian financially sustainable," the paper's editor-in-chief said in a piece to the first new issue.
Nearly lunch time so a couple of cartoons This is Tom Gauld who creates cartoons for the Guardian. Dr S is furious it’s gone tabloid size today. Hope he hasn’t taken it out on my lunch…yikes! pic.twitter.com/hlNACrdO7G
— helen warlow (@HWarlow) 15 января 2018 г.
Katharine Viner, The Guardian’s Editor-in-Chief, said they adopted a new, uniquely Guardian font to make newspaper issues "bold, striking and beautiful":
"Since we announced our plans to change format seven months ago, it’s been an exhilarating period of creativity, imagination and focus, and I’m thrilled with the result: a new paper that feels bold, striking and beautiful, and still unmistakably The Guardian."
I’m sheltering on the roof of Canterbury Cathedral. It’s windy, the rain is tipping, I’m waiting to shoot a scene and am loving the new tabloid Guardian. It’s easy to stow, easy to turn the pages and it doesn’t blow away @guardian
— Tony Robinson (@Tony_Robinson) 15 января 2018 г.
The aesthetic refresh is seen as a hallmark of Guardian journalism at large:
"We have grounded our new editions in the qualities readers value most in Guardian journalism: clarity, in a world where facts should be sacred but are too often overlooked; imagination, in an age in which people yearn for new ideas and fresh alternatives to the way things are," Viner wrote.
The newspaper previously had a blue and white masthead and in 2005 it adopted the co-called Berliner format, midway between a broadsheet and a tabloid.
READ MORE: Snowden's 'Guardian Angels' Face Retaliation in Hong Kong
The shrunken Guardian will outsource its printing to tabloid-format Trinity Mirror media group, selling or scrapping its own presses – a move hoped to save the business millions of pounds annually. In the longer run, the newspaper is set to stem further losses by April 2019.
The website and apps have also undergone a redesign, making the resource "a space for big ideas, for debate, for clear thinking and new perspectives," Viner pointed out.
For me design of tabloid Guardian seems confident and innovative from day 1. Keen to see how it flexes with the daily news and expands on a Saturday… Very exciting. Congratulations from old Helvetica hack. pic.twitter.com/9DqzVnCzwX
— simon esterson (@bodoni20) 15 января 2018 г.
In recent years, The Guardian has been increasingly appealing for from its monthly 150-million-strong readership. About 800,000 make regular payments having formerly subscribed to the edition.