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Baskerville

Baskerville is a serif typeface designed in the 1750s by John Baskerville (1706–1775) in Birmingham, England, and cut into metal by punchcutter John Handy.[1][2][3][4] Baskerville is classified as a transitional typeface, intended as a refinement of what are now called old-style typefaces of the period, especially those of his most eminent contemporary, William Caslon.[5][a]

Compared to earlier designs popular in Britain, Baskerville increased the contrast between thick and thin strokes, making the serifs sharper and more tapered, and shifted the axis of rounded letters to a more vertical position.[8] The curved strokes are more circular in shape, and the characters became more regular. These changes created a greater consistency in size and form, influenced by the calligraphy Baskerville had learned and taught as a young man.[9] Baskerville's typefaces remain very popular in book design and there are many modern revivals, which often add features such as bold type which did not exist in Baskerville's time.[10]

As Baskerville's typefaces were proprietary to him[b] and sold to a French publisher after his death, some designs influenced by him were made by British punchcutters.[2] The Fry Foundry of Bristol created a version, probably cut by their typefounder Isaac Moore.[12][13][14] Marketed in the twentieth century as "Fry's Baskerville" or "Baskerville Old Face", a digitisation based on the more delicate larger sizes is included with some Microsoft software.[15][c]

History edit

 
The Folio Bible printed by Baskerville in 1763.
 
Baskerville's first publication, an edition of Virgil. The design shows the smooth, gleaming finish of his paper and minimal title pages.

Baskerville's typeface was part of an ambitious project to create books of the greatest possible quality. Baskerville was a wealthy industrialist, who had started his career as a writing-master (teacher of calligraphy) and carver of gravestones, before making a fortune as a manufacturer of varnished lacquer goods. At a time when books in England were generally printed to a low standard, using typefaces of conservative design, Baskerville sought to offer books created to higher-quality methods of printing than any before, using carefully made, level presses, a high quality of ink and very smooth paper pressed after printing to a glazed, gleaming finish.[18][19][20][21]

Having been an early admirer of the beauty of Letters, I became insensibly desirous of contributing to the perfection of them. I formed to myself ideas of greater accuracy than had yet appeared, and had endeavoured to produce a Set of Types according to what I conceived to be their true proportion...It is not my desire to print many books, but such only as are books of Consequence, of intrinsic merit or established Reputation, and which the public may be pleased to see in an elegant dress, and to purchase at such a price as will repay the extraordinary care and expense that must necessarily be bestowed upon them.[5]

Baskerville's preface to Milton

While Baskerville's types in some aspects recall the general design of William Caslon, the most eminent punchcutter of the time, his approach was far more radical. Beatrice Warde, John Dreyfus and others have written that aspects of his design recalled his handwriting and common elements of the calligraphy taught by the time of Baskerville's youth, which had been used in copperplate engraving but had not previously been cut into type in Britain.[6][22][23][d] Such details included many of the intricate details of his italic, such as the flourishes on the capital N and entering stroke at top left of the italic 'p'. He had clearly considered the topic of ideal letterforms for many years, since a slate carved in his early career offering his services cutting tombstones, believed to date from around 1730, is partly cut in lettering very similar to his typefaces of the 1750s.[2][24][e] The result was a typeface cut by Handy to Baskerville's specifications that reflected Baskerville's ideals of perfection.[26] According to Baskerville, he developed his printing projects for seven years, releasing a prospectus advertisement for the project in 1754, before finally releasing his first book, an edition of Virgil, in 1757, which was followed by other classics.[27] At the start of his edition of Paradise Lost, he wrote a preface explaining his ambitions.[28][29]

 
A slate carved by John Baskerville in his early career offering his services carving tombstones, in blackletter, roman, script and italic. The design is similar to his typography.[30] A recreation in Monotype Baskerville shows the similarities of letterforms.
 

In 1758, he was appointed University Printer to the Cambridge University Press.[31] It was there in 1763 that he published his master work, a folio Bible.

Reception edit

 
A detail view of Baskerville's Bible for Cambridge, showing the crispness of the impression.

The crispness of Baskerville's work seems to have unsettled (or perhaps provoked jealousy in) his contemporaries, and some claimed the stark contrasts in his printing damaged the eyes.[28] Baskerville was never particularly successful as a printer, being a printer of specialist and elite editions, something not helped by the erratic standard of editing in his books.[2][32] Abroad, however, he was much admired (if not directly imitated, at least not his style of type design), notably by Pierre Simon Fournier, Giambattista Bodoni and Benjamin Franklin (who had started his career as a printer), who wrote him a letter praising his work.[33][34][f] His work was later admired in England by Thomas Frognall Dibdin, who wrote that "in his Italic letter...he stands unrivalled; such elegance, freedom and perfect symmetry being in vain to be looked for among the specimens of Aldus and Colinaeus...Baskerville was a truly original artist, he struck out a new method of printing in this country and may be considered as the founder of that luxuriant style of typography at present so generally prevails; and which seems to have attained perfection in the neatness of Whittingham, the elegance of Bulmer and the splendour of Bensley."[36] Thomas Curson Hansard in 1825 seems to have had misgivings about his work, praising his achievement in some ways but also suggesting that he was a better printer than a type designer.[19] On his death his widow Sarah eventually sold his material to a Paris literary society connected to Beaumarchais, placing them out of reach of British printing. A. F. Johnson however cautions that some perhaps over-patriotic British writers on type design have over-estimated Baskerville's influence on continental type design: "there seems to be no trace of a Baskerville school outside Great Britain, except of course in the use of actual Baskerville types. Didot proceeded from the "romains du roi" and would have so proceeded if Baskerville had never printed. Even in England, where there was a Baskerville period in typography, the modern face came from the French, and not as a development from Baskerville."[9]

Baskerville's styles of type and printing, although initially unpopular in Britain, proved influential for a brief transitional period in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, with printers and type designers such as Joseph Fry, Isaac Moore who may have been Fry's punchcutter, and Wilson of Glasgow. Bulmer, cut by the brother of Baskerville's foremen, was one design inspired by it, as is the Bell type cut by Richard Austin.[8][29] Austin's biographer Alastair Johnston has described this period as a "glorious but short-lived" period of innovative type design in Britain "of harmonious types that had the larger-on-the-body proportions of the Romain du Roi, with the modelling of Baskerville but more colour and fine serifs".[37] Philip Gaskell particularly highlights as a successful typeface of this period the Wilson foundry of Glasgow's 'startling' English-sized (14 pt) roman of 1760, following soon from Baskerville's first editions of 1757 and cut extremely large for its point size: "Baskerville's influence is obvious, but Wilson has outdone the master in the width, weight and even the size of the face. I think myself that with its large x-height, generous width and clean execution, this elegant fount carries out Baskerville's ideas better than did Baskerville himself."[38][39][12] This period saw an increasing influence of Didone printing from the Continent, in particular the types of the Didot family and the editions published by Bodoni. The style then disappeared from view altogether following a full trend towards Didone typefaces, often with a much darker style of impression; Updike suggests that this change mostly happened around 1815–20.[29] The Scotch Roman genre which proved popular in Britain and America is something of an intermediate between Didone typefaces and Baskerville's influence. The succession of more extreme "Didone" typefaces quickly replacing Baskerville's style has led to Baskerville being called "transitional" on the road to the Didone style which dominated printing for a long period, although of course Baskerville would not have considered his design "transitional" but as a successful end in itself.[7][6]

The original Baskerville type (with some replaced letters) was revived in 1917 by Bruce Rogers, for the Harvard University Press, and also released by G. Peignot et Fils in Paris (France).[22] Modern revivals have added features, such as italics with extra or no swashes and bold weights, that were not present in Baskerville's original work.

Baskerville is used widely in documents issued by the University of Birmingham (UK) and Castleton University (Vermont, USA).[40] A modified version of Baskerville is also prominently used in the Canadian government's corporate identity program—namely, in the 'Canada' wordmark. Another modified version of Baskerville is used by Northeastern University (USA), and the ABRSM.

Characteristics edit

 
Fry's Baskerville showing its key features: a nearly vertical axis of thinnest points (a), a high stroke contrast (c) and nearly-horizontal serifs which are sharp points (d). This compares to earlier type designs such as Bembo (below) with a diagonal axis (b), less stroke contrast (d) and serifs at a greater angle to the horizontal (e).
 

Key features of Baskerville are its E where the bottom arm projects further than the upper, a W with no centre serif, and in the lower-case g where the bottom loop is open. Some fonts cut for Baskerville have an 'R' with a straight leg; in others it is curved. Many characters have obvious ball terminals, in contrast to the more wedge-shaped serifs of earlier fonts. Most distinctive is the italic, in which the J has a centre-bar and many other italic capitals have flourishes, the 'p' has a tail pointing downwards and to the left (similar to the entrance stroke that would be made with a pen) and the w has a clear centre loop and swash on the left. In general, Baskerville's type has been described as 'rounder, more sharply cut' than its predecessors.[41] (Some of these distinctive features are discarded in many revivals, as seen below.) Baskerville's type featured text figures or lower-case numbers, the only form of Arabic numerals in use at the time (Roman numerals would be used to align with the capitals).[19][29] The capitals are very bold, and (like Caslon's) have been criticised for being unbalanced to the lower-case at large sizes.

Baskerville also produced a font for Greek, which survives at Oxford.[42][43][44][45] It has sometimes been criticised as unidiomatic, and has not been particularly popular.[46][47][g][48][49] He also had cut ornaments, many apparently copied or influenced from those offered by the Enschedé type foundry of Haarlem.[50]

Metal type versions edit

 
An American adaptation of Isaac Moore's type following Baskerville's style, from the late metal type period. Note the 'Q' and 'a', unlike Baskerville's. The lining figures are not original and the descenders have likely been shortened to fit the American "common line" standard.[51]
 
The Fry type foundry's copies of first Baskerville (above) and then Caslon (below), shown in a specimen attached to an edition of The Printer's Grammar, 1787. The image illustrates the limits of Baskerville's type's popularity, since they apparently felt the need to cut a copy of Caslon's type also, although the book is set in Baskerville-style type.

The following foundries offered versions of Baskerville:

  • The original punches were sold by Baskerville's widow and eventually ended up in the possession of G. Peignot et Fils by way of Beaumarchais. Charles Peignot donated them to Cambridge University Press in 1953.[52][53]
  • Since Baskerville's equipment was in France and therefore unavailable to them, the Fry type foundry of Bristol produced its own version in the late eighteenth century, presumably cut by typefounder Isaac Moore who also showcased them on his own specimen.[51][54][h] These designs feature a slightly different 'a' at large sizes, which has been followed in many Baskerville revivals.[55] Mosley comments that "In its larger sizes it is one of the most elegant types which have ever been cut, and it is by no means a simple derivative. The curves of the lower-case letters are flatter than Baskerville's and the serifs are slightly more tapered."[12] Fry's version was showcased in a specimen attached to a 1787 reprint of John Smith's[i] Printer's Grammar, in which it was frankly admitted that "The plan on which they first sat out was an improvement of the Types of the late Mr. Baskerville of Birmingham" but, presumably failing to achieve sufficient popularity, they additionally created copies of Caslon's types.[29][13]
  • When Fry's successors closed, their version was acquired and issued (and some sizes possibly recut) by Stephenson Blake under the name "Baskerville Old Face"; many imitations follow its design, often adding lining figures at cap height and cropping the descenders as was necessary for "standard line" American printing.[15]
  • The Fry Foundry version was also copied by American Type Founders. Finding Moore's italic unsatisfactory, they added an italic based on the slightly later Bell typeface cut by Richard Austin.[57]
  • The British Monotype Corporation cut a copy of Baskerville in 1923 for its hot metal typesetting system, showcased in Penrose's Annual of 1924; it was extremely popular for printing in Britain during the twentieth century.[58][59] As with other Monotype revivals, the design is now sometimes called Baskerville MT. It is bundled with OS X in a somewhat slender digitisation.[60][61][62]
  • Schriftgießerei D. Stempel issued a revival in 1926 under the name "Original-Baskerville".
  • Linotype AG, the German arm of Mergenthaler Linotype, adapted the Stempel cutting of the face for linecasting in 1927.[63]
  • Linotype's Baskerville was cut in 1923 by George W. Jones, and was re-cut in 1936. A bold version was cut by Chauncey H. Griffith in 1939. It may sometimes be called Baskerville LT.

More loosely, the Scotch Roman genre of transitional types reflects the influence of Baskerville's work, with increasing influence of Didone type from the continent around the beginning of the nineteenth century; the font Georgia is influenced by this genre. Due to the cachet of the name, some completely unrelated designs were named 'Baskerville' in the hot metal period.[64][65]

Cold type versions edit

 
Two Baskerville revivals. The top design (Baskerville Old Style in the common Microsoft release) is more suitable for headings and that below (Berthold's) with its thicker strokes for body text. Baskerville Old Style is based on Fry and Moore's recreation, distinguishable by the slightly different curve of its 'a'.

As it had been a standard type for many years, Baskerville was widely available in cold type. Alphatype, Autologic, Berthold, Compugraphic, Dymo, Star/Photon, Harris, Mergenthaler, MGD Graphic Systems, Varityper, Hell AG and Monotype, all sold the face under the name Baskerville, while Graphic Systems Inc. offered the face as Beaumont.[66]

Digital versions edit

 
Baskerville revivals take a variety of approaches and the differences are often particularly visible in italic. Monotype's, at top, favours historical accuracy and a quite light colour, retaining the elegant swashed N, Q and T of Baskerville's original. ITC's uses conventional capitals, presumably to offer a more homogenous appearance.[67] Impallari's revival makes the same choice on a thicker structure, more suitable for use at small sizes or onscreen display where there will be no ink spread.[68]

As a somewhat precise design that emphasises contrast between thick and thin strokes, modern designers may prefer different revivals for different text sizes, printing methods and onscreen display, since a design intended to appear elegant in large text sizes could look too spindly for body text.[10] Factors which would be taken into account include compensation for size and ink spread, if any (the extent of which depends on printing methods and type of paper used; it does not occur on screens). Among digitisations, František Štorm's extremely complete range of versions is particularly praised for featuring three optical sizes, the text version having thicker strokes to increase legibility as metal type does.[69][70] Meanwhile, the common digitisation of Baskerville Old Face bundled with many Microsoft products features dramatic contrasts between thin and thick strokes. This makes it most suited to headings, especially since it does not have an italic.[71][72]

Another common question facing revivals is what to do with some letters such as 'N' in italics. On faithful revivals such as the Storm digitisation (shown at top right) they have a swash, but this may be thought too distracting for general use or to space poorly in all-caps text. Accordingly, many revivals substitute (or offer as an alternate) capitals without swashes.

Dieter Hofrichter, who assisted Günter Gerhard Lange in designing a Baskerville revival for Berthold around 1980, commented:

We went to Birmingham where we saw original prints by Baskerville. I was quite astounded by how sharp the printing of his specimens is. They are razor-sharp: it almost hurt your eyes to see them. So elegant and high-contrast! He showed in this way what he could achieve. That was Baskerville's ideal - but not necessarily right for today.[73][74]

Many companies have provided digital releases (some of older Baskerville revivals), including Linotype, URW++, Bitstream and SoftMaker as well as many others. These may have varying features, for example some lacking small caps. Monotype Baskerville is installed on Macs as part of macOS, while many Windows computers receive Moore's adaptation under the name of Baskerville Old Face in the URW digitisation (that described above) without an italic or bold weight.

Adaptations edit

 
Mrs Eaves, a radical reimagination of the Baskerville style by Zuzana Licko, with a low x-height for display use.

A particularly idiosyncratic Baskerville revival is Mrs Eaves (1996), designed by Zuzana Licko.[75] Named after Baskerville's housekeeper-turned-wife, it uses a low x-height to create a bright page without reducing stroke width. Not intended for extended body text, it is often used on book titles and headings.[76][77][78] It uses a variety of ligatures to create effects with linked characters.[79] Licko later created a sans-serif companion, Mr. Eaves.

Big Moore by Matthew Carter is a recent, complex digitisation of the larger sizes of Isaac Moore's early adaptation, that often called Baskerville Old Face, adding an italic.[51][55][80][81] Harriet is an adaptation by Okaytype inspired by American nineteenth-century printing.[82]

 
The 'Canada' wordmark

Gallery edit

Some examples of volumes published by Baskerville.

Notes edit

  1. ^ It should be realised that "Transitional" is a somewhat nebulous classification, almost always including Baskerville and other typefaces around this period but also sometimes some of the later "old-style" faces such as the work of Caslon and his imitators. In addition, of course Baskerville and others of this period would not have seen their work as "transitional" but as an end in itself. Eliason (2015) provides a leading modern critique and assessment of the classification, but even in 1930 Alfred F. Johnson called the term "vague and unsatisfactory."[6][7]
  2. ^ With a few exceptions - some Birmingham publishers local to him used some of his types occasionally, including his foreman Robert Martin.[11]
  3. ^ The attribution to more is generally quite confidently accepted by scholars and the Baskerville imitation typefaces appear on a specimen issued credited to him personally although some writers only describe the attribution as probable.[12] They were later claimed to be "cut for John Baskerville in 1768" by its owners Stephenson Blake; modern historians have generally treated this as a misunderstanding or exaggeration.[16][17]
  4. ^ 'Transitional' faces moving on from the sixteenth-century model had appeared and become popular on the continent, for instance the Romain du Roi typeface, the work of Joan Michaël Fleischman and Fournier, but these had not become popular in Britain.
  5. ^ The slate survives in the collection of the Library of Birmingham. Unfortunately, none of his gravestones or formal calligraphy are known to survive.[25]
  6. ^ Mosley also notes that it is not certain, that Bodoni actually planned to come to England with the specific goal of meeting Baskerville, as has sometimes been reported.[35]
  7. ^ Linotype's upright Baskerville Greek was not based on it but rather copies the style of his roman type.
  8. ^ Moore was a Birmingham native, but does not appear to have had any connection with Baskerville himself.
  9. ^ Possibly a pseudonym.[56]

References edit

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  3. ^ Benton, Josiah Henry (1914). John Baskerville, Type-Founder and Printer, 1706-1775. Boston. Retrieved 12 February 2017.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Robert Dodsley (22 January 2004). The Correspondence of Robert Dodsley: 1733-1764. Cambridge University Press. pp. 144–6. ISBN 978-0-521-52208-3.
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  13. ^ a b Smith, John (1787). The Printer's Grammar (1787 ed.). pp. 271–316. Retrieved 16 June 2018. Since the first appearance of Smith's Printers Grammar, and Mr. Luckombe's History of Printing, many very useful improvements have been made in the Letter Foundery of Messrs. Fry and Son, which was begun in 1764, and has been continued with great perseverance and assiduity, and at a very considerable expense. The plan on which they first sat out, was an improvement of the Types of the late Mr Baskerville of Birmingham, eminent for his ingenuity in this line, as also for his curious Printing, many proofs of which are extant, and much admired: But the shape of Mr. Caslon's Type has since been copied by them with such accuracy as not to be distinguished from those of that celebrated Founder…The following short Specimen may serve to convey some idea of the Perfection to which that Manufactory is arrived.
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  56. ^ Mosley, James. "John Smith's Printer's Grammar, 1755". Typefoundry. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  57. ^ Morison, Stanley; Barker, Nicolas (1981). John Bell, 1745-1831: Bookseller, Printer, Publisher, Typefounder, Journalist &c (Repr. of the 1930 ed.). New York [u.a.]: Garland. p. x. ISBN 9780824038878.
  58. ^ Stanley Morison (7 June 1973). A Tally of Types. CUP Archive. pp. 81–91. ISBN 978-0-521-09786-4.
  59. ^ Williamson, Hugh (1956). Methods of Book Design. Oxford University Press. pp. 88–90.
  60. ^ MacGrew, Mac, American Metal Typefaces of the Twentieth Century, Oak Knoll Books, New Castle, Delaware, 1993, ISBN 0-938768-34-4, p. 27.
  61. ^ "Monotype Baskerville specimen book" (PDF). Monotype. Retrieved 30 October 2015.
  62. ^ Coles, Stephen. "Digital versions are poor for text. Too light". Typographica.
  63. ^ Lawson, Alexander. Anatomy Of A Typeface. David R. Godine, Publisher, Inc.: 1990, p. 192
  64. ^ Hoefler, Jonathan. "What's in a font name?". Hoefler & Frere-Jones. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  65. ^ Specimens of Type. London: Caslon & Co. 1915. p. 64.
  66. ^ Lawson, Alexander, Archie Provan, and Frank Romano, Primer Metal Typeface Identification, National Composition Association, Arlington, Virginia, 1976, pp. 34 - 35.
  67. ^ "ITC New Baskerville". MyFonts. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  68. ^ Impallari, Pablo. . Impallari Type. Archived from the original on 25 October 2015. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  69. ^ Twardoch, Adam. "Baskerville 10". Typographica. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  70. ^ Butterick, Matthew. . Typography for Lawyers (archived). Archived from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved 7 August 2016. The Baskerville system font is mediocre: brittle and excessively quaint. The best recreation of the traditional Baskerville look is Baskerville 10. The definitive modernist reinterpretation is Mrs Eaves.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  71. ^ "Storm Type Baskerville Original Pro". MyFonts. Monotype. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  72. ^ "Baskerville Old Face". Fonts In Use.
  73. ^ Reynolds, Dan. "Dieter Hofrichter". MyFonts. Monotype. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  74. ^ "Baskerville Book Pro". Berthold. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  75. ^ Eye, Number 43, Volume 11, Spring 2002.
  76. ^ (PDF). Emigre. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 November 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  77. ^ "Mr Eaves". Emigre Fonts. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  78. ^ . Emigre. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  79. ^ "Mrs Eaves Design Information: Emigre Fonts". Emigre.com. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  80. ^ "Introducing Big Moore". Font Bureau. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  81. ^ "Big Moore FB". Font Bureau. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  82. ^ Mora, André. "Harriet series". Typographica. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  • Lawson, Alexander S. (1990), Anatomy of a Typeface, Boston: Godine, ISBN 0-87923-333-8.
  • Meggs, Philip B. & Carter, Rob (1993), Typographic Specimens: The Great Typefaces, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, ISBN 0-442-00758-2
  • Meggs, Philip B. & McKelvey, Roy (2000), Revival of the Fittest, New York: RC Publications, ISBN 1-883915-08-2.
  • Updike, Daniel Berkley (1980) [1922], Printing Types Their History, Forms and Use, vol. II, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-23929-2 - general survey of printing including of the years after Baskerville & his influence on printing. Many illustrations.

External links edit

  • John Baskerville I Love Typography, Sep. 23, 2007
  • Open Baskerville – an open-source revival of Moore's Baskerville, without an italic

baskerville, this, article, about, font, person, created, font, john, other, uses, disambiguation, serif, typeface, designed, 1750s, john, 1706, 1775, birmingham, england, into, metal, punchcutter, john, handy, classified, transitional, typeface, intended, ref. This article is about the font For the person who created the font see John Baskerville For other uses see Baskerville disambiguation Baskerville is a serif typeface designed in the 1750s by John Baskerville 1706 1775 in Birmingham England and cut into metal by punchcutter John Handy 1 2 3 4 Baskerville is classified as a transitional typeface intended as a refinement of what are now called old style typefaces of the period especially those of his most eminent contemporary William Caslon 5 a CategorySerifClassificationTransitional serifDesigner s John BaskervilleFoundryG Peignot et FilsLinotypeVariationsMrs EavesShown hereBaskerville Ten byFrantisek StormCompared to earlier designs popular in Britain Baskerville increased the contrast between thick and thin strokes making the serifs sharper and more tapered and shifted the axis of rounded letters to a more vertical position 8 The curved strokes are more circular in shape and the characters became more regular These changes created a greater consistency in size and form influenced by the calligraphy Baskerville had learned and taught as a young man 9 Baskerville s typefaces remain very popular in book design and there are many modern revivals which often add features such as bold type which did not exist in Baskerville s time 10 As Baskerville s typefaces were proprietary to him b and sold to a French publisher after his death some designs influenced by him were made by British punchcutters 2 The Fry Foundry of Bristol created a version probably cut by their typefounder Isaac Moore 12 13 14 Marketed in the twentieth century as Fry s Baskerville or Baskerville Old Face a digitisation based on the more delicate larger sizes is included with some Microsoft software 15 c Contents 1 History 1 1 Reception 2 Characteristics 3 Metal type versions 4 Cold type versions 5 Digital versions 5 1 Adaptations 6 Gallery 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp The Folio Bible printed by Baskerville in 1763 nbsp Baskerville s first publication an edition of Virgil The design shows the smooth gleaming finish of his paper and minimal title pages Baskerville s typeface was part of an ambitious project to create books of the greatest possible quality Baskerville was a wealthy industrialist who had started his career as a writing master teacher of calligraphy and carver of gravestones before making a fortune as a manufacturer of varnished lacquer goods At a time when books in England were generally printed to a low standard using typefaces of conservative design Baskerville sought to offer books created to higher quality methods of printing than any before using carefully made level presses a high quality of ink and very smooth paper pressed after printing to a glazed gleaming finish 18 19 20 21 Having been an early admirer of the beauty of Letters I became insensibly desirous of contributing to the perfection of them I formed to myself ideas of greater accuracy than had yet appeared and had endeavoured to produce a Set of Types according to what I conceived to be their true proportion It is not my desire to print many books but such only as are books of Consequence of intrinsic merit or established Reputation and which the public may be pleased to see in an elegant dress and to purchase at such a price as will repay the extraordinary care and expense that must necessarily be bestowed upon them 5 Baskerville s preface to Milton While Baskerville s types in some aspects recall the general design of William Caslon the most eminent punchcutter of the time his approach was far more radical Beatrice Warde John Dreyfus and others have written that aspects of his design recalled his handwriting and common elements of the calligraphy taught by the time of Baskerville s youth which had been used in copperplate engraving but had not previously been cut into type in Britain 6 22 23 d Such details included many of the intricate details of his italic such as the flourishes on the capital N and entering stroke at top left of the italic p He had clearly considered the topic of ideal letterforms for many years since a slate carved in his early career offering his services cutting tombstones believed to date from around 1730 is partly cut in lettering very similar to his typefaces of the 1750s 2 24 e The result was a typeface cut by Handy to Baskerville s specifications that reflected Baskerville s ideals of perfection 26 According to Baskerville he developed his printing projects for seven years releasing a prospectus advertisement for the project in 1754 before finally releasing his first book an edition of Virgil in 1757 which was followed by other classics 27 At the start of his edition of Paradise Lost he wrote a preface explaining his ambitions 28 29 nbsp A slate carved by John Baskerville in his early career offering his services carving tombstones in blackletter roman script and italic The design is similar to his typography 30 A recreation in Monotype Baskerville shows the similarities of letterforms nbsp In 1758 he was appointed University Printer to the Cambridge University Press 31 It was there in 1763 that he published his master work a folio Bible Reception edit nbsp A detail view of Baskerville s Bible for Cambridge showing the crispness of the impression The crispness of Baskerville s work seems to have unsettled or perhaps provoked jealousy in his contemporaries and some claimed the stark contrasts in his printing damaged the eyes 28 Baskerville was never particularly successful as a printer being a printer of specialist and elite editions something not helped by the erratic standard of editing in his books 2 32 Abroad however he was much admired if not directly imitated at least not his style of type design notably by Pierre Simon Fournier Giambattista Bodoni and Benjamin Franklin who had started his career as a printer who wrote him a letter praising his work 33 34 f His work was later admired in England by Thomas Frognall Dibdin who wrote that in his Italic letter he stands unrivalled such elegance freedom and perfect symmetry being in vain to be looked for among the specimens of Aldus and Colinaeus Baskerville was a truly original artist he struck out a new method of printing in this country and may be considered as the founder of that luxuriant style of typography at present so generally prevails and which seems to have attained perfection in the neatness of Whittingham the elegance of Bulmer and the splendour of Bensley 36 Thomas Curson Hansard in 1825 seems to have had misgivings about his work praising his achievement in some ways but also suggesting that he was a better printer than a type designer 19 On his death his widow Sarah eventually sold his material to a Paris literary society connected to Beaumarchais placing them out of reach of British printing A F Johnson however cautions that some perhaps over patriotic British writers on type design have over estimated Baskerville s influence on continental type design there seems to be no trace of a Baskerville school outside Great Britain except of course in the use of actual Baskerville types Didot proceeded from the romains du roi and would have so proceeded if Baskerville had never printed Even in England where there was a Baskerville period in typography the modern face came from the French and not as a development from Baskerville 9 Baskerville s styles of type and printing although initially unpopular in Britain proved influential for a brief transitional period in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century with printers and type designers such as Joseph Fry Isaac Moore who may have been Fry s punchcutter and Wilson of Glasgow Bulmer cut by the brother of Baskerville s foremen was one design inspired by it as is the Bell type cut by Richard Austin 8 29 Austin s biographer Alastair Johnston has described this period as a glorious but short lived period of innovative type design in Britain of harmonious types that had the larger on the body proportions of the Romain du Roi with the modelling of Baskerville but more colour and fine serifs 37 Philip Gaskell particularly highlights as a successful typeface of this period the Wilson foundry of Glasgow s startling English sized 14 pt roman of 1760 following soon from Baskerville s first editions of 1757 and cut extremely large for its point size Baskerville s influence is obvious but Wilson has outdone the master in the width weight and even the size of the face I think myself that with its large x height generous width and clean execution this elegant fount carries out Baskerville s ideas better than did Baskerville himself 38 39 12 This period saw an increasing influence of Didone printing from the Continent in particular the types of the Didot family and the editions published by Bodoni The style then disappeared from view altogether following a full trend towards Didone typefaces often with a much darker style of impression Updike suggests that this change mostly happened around 1815 20 29 The Scotch Roman genre which proved popular in Britain and America is something of an intermediate between Didone typefaces and Baskerville s influence The succession of more extreme Didone typefaces quickly replacing Baskerville s style has led to Baskerville being called transitional on the road to the Didone style which dominated printing for a long period although of course Baskerville would not have considered his design transitional but as a successful end in itself 7 6 The original Baskerville type with some replaced letters was revived in 1917 by Bruce Rogers for the Harvard University Press and also released by G Peignot et Fils in Paris France 22 Modern revivals have added features such as italics with extra or no swashes and bold weights that were not present in Baskerville s original work Baskerville is used widely in documents issued by the University of Birmingham UK and Castleton University Vermont USA 40 A modified version of Baskerville is also prominently used in the Canadian government s corporate identity program namely in the Canada wordmark Another modified version of Baskerville is used by Northeastern University USA and the ABRSM Characteristics edit nbsp Fry s Baskerville showing its key features a nearly vertical axis of thinnest points a a high stroke contrast c and nearly horizontal serifs which are sharp points d This compares to earlier type designs such as Bembo below with a diagonal axis b less stroke contrast d and serifs at a greater angle to the horizontal e nbsp Key features of Baskerville are its E where the bottom arm projects further than the upper a W with no centre serif and in the lower case g where the bottom loop is open Some fonts cut for Baskerville have an R with a straight leg in others it is curved Many characters have obvious ball terminals in contrast to the more wedge shaped serifs of earlier fonts Most distinctive is the italic in which the J has a centre bar and many other italic capitals have flourishes the p has a tail pointing downwards and to the left similar to the entrance stroke that would be made with a pen and the w has a clear centre loop and swash on the left In general Baskerville s type has been described as rounder more sharply cut than its predecessors 41 Some of these distinctive features are discarded in many revivals as seen below Baskerville s type featured text figures or lower case numbers the only form of Arabic numerals in use at the time Roman numerals would be used to align with the capitals 19 29 The capitals are very bold and like Caslon s have been criticised for being unbalanced to the lower case at large sizes Baskerville also produced a font for Greek which survives at Oxford 42 43 44 45 It has sometimes been criticised as unidiomatic and has not been particularly popular 46 47 g 48 49 He also had cut ornaments many apparently copied or influenced from those offered by the Enschede type foundry of Haarlem 50 Metal type versions edit nbsp An American adaptation of Isaac Moore s type following Baskerville s style from the late metal type period Note the Q and a unlike Baskerville s The lining figures are not original and the descenders have likely been shortened to fit the American common line standard 51 nbsp The Fry type foundry s copies of first Baskerville above and then Caslon below shown in a specimen attached to an edition of The Printer s Grammar 1787 The image illustrates the limits of Baskerville s type s popularity since they apparently felt the need to cut a copy of Caslon s type also although the book is set in Baskerville style type The following foundries offered versions of Baskerville The original punches were sold by Baskerville s widow and eventually ended up in the possession of G Peignot et Fils by way of Beaumarchais Charles Peignot donated them to Cambridge University Press in 1953 52 53 Since Baskerville s equipment was in France and therefore unavailable to them the Fry type foundry of Bristol produced its own version in the late eighteenth century presumably cut by typefounder Isaac Moore who also showcased them on his own specimen 51 54 h These designs feature a slightly different a at large sizes which has been followed in many Baskerville revivals 55 Mosley comments that In its larger sizes it is one of the most elegant types which have ever been cut and it is by no means a simple derivative The curves of the lower case letters are flatter than Baskerville s and the serifs are slightly more tapered 12 Fry s version was showcased in a specimen attached to a 1787 reprint of John Smith s i Printer s Grammar in which it was frankly admitted that The plan on which they first sat out was an improvement of the Types of the late Mr Baskerville of Birmingham but presumably failing to achieve sufficient popularity they additionally created copies of Caslon s types 29 13 When Fry s successors closed their version was acquired and issued and some sizes possibly recut by Stephenson Blake under the name Baskerville Old Face many imitations follow its design often adding lining figures at cap height and cropping the descenders as was necessary for standard line American printing 15 The Fry Foundry version was also copied by American Type Founders Finding Moore s italic unsatisfactory they added an italic based on the slightly later Bell typeface cut by Richard Austin 57 The British Monotype Corporation cut a copy of Baskerville in 1923 for its hot metal typesetting system showcased in Penrose s Annual of 1924 it was extremely popular for printing in Britain during the twentieth century 58 59 As with other Monotype revivals the design is now sometimes called Baskerville MT It is bundled with OS X in a somewhat slender digitisation 60 61 62 Schriftgiesserei D Stempel issued a revival in 1926 under the name Original Baskerville Linotype AG the German arm of Mergenthaler Linotype adapted the Stempel cutting of the face for linecasting in 1927 63 Linotype s Baskerville was cut in 1923 by George W Jones and was re cut in 1936 A bold version was cut by Chauncey H Griffith in 1939 It may sometimes be called Baskerville LT More loosely the Scotch Roman genre of transitional types reflects the influence of Baskerville s work with increasing influence of Didone type from the continent around the beginning of the nineteenth century the font Georgia is influenced by this genre Due to the cachet of the name some completely unrelated designs were named Baskerville in the hot metal period 64 65 Cold type versions edit nbsp Two Baskerville revivals The top design Baskerville Old Style in the common Microsoft release is more suitable for headings and that below Berthold s with its thicker strokes for body text Baskerville Old Style is based on Fry and Moore s recreation distinguishable by the slightly different curve of its a As it had been a standard type for many years Baskerville was widely available in cold type Alphatype Autologic Berthold Compugraphic Dymo Star Photon Harris Mergenthaler MGD Graphic Systems Varityper Hell AG and Monotype all sold the face under the name Baskerville while Graphic Systems Inc offered the face as Beaumont 66 Digital versions edit nbsp Baskerville revivals take a variety of approaches and the differences are often particularly visible in italic Monotype s at top favours historical accuracy and a quite light colour retaining the elegant swashed N Q and T of Baskerville s original ITC s uses conventional capitals presumably to offer a more homogenous appearance 67 Impallari s revival makes the same choice on a thicker structure more suitable for use at small sizes or onscreen display where there will be no ink spread 68 As a somewhat precise design that emphasises contrast between thick and thin strokes modern designers may prefer different revivals for different text sizes printing methods and onscreen display since a design intended to appear elegant in large text sizes could look too spindly for body text 10 Factors which would be taken into account include compensation for size and ink spread if any the extent of which depends on printing methods and type of paper used it does not occur on screens Among digitisations Frantisek Storm s extremely complete range of versions is particularly praised for featuring three optical sizes the text version having thicker strokes to increase legibility as metal type does 69 70 Meanwhile the common digitisation of Baskerville Old Face bundled with many Microsoft products features dramatic contrasts between thin and thick strokes This makes it most suited to headings especially since it does not have an italic 71 72 Another common question facing revivals is what to do with some letters such as N in italics On faithful revivals such as the Storm digitisation shown at top right they have a swash but this may be thought too distracting for general use or to space poorly in all caps text Accordingly many revivals substitute or offer as an alternate capitals without swashes Dieter Hofrichter who assisted Gunter Gerhard Lange in designing a Baskerville revival for Berthold around 1980 commented We went to Birmingham where we saw original prints by Baskerville I was quite astounded by how sharp the printing of his specimens is They are razor sharp it almost hurt your eyes to see them So elegant and high contrast He showed in this way what he could achieve That was Baskerville s ideal but not necessarily right for today 73 74 Many companies have provided digital releases some of older Baskerville revivals including Linotype URW Bitstream and SoftMaker as well as many others These may have varying features for example some lacking small caps Monotype Baskerville is installed on Macs as part of macOS while many Windows computers receive Moore s adaptation under the name of Baskerville Old Face in the URW digitisation that described above without an italic or bold weight Adaptations edit nbsp Mrs Eaves a radical reimagination of the Baskerville style by Zuzana Licko with a low x height for display use A particularly idiosyncratic Baskerville revival is Mrs Eaves 1996 designed by Zuzana Licko 75 Named after Baskerville s housekeeper turned wife it uses a low x height to create a bright page without reducing stroke width Not intended for extended body text it is often used on book titles and headings 76 77 78 It uses a variety of ligatures to create effects with linked characters 79 Licko later created a sans serif companion Mr Eaves Big Moore by Matthew Carter is a recent complex digitisation of the larger sizes of Isaac Moore s early adaptation that often called Baskerville Old Face adding an italic 51 55 80 81 Harriet is an adaptation by Okaytype inspired by American nineteenth century printing 82 nbsp The Canada wordmarkGallery editSome examples of volumes published by Baskerville nbsp John Milton s Paradise Lost 1758 nbsp Volume One of The works of Joseph Addison 1761 nbsp Title page of Baskerville s 1763 Bible showing additional custom lettering nbsp The 1766 translation of Virgil into English by Robert Andrews nbsp Baskerville s 1760 Book of Common Prayer nbsp An edition from 1766 Notes edit It should be realised that Transitional is a somewhat nebulous classification almost always including Baskerville and other typefaces around this period but also sometimes some of the later old style faces such as the work of Caslon and his imitators In addition of course Baskerville and others of this period would not have seen their work as transitional but as an end in itself Eliason 2015 provides a leading modern critique and assessment of the classification but even in 1930 Alfred F Johnson called the term vague and unsatisfactory 6 7 With a few exceptions some Birmingham publishers local to him used some of his types occasionally including his foreman Robert Martin 11 The attribution to more is generally quite confidently accepted by scholars and the Baskerville imitation typefaces appear on a specimen issued credited to him personally although some writers only describe the attribution as probable 12 They were later claimed to be cut for John Baskerville in 1768 by its owners Stephenson Blake modern historians have generally treated this as a misunderstanding or exaggeration 16 17 Transitional faces moving on from the sixteenth century model had appeared and become popular on the continent for instance the Romain du Roi typeface the work of Joan Michael Fleischman and Fournier but these had not become popular in Britain The slate survives in the collection of the Library of Birmingham Unfortunately none of his gravestones or formal calligraphy are known to survive 25 Mosley also notes that it is not certain that Bodoni actually planned to come to England with the specific goal of meeting Baskerville as has sometimes been reported 35 Linotype s upright Baskerville Greek was not based on it but rather copies the style of his roman type Moore was a Birmingham native but does not appear to have had any connection with Baskerville himself Possibly a pseudonym 56 References edit Benton Josiah 2014 John Baskerville type founder and printer 1706 1775 S l Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 9781108076227 Retrieved 10 December 2015 a b c d Mosley James John Baskerville Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Benton Josiah Henry 1914 John Baskerville Type Founder and Printer 1706 1775 Boston Retrieved 12 February 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Robert Dodsley 22 January 2004 The Correspondence of Robert Dodsley 1733 1764 Cambridge University Press pp 144 6 ISBN 978 0 521 52208 3 a b Baskerville John 1758 Preface to Paradise Lost amp Paradise Regained Birmingham John Baskerville for J amp R Tonson a b c Johnson Alfred F 1930 The Evolution of the Modern Face Roman The Library s4 XI 3 353 377 doi 10 1093 library s4 XI 3 353 a b Eliason Craig October 2015 Transitional Typefaces The History of a Typefounding Classification Design Issues 31 4 30 43 doi 10 1162 DESI a 00349 S2CID 57569313 a b Phinney Thomas Transitional amp Modern Type Families Graphic Design amp Publishing Center Archived from the original on 19 October 2015 Retrieved 30 October 2015 a b Johnson Alfred F 1959 Type Designs London Grafton amp Co pp 69 79 a b Coles Stephen Top Ten Typefaces Used by Book Design Winners FontFeed archived Archived from the original on 28 February 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Pardoe F E 1990 Two unrecorded Baskerville items Bulletin of the Printing Historical Society 27 1 3 a b c d Mosley James 1963 English Vernacular Motif 11 3 56 Their roman known today as Fry s Baskerville was probably the work of Isaac Moore who later became a partner in the foundry In its larger sizes it is one of the most elegant types which have ever been cut and it is by no means a simple derivative The curves of the lower case letters are flatter than Baskerville s and the serifs are slightly more tapered a b Smith John 1787 The Printer s Grammar 1787 ed pp 271 316 Retrieved 16 June 2018 Since the first appearance of Smith s Printers Grammar and Mr Luckombe s History of Printing many very useful improvements have been made in the Letter Foundery of Messrs Fry and Son which was begun in 1764 and has been continued with great perseverance and assiduity and at a very considerable expense The plan on which they first sat out was an improvement of the Types of the late Mr Baskerville of Birmingham eminent for his ingenuity in this line as also for his curious Printing many proofs of which are extant and much admired But the shape of Mr Caslon s Type has since been copied by them with such accuracy as not to be distinguished from those of that celebrated Founder The following short Specimen may serve to convey some idea of the Perfection to which that Manufactory is arrived Shaw Paul 2017 Revival Type Digital Typefaces Inspired by the Past Yale University Press pp 94 9 ISBN 978 0 300 21929 6 a b Mosley James Comments on Typophile thread Typophile Archived from the original on 28 September 2017 Retrieved 28 September 2017 The Fry foundry whose first types in the 1760s were what they called an improvement of Baskerville s Stephenson Blake cast some types from the Fry Baskerville matrices then decided to add the smaller sizes of this type and market the typeface as Baskerville Old Face Millington Roy 2002 Stephenson Blake the last of the Old English typefounders 1st ed New Castle Del u a Oak Knoll Press u a pp 104 228 ISBN 9780712347952 Bartram Alan 2007 Typeforms a history London British Library p 48 ISBN 9780712309714 John Baskerville type founder and printer 1706 1775 S l Cambridge Univ Press 2014 ISBN 9781108076227 a b c Hansard Thomas Curson 1825 Typographia an Historical Sketch of the Origin and Progress of the Art of Printing p 355 Retrieved 12 August 2015 William West 1830 The history topography and directory of Warwickshire inclusive of some portions of the ancient histories of Rous Camden Speed and Dugdale with curious memoirs of the lives of these early English writers a directory of every town and considerable village in the county a gazetteer of all towns villages parishes and hamlets and an itinerary R Wrightson pp 260 273 John Nichols 1812 Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century Comprizing Biographical Memoirs of William Bowyer Printer F S A and Many of His Learned Friends pp 450 461 a b Dreyfus John 1950 The Baskerville Punches 1750 1950 The Library s5 V 1 26 48 doi 10 1093 library s5 V 1 26 Ewan Clayton 11 February 2014 The Golden Thread A History of Writing Counterpoint LLC pp 205 210 ISBN 978 1 61902 242 3 permanent dead link John Baskerville Type Founder and Printer Cambridge Library Collection Blog Cambridge University Press 25 September 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2017 Archer Carolyn John Baskerville PDF West Midlands History Archived from the original PDF on 13 February 2017 Retrieved 13 February 2017 Bartram Alan 2004 Bauhaus modernism and the illustrated book New Haven CT Yale Univ Press ISBN 9780300101171 Philip Gaskell 14 April 2011 John Baskerville A Bibliography Cambridge University Press p 19 ISBN 978 0 521 17072 7 a b Loxley Simon 2005 Type the secret history of letters London u a I B Tauris ISBN 9781845110284 a b c d e Updike Daniel 1922 Printing types their history forms and use a study in survivals Harvard University Press Morris Errol 10 August 2012 Hear All Ye People Hearken O Earth Part 2 The New York Times Retrieved 22 June 2017 David McKitterick 27 August 1998 A History of Cambridge University Press Volume 2 Scholarship and Commerce 1698 1872 Cambridge University Press pp 195 202 216 219 244 253 ISBN 978 0 521 30802 1 Mosley James Typefounder and Printer Review of John Baskerville A Bibliography by Philip Gaskell Motif 106 Lawson Alexander 1990 Anatomy of a Typeface 1st ed Boston Godine pp 184 ISBN 9780879233334 Benjamin Franklin 1840 The Works of Benjamin Franklin Containing Several Political and Historical Tracts Not Included in Any Former Edition and Many Letters Official and Private Not Hitherto Published with Notes and a Life of the Author Hillard Gray pp 212 5 Mosley James Comments on Typophile thread Typophile Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 16 December 2016 Dibdin Thomas 1808 An introduction to the knowledge of rare and valuable editions of the Greek and Latin classics Dibdin on the Classics Printed for Longman Hurst Rees and Orme p 336 Johnston Alastair 2014 Transitional Faces The Lives amp Work of Richard Austin type cutter and Richard Turner Austin wood engraver Berkeley Poltroon Press ISBN 978 0918395320 Retrieved 8 February 2017 Gaskell Philip 1986 A Bibliography of the Foulis Press 2nd ed Winchester Hampshire England St Paul s Bibliographies ISBN 0906795133 Mosley James 1987 A Large Face of the eighteenth century Printing Historical Society Bulletin 253 254 ISSN 0144 7505 Castleton State College Athletic Logo Usage and Style Guidelines PDF Castleton State College August 2008 Retrieved 18 August 2012 permanent dead link Monotype Baskerville PDF Monotype Recorder 32 1 27 Alfred W Pollard 1900 A Short History of English Printing 1476 1898 Library of Alexandria pp 252 4 ISBN 978 1 4655 4384 4 Allen Kent 28 February 1986 Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science Volume 40 Supplement 5 Austria National Library of to The Swiss National Library CRC Press pp 11 25 ISBN 978 0 8247 2040 7 Bowman J H 1992 Greek Printing Types in Britain in the Nineteenth Century A Catalogue Oxford Oxford Bibliographical Society p 40 ISBN 9780901420503 Bowman J H 1998 Greek Printing Types in Britain from the late eighteenth century to the early twentieth century Thessaloniki Typophilia pp 95 9 ISBN 9789607285201 Leonidas Gerry 5 October 2017 A Reappraisal of Baskerville s Greek Types In Archer Parre Caroline Dick Malcolm eds John Baskerville Art and Industry of the Enlightenment Liverpool University Press pp 133 151 ISBN 9781786948601 Leonidas Gerry A primer on Greek type design Gerry Leonidas Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Retrieved 14 May 2017 Greek Typefaces of the 18th century Greek Font Society Archived from the original on 18 October 2016 Retrieved 14 October 2016 Allen Kent 28 February 1986 Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science Volume 40 Supplement 5 Austria National Library of to The Swiss National Library CRC Press pp 18 9 ISBN 978 0 8247 2040 7 Dreyfus John Baskerville s Ornaments Into Print pp 37 42 a b c A Specimen by Isaac Moore amp Co 1766 Providence Public Library saac Moore amp Co Archived from the original on 8 January 2016 Retrieved 30 October 2015 Jaspert W Pincus W Turner Berry and A F Johnson The Encyclopedia of Type Faces Blandford Press Lts 1953 1983 ISBN 0 7137 1347 X p 15 Lawson Alexander Anatomy Of A Typeface David R Godine Publisher Inc 1990 p 194 Obituary Dr Fry The Gentleman s Magazine May 557 8 May 1838 a b Baskerville Old Face Microsoft Retrieved 24 June 2015 Mosley James John Smith s Printer s Grammar 1755 Typefoundry Retrieved 16 June 2018 Morison Stanley Barker Nicolas 1981 John Bell 1745 1831 Bookseller Printer Publisher Typefounder Journalist amp c Repr of the 1930 ed New York u a Garland p x ISBN 9780824038878 Stanley Morison 7 June 1973 A Tally of Types CUP Archive pp 81 91 ISBN 978 0 521 09786 4 Williamson Hugh 1956 Methods of Book Design Oxford University Press pp 88 90 MacGrew Mac American Metal Typefaces of the Twentieth Century Oak Knoll Books New Castle Delaware 1993 ISBN 0 938768 34 4 p 27 Monotype Baskerville specimen book PDF Monotype Retrieved 30 October 2015 Coles Stephen Digital versions are poor for text Too light Typographica Lawson Alexander Anatomy Of A Typeface David R Godine Publisher Inc 1990 p 192 Hoefler Jonathan What s in a font name Hoefler amp Frere Jones Retrieved 2 July 2015 Specimens of Type London Caslon amp Co 1915 p 64 Lawson Alexander Archie Provan and Frank Romano Primer Metal Typeface Identification National Composition Association Arlington Virginia 1976 pp 34 35 ITC New Baskerville MyFonts Retrieved 10 December 2015 Impallari Pablo Libre Baskerville Impallari Type Archived from the original on 25 October 2015 Retrieved 10 December 2015 Twardoch Adam Baskerville 10 Typographica Retrieved 12 July 2015 Butterick Matthew Better options for Baskerville Typography for Lawyers archived Archived from the original on 15 March 2015 Retrieved 7 August 2016 The Baskerville system font is mediocre brittle and excessively quaint The best recreation of the traditional Baskerville look is Baskerville 10 The definitive modernist reinterpretation is Mrs Eaves a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Storm Type Baskerville Original Pro MyFonts Monotype Retrieved 9 July 2015 Baskerville Old Face Fonts In Use Reynolds Dan Dieter Hofrichter MyFonts Monotype Retrieved 17 June 2015 Baskerville Book Pro Berthold Retrieved 13 July 2015 Eye Number 43 Volume 11 Spring 2002 Introducing Mrs Eaves XL PDF Emigre Archived from the original PDF on 6 November 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2014 Mr Eaves Emigre Fonts Retrieved 6 November 2014 Mr Eaves specimen Emigre Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 6 November 2014 Mrs Eaves Design Information Emigre Fonts Emigre com Retrieved 13 August 2012 Introducing Big Moore Font Bureau Retrieved 9 July 2015 Big Moore FB Font Bureau Retrieved 9 July 2015 Mora Andre Harriet series Typographica Retrieved 19 October 2015 Lawson Alexander S 1990 Anatomy of a Typeface Boston Godine ISBN 0 87923 333 8 Meggs Philip B amp Carter Rob 1993 Typographic Specimens The Great Typefaces New York Van Nostrand Reinhold ISBN 0 442 00758 2 Meggs Philip B amp McKelvey Roy 2000 Revival of the Fittest New York RC Publications ISBN 1 883915 08 2 Updike Daniel Berkley 1980 1922 Printing Types Their History Forms and Use vol II New York Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 23929 2 general survey of printing including of the years after Baskerville amp his influence on printing Many illustrations External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baskerville Typophile Baskerville John Baskerville I Love Typography Sep 23 2007 Open Baskerville an open source revival of Moore s Baskerville without an italic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baskerville amp oldid 1192698612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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