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History of Western typography

Modern typographers view typography as a craft with a very long history tracing its origins back to the first punches and dies used to make seals and coinage currency in ancient times. The basic elements of typography are at least as old as civilization and the earliest writing systems—a series of key developments that were eventually drawn together into one systematic craft. While woodblock printing and movable type had precedents in East Asia, typography in the Western world developed after the invention of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg in the mid-15th century. The initial spread of printing throughout Germany and Italy led to the enduring legacy and continued use of blackletter, roman, and italic types.

A piece of cast metal type, Garamond style long s / i ligature. See also: movable type.

Medieval design roots edit

 
First page of the first volume of the Gutenberg Bible, printed with an early textur typeface c. 1455. In this copy the decorative colored initials were hand-lettered separately by a scribe.

Typography, type-founding, and typeface design began as closely related crafts in mid-15th-century Europe with the introduction of movable type printing at the junction of the medieval era and the Renaissance. Handwritten letterforms of the mid-15th century calligraphy were the natural models for letterforms in systematized typography.[1] The scribal letter known as textur or textualis, produced by the strong gothic spirit of blackletter from the hands of German area scribes, served as the model for the first text types.

Johannes Gutenberg, around 1450, invented a lead type mold, applied it to an alphabet of about 24 characters, and used known press technology to print ink on paper. Prior printing had been done with woodblocks, but movable type was impossible due to fragility of wood at small sizes. Gutenberg employed the scribe Peter Schöffer to help design and cut the letterpunches for the first typeface—the D-K type of 202 characters used to print the first printed books in Europe. A second typeface of about 300 characters designed for the 42-line Bible c. 1455 was probably cut by the goldsmith Hans Dunne with the help of two others—Götz von Shlettstadt and Hans von Speyer.

Cultural tradition ensured that German typography and type design remained true to the gothic/blackletter spirit; but the parallel influence of the humanist and neo-classical typography in Italy (the first country outside of Germany with a printing press) catalyzed texture into four additional sub-styles that were distinct, structurally rich and highly disciplined: Bastarda, fraktur, rotunda, and Schwabacher. Notably, early printed manuscripts matched the style of handwritten manuscripts and did not contain title pages, page numbers, or headings.[1]

The rapid spread of movable type printing across Europe produced additional Gothic, half-Gothic and Gothic-to-Roman transitional types. Johann Bämler's Schwabacher, Augsburg appeared in 1474. The half-Gothic Rotunda type of Erhard Ratdolt c. 1486 was cut to suit Venetian taste. In 1476 William Caxton, having learned his craft on the Continent, printed the first books in England with a so-called Bâtarde type (an early Schwabacher design), but soon abandoned it.[2]

The early printers in Spain were Germans who began printing in contemporary roman types but soon gave these up and adopted Gothic typefaces based on the letterforms of Spanish manuscripts. Valencia in the Kingdom of Aragon was the location of the first press, established in 1473. From there printers moved to other cities to set up presses. Roman types were used by the printers of Salamanca for their editions of classical authors. Printing in Portuguese began at Lisbon in 1495 (the first book printed in Portugal was a Hebrew book printed in 1489).[3]

Classical revival edit

In Italy, the heavy gothic styles were soon displaced by Venetian or "old style" Latin types, also called antiqua. The inscriptional capitals on Roman buildings and monuments were structured on a euclidean geometric scheme and the discrete component-based model of classical architecture. Their structurally perfect design, near-perfect execution in stone, balanced angled stressing, contrasting thick and thin strokes, and incised serifs became the typographic ideal for western civilization. The best-known example of Roman inscriptional capitals exists on the base of Trajan's Column, inscribed c. 113.

 
Roman inscriptional capitals on the base of Trajan's Column, c. 113.

In their enthusiastic revival of classical culture, Italian scribes and humanist scholars of the early 15th century searched for ancient lower case letters to match the Roman inscriptional capitals. Practically all of the available manuscripts of classical writers had been rewritten during the Carolingian Renaissance, and with a lapse of three hundred years since the widespread use of this style, the humanist scribes mistook Carolingian minuscule as the authentic writing style of the ancients (as opposed to blackletter, incorrectly seen as the lettering of the Goths that conquered Rome). Dubbing it lettera antica, they began by copying the minuscule hand almost exactly, combining it with Roman capitals in the same manner as the manuscripts they were copying.[4]

 
Sample of Carolingian writing from the Carolingian Gospel Book produced between 820 and 830 AD

Upon noticing the stylistic mismatch between these two very different letters, the scribes redesigned the small Carolingian letter, lengthening ascenders and descenders, and adding incised serifs and finishing strokes to integrate them with the Roman capitals. By the time moveable type reached Italy several decades later, the humanistic writing had evolved into a consistent model known as humanistic minuscule, which served as the basis for type style we know today as Venetian.[4]

Transition from humanistic minuscule to roman type edit

The classically endowed city of Rome attracted the first printers known to have set up shop outside Germany, Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweynheim, closely followed by the brothers Johann and Wendelin of Speyer (de Spira), and the Frenchman Nicolas Jenson. The sequence of appearance and production dates for types used by these printers have yet to be established with certainty; all four are known to have printed with types ranging from textur Gothic to fully developed romans inspired by the earlier humanistic writing, and within a few years the center of printing in Italy shifted from Rome to Venice.

Some time before 1472 in Venice, Johann and Wendelin issued material printed with a half-Gothic-half-roman type known as "Gotico-antiqua". This design paired simplified Gothic capitals with a rationalized humanistic minuscule letter set, itself combining Gothic minuscule forms with elements of Carolingian, in a one step forward, half step back blending of styles.

Around the same time (1468) in Rome, Pannartz and Sweynheim were using another typeface that closely mimicked humanistic minuscule, known as "Lactantius". Unlike the rigid fractured forms of Speyer's half-Gothic, the Lactantius is characterized by smoothly rendered letters with a restrained organic finish. The Lactantius a departed from both the Carolingian and Gothic models; a vertical backstem and right-angled top replaced the diagonal Carolingian structure, and a continuous curved stroke replaced the fractured Gothic bowl element.

For details on the evolution of lower case letterforms from Latin capitals, see Latin alphabet.

Development of roman type edit

Nicolas Jenson began printing in Venice with his original roman font from 1470. Jenson's design and the very similar roman types cut by Francesco Griffo c. 1499 and Erhard Ratdolt c. 1486 are acknowledged as the definitive and archetypal roman faces that set the pattern for the majority of western text faces that followed.

The Jenson roman was an explicitly typographic letter designed on its own terms that declined to imitate the appearance of hand-lettering. Its effect is one of a unified cohesive whole, a seamless fusion of style with structure, and the successful convergence of the long progression of preceding letter styles. Jenson adapted the structural unity and component-based modular integration of Roman capitals to humanistic minuscule forms by masterful abstract stylization. The carefully modelled serifs follow an artful logic of asymmetry. The ratio of extender lengths to letter bodies and the distance between lines results in balanced, harmonious body of type. Jenson also mirrors the ideal expressed in renaissance painting of carving up space (typographic "white space") with figures (letters) to articulate the relationship between the two and make the white space dynamic.

 
Nicolas Jenson's roman type used in Venice c. 1470. Later "old style" or Venetian book romans such as Aldines, and much later Bembo, were closely based on Jenson.

The name "roman" is customarily applied uncapitalized to distinguish early Jenson and Aldine-derived types from classical Roman letters of antiquity. Some parts of Europe call roman "antiqua" from its connection with the humanistic "lettera antica"; "medieval" and "old-style" are also employed to indicate roman types dating from the late 15th century, especially those used by Aldus Manutius (Italian: Manuzio). Roman faces based on those of Speyer and Jenson are also called Venetian.

Italic type edit

The humanist spirit driving the Renaissance produced its own unique style of formal writing, known as "cursiva humanistica". This slanted and rapidly written letter evolved from humanistic minuscule and the remaining Gothic current cursive hands in Italy, served as the model for cursive or italic typefaces. As books printed with early roman types forced humanistic minuscule out of use, cursiva humanistica gained favor as a manuscript hand for the purpose of writing. The popularity of cursive writing itself may have created some demand for a type of this style. The more decisive catalyst was probably the printing of pocket editions of Latin classics by Aldus Manutius. However, even as printing overtook production of previously handwritten materials, increased literacy created a greater demand for documents and thus calligraphers saw increased work.[1]

The "Aldino" italic type, commissioned by Manutius and cut by Francesco Griffo in 1499, was a closely spaced condensed type. Griffo's punches are a delicate translation of the Italian cursive hand, featuring letters of irregular slant angle and uneven height and vertical position, with some connected pairs (ligatures), and unslanted small roman capitals the height of the lower case t. The fame of Aldus Manutius and his editions made the Griffo italic widely copied and influential, although it was not the finest of the pioneer italics. The "Aldino" style quickly became known as "italic" from its Italian origin.

Around 1527 the Vatican chancellery scribe Ludovico Arrighi designed a superior italic type and had the punches cut by Lauticio di Bartolomeo dei Rotelli. The more modular structure of Arrighi's italic and its few ligatures made it less a copy of the cursive hand than Griffo's. Its slightly taller roman capitals, a gentler slant angle, taller ascenders and wider separation of lines gave the elegant effect of refined handwriting.

 
Italic type designed by Ludovico Arrighi, c. 1527. This elegant design inspired later French italic types.

Surviving examples of 16th-century Italian books indicate the bulk of them were printed with italic types. By mid-century the popularity of italic types for sustained text setting began to decline until they were used only for in-line citations, block quotes, preliminary text, emphasis, and abbreviations. Italic types from the 20th century up to the present are much indebted to Arrighi and his influence on French designers.

Swiss art historian Jakob Burckhardt described the classically inspired Renaissance modello of dual case roman and cursive italic types as "The model and ideal for the whole western world". Venetian pre-eminence in type design was brought to an end by the political and economic turmoil that concluded the Renaissance in Italy with the sack of Rome in 1527.

Renaissance Germany and Switzerland edit

Soon after 1500, roman typefaces began to gain popularity north of the Alps for printing of Latin literature. Johann Froben of Basel, Switzerland set up his press in 1491, and by about 1519 (when he printed Erasmus's famous edition of the Greek New Testament) he had established a set of standards for humanistic printing which were widely copied throughout the German-speaking world and also in Spain and, to a lesser extent in England. His principal type is wholly roman in the shape of the characters but retains an echo of gothic influence in the angled serifs and the way the thick and thin strokes are organized; it was coupled with mated sets of woodcut initials (often designed by distinguished artists) and with two larger sizes of uppercase letters for use in title pages and headings—Froben was the first to use such 'display typefaces' consistently, breaking away from the Italian tradition in which title pages and headings tended to be set in the same size as the main text. By using these large faces, Froben developed the title page as a fully organized artistic whole. Froben's italic face is based on that of Aldus but more even and uniform in effect. These Swiss books are the first to have been designed in every detail as printed artifacts rather than as adaptations of manuscript technique.

After about 1550 this Swiss/German tradition was gradually overwhelmed by French influence. Towards the end of the 16th century, the Wechel family of Frankfurt, previously based in Paris, was producing fine books which used French typefaces in conjunction with heavy but resplendent woodcut ornaments to achieve a splendid page effect; but soon after 1600 there was a general, marked decline in the quality of both skill and materials, from which German printing did not recover until the 20th century.

16th century France edit

Typography was introduced to France by the German printers Martin Crantz, Michael Freyburger and Ulrich Gering, who set up a press in Paris in 1470, where they printed with an inferior copy of the Lactantius type. Gothic types dominated in France until the end of the 15th century, when they were gradually supplanted by roman designs. Jodocus Badius Ascensius (Josse Bade) in partnership with Henri Estienne established a press in Paris in 1503. Printing with undeveloped Roman and half-Gothic types, the French pair were too occupied meeting the demand for Humanistic and classical texts to design any original types of their own. French books nonetheless began to follow the format established by Italian printers, and Lyon and Paris became the new centers of activity. Eventually, the French government fixed a standard height for all type, to ensure that different batches could be used together.[5]

De Colines, Estienne, and Augereau edit

After their 1494 invasion of Italy the French were greatly influenced by Renaissance culture, and later set about converting French culture from Gothic to neo-classical. The required phonetic and orthographic changes to French language hindered the evolution of type design in France until the late 1520s. At the end of this period roman types introduced by Robert Estienne, Simon de Colines and Antoine Augereau began a phase of type design with a distinctly French character. Robert Estienne carried on the establishment of his father Henri Estienne, who had died in 1520. Simon de Colines had been the elder Estienne's assistant, married his widow, and set up his own press.

The de Colines roman of 1531 resembled Griffo's 1499 roman but did not copy it closely. Narrower forms and tighter letter fit; a with low angled bowl; elevated triangular stem serifs on i, j, m, n and r; flattened baseline serifs, delicately modeled ascender serifs and graceful, fluid lines characterize the French style. Robert Estienne's roman of 1532 was similar to the de Colines face, which Estienne complemented with a fine italic type based on that of Arrighi. The craftsmen who cut the punches for the romans used by Estienne and de Colines remain unidentified. In 1532 Antoine Augereau cut the punches for a roman type very close to Estienne's. The lower cases of the Estienne and Augereau types became the basis for post-Renaissance old style typography, and were copied by French typographers for the next 150 years.

Garamond edit

 
Garamond type revival by Robert Slimbach.

The svelte French style reached its fullest refinement in the roman types attributed to the best-known figure of French typography—Claude Garamond (also Garamont). In 1541 Robert Estienne, printer to the king, helped Garamond obtain commissions to cut the sequence of Greek fonts for King Francis I of France, known as the "grecs du roi". A number of roman faces used in Garamond's publishing activities can be positively attributed to him as punch-cutter. From the dates of their appearance, and their similarity to romans used by Estienne, Christoffel Plantijn and the printer André Wechel, the types known as "Canon de Garamond" and "Petit Canon de Garamond" shown on a specimen sheet issued by the Egenolff-Berner foundry in 1592 are generally accepted as Claude Garamond's final roman types.

Robert Granjon edit

 
Evangelium Sanctum Domini Nostri Jesu Christi in Arabic, 1590, with Arabic types of Robert Grandjon, Typographia Medicea, Rome.

Robert Granjon worked in the second half of the 16th century, mainly at Lyon, but was also recorded at Paris, Rome and Antwerp. He is still famous because of his Civilité types, imitating French gothic cursive calligraphy.[6] His main contribution was an italic type known as "Parangon de Granjon". Italic type design had apparently become corrupted since the Arrighi and Aldine models. Granjon's italic had a greater slant angle, slanted roman capitals, and reduced weight and rigor. These qualities and its contrasting thick and thin strokes gave it a dazzling appearance that made it difficult to read. It was nevertheless the main influence for italic type design until the Arrighi model was revived in 1920.

In the 16th century, Western printers also developed Oriental types, such as François Savary de Brèves or Robert Granjon, usually with the objective of proselytizing the Catholic faith.[7]

Transition to modern type: 17th and 18th century edit

Baroque and rococo aesthetic trends, use of the pointed-pen for writing, and steel engraving techniques effected a gradual shift in typographic style. Contrast between thick and thin strokes increased. Tilted stressing transformed into vertical stressing; full rounds were compressed. Blunt bracketed serifs grew sharp and delicate until they were fine straight lines. Detail became clean and precise.

Transitional roman types combined the classical features of lettera antiqua with the vertical stressing and higher contrast between thick and thin strokes characteristic of the true modern romans to come.

The roman types used c. 1618 by the Dutch printing firm of Elzevir in Leyden reiterated the 16th-century French style with higher contrast, less rigor and a lighter page effect. After 1647 most Elzevir faces were cut by the highly regarded Christoffel van Dyck, whose precise renditions were regarded by some experts at the time as finer than Garamond's.

Fell types edit

 
Specimen of Fell type English roman, quoting Cicero's First Oration against Catiline.

From mid-16th century until the end of the 17th, interference with printing by the Crown thwarted the development of type founding in England—most type used by 17th-century English printers was of Dutch origin. The lack of material inspired Bishop of Oxford Doctor John Fell to purchase punches & matrices from Holland c. 1670–1672 for use by the Oxford University Press. The so-named Fell types, presumed to be the work of Dutch punchcutter Dirck Voskens, mark a noticeable jump from previous designs, with considerably shorter extenders, higher stroke contrast, narrowing of round letters, and flattened serifs on the baseline and descenders. The design retained a retrogressive old-style irregularity, smooth modeling from vertical to horizontal, and angled stressing of rounds (except a vertically stressed o). Fell capitals were condensed, even-width, with wide flattened serifs; all characteristics of the definitive modern romans of the late 18th century. Fell italic types were distinguished by high contrast matching the Fell romans; wider ovals; a split-branching stroke from the stems of m n r and u; and long, flat serifs—prefiguring modern. They repeated the non-uniform slant of French models, and the capitals included swash J and Q forms.

An open-source digitisation of the Fell Types has been released by designer and engineer Igino Marini.[8]

Caslon edit

 
Caslon English roman, from a sample issued by the Caslon foundry and quoting the same text. Compare against the Fell type.

The first major figure in English typography is reckoned by type historians to have ended the monopoly of Dutch type founding almost single-handedly. The gun engraver-turned-punchcutter William Caslon spent 14 years creating the stable of typefaces on the specimen sheet issued in 1734. The complete canon included roman, italic, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic etc. Caslon's Great Primer roman and English roman were retrogressive designs that very closely followed the Fell types and the roman of Miklós (Nicholas) Kis c. 1685 falsely attributed to Anton Janson. Caslon's slightly bracketed serifs and old-style irregularity were not novel, but a precise cut and perpendicularity gave legibility to the forms. Caslon's italic structures follow the Fell italics, but at a condensed width and with conventional branching from stems.

William Caslon's prodigious output was influential worldwide. Caslon type and its imitations were used throughout the British Empire. It was the dominant type in the thirteen American colonies of British America (introduced by Benjamin Franklin) for the second half of the 18th century and was used for the United States Declaration of Independence. Caslon marks the rise of England as the center of typographic activity.[citation needed]

Fleischmann edit

Joan Michaël Fleischman (1701–1768) was born in Nürnberg where he trained as a punchcutter. He found employment with Dutch type founders in Holland and settled there c. 1728. At the Enschedé foundry in Haarlem he cut punches for a large amount of material. Some time after 1743 he produced a distinguished roman design—related to the preceding transitional types but departing from them. It prefigured modern romans with sparse transaxial modeling, joining the vertical stressing to hairline thins and ball-ends. Fleischmann borrowed from the general mode of Phillipe Grandjean's and Louis Simonneau's "Romain du Roi," commissioned by Louis XIV in 1692[9] for the Imprimerie Royale, but did not imitate that face. Fleischmann's capitals were a new variety; an even-width scheme, compressed rounds, all-vertical stressing, and triangular beak ends of E F L T and Z, all characteristics prefiguring the "classical" moderns of Bodoni and Didot. Fleischmann's italic bore some resemblance to Granjean's but had longer ascenders and followed the established Dutch structures for h v and w.

Fleischmann was held in great esteem by his contemporaries, his designs exerting a decisive influence in the last quarter of the 18th century. Renowned French punchcutter Pierre Simon Fournier (1712–1768), confessed to having copied Fleischmann's design, and was first to dub "contrast" types like the Fells, Caslon and Fleischmann "modern". Fournier's rococo-influenced designs—Fournier and Narcissus—and his Modèles des Caractères (1742) continued the romaine du roi style and adapted it for his own modern age. Like Baskerville, his italics were inspired by handwriting and the engraved lettering known as copperplate hand. Fournier also published a two volume Manuel Typographique, in which he recorded much European typographic history, and introduced the first standardized system of type size measurement—the "point".

Baskerville edit

 
The Baskerville typeface designed by John Baskerville.

About 1751, John Baskerville, having found financial success in producing goods from sheet metal, moved into the printing business. His roman and italic types appeared later than Fleischman's but are considered transitional and partly retrogressive with a return to lower contrast, smooth transaxial modeling, finely modeled bracketed serifs, and long stems. The exquisite design and finish of Baskerville's roman however, combining elegance and strength, was modern. His roman design, and especially his italic, were rococo-influenced. His letterforms are an intentional transition between old-style forms and modern styles.[1] They were informed by his prior experience as a writing master and the influences of his time. The types of Joseph Fry, Alexander Wilson, and John Bell closely followed Baskerville, and through his correspondence with European type founders Baskerville's influence penetrated most of western Europe. Baskerville was a meticulous artist who controlled all aspects of his creation, devising more accurate presses, blacker inks and paper sealed with hot rollers to ensure crisp impressions. Of particular note, the lower storey of his lowercase g does not fully close. Derivatives of Baskerville are often identified thus. A modern revival of Baskerville, a font called Mrs Eaves, is named after Baskerville's mistress-turned-wife Sarah Eaves, the widow of Richard Eaves.[10]

Modern romans edit

 
Facsimile of sample published with genuine Bodoni types by the Officina Bodoni in 1925. The font shown is the digital Bodoni Monotype c. 1999.
 
Didot type Revival designed in 1991 by Adrian Frutiger for Linotype foundry.

True modern romans arrived with the types of the Italian Giambattista Bodoni and the French Didots. Completing trends begun by the Fell types, Fleischman, Fournier and Baskerville, the so-called "classical" modern romans eschewed chirographic and organic influences, their synthetic symmetric geometry answering to a rationalized and reformed classical model driven by the strict cartesian grid philosophy of René Descartes and the predictable clockwork universe of Isaac Newton.

The "classical" appellation of modern romans stems from their return to long ascenders and descenders set on widely spaced lines, and a corresponding light page effect reminiscent of old-style—occurring at a time of classical revival.

Bodoni was foremost in progressing from rococo to the new classical style. He produced an italic very close to Baskerville's, and a French cursive script type falling in between italic type and joined scripts. The roman types of Francois Ambroise Didot and son Firmin Didot closely resemble the work of Bodoni, and opinion is divided over whether the Didots or Bodoni originated the first modern romans. At any rate the Didots' mathematical precision and vanishing of rococo design reflected the "enlightenment" of post-revolution France under Napoleon. Francois Ambroise also designed "maigre" and "gras" types corresponding to later condensed and expanded font formats.

The Spanish designer Joaquín Ibarra's roman was influenced by Baskerville, Didot and Bodoni, but hewn nearer to old-style and used in the same classical manner, including spaced capitals. In England modern romans resembling Bodoni's were cut for the printer William Bulmer c. 1786 by the punchcutter William Martin, who had been apprenticed to Baskerville and influenced by him. Martin's italic mirrored the open-tail g and overall finesse of Baskerville's.

In Britain and the United States, modern romans (emerging around 1800 and totally dominant by the 1820s) took a somewhat more rounded, less geometrical form than the designs of Didot and Bodoni; an obvious difference is that in Anglo-American faces the upper-case C has only one serif (at the top) whereas in European designs it has two.

19th and 20th century typography edit

Industrialization edit

The 19th century brought fewer stylistic innovations. The most notable invention was the rise of typefaces with strengthened serifs. Forerunners were the so-called Egyptienne fonts, which were used already at the beginning of the 19th century. Their name likely comes from the enthusiasm of the Napoleonic era for the orient, which in turn was started by Napoleon's invasion in Egypt. In fact slab-serif fonts (e. g. Clarendon from 1845) were newspaper fonts, whose serifs were strengthened in order to prevent damage during the printing process. Stylistically the serif fonts of the mid-19th century appeared very robust and otherwise had more or less neo-classical design features, which changed during the course of time: By the application of the slab serif design feature and by appending serifs to more and more typefaces, an independent intermediate group of heterogeneous fonts emerged during the 20th century. Meanwhile, the slab serifs are listed as an independent group in most typeface classifications—besides both main groups serif and sans serif.

Slab-serif and sans-serif types were rarely used for continuous bodies of text; their realm was that of advertisements, title-pages and other attention-catching pieces of print. By about 1820, most western countries were using modern romans and italics for continuous texts. This remained true until the 1860s, when so-called 'old style' faces—a largely English-speaking phenomenon—came into use. These went to the opposite extreme from the modern faces; 'thick' strokes were attenuated, and serifs at the end of thin strokes (as in C, E, L and T) were narrow and angled whereas in modern faces they were broad and vertical or nearly so. All the upper-case characters were somewhat 'condensed' (narrowed). Old style faces remained popular until about 1910.

Above all the 19th century was innovative regarding technical aspects. Automatic manufacturing processes changed the print as well as the graphical illustrations. The illustration of printed matters could be considerably standardised due to the lithography technique invented by Alois Senefelder. Finally, another invention was photography, whose establishment at the end of the 19th century led to the first halftoning and reproduction procedures. The step-by-step development of a modern mass society provided a growing demand of printed matters. Besides the traditional letterpress beginnings of a newspaper landscape as well as a broad market for publications, advertisements, and posters of all kinds appeared. The challenges had changed: since printing and typography had been a straightforward craft for centuries, it now had to face the challenges of an industry-ruled mass society.

Hot type and phototypesetting in the 20th century edit

 
Monotype machine
 
Exlibris, 1921

The 90 years between 1890 and 1980 coined typography until now. The craft of printing became an industry, the sixth-largest in the United States.[11]

The fabrication and application of typefaces more and more were affected by industrial manufacturing processes. Significant incidents were the invention of the hot type machine by Ottmar Mergenthaler (Linotype machine, 1886) and Tolbert Lanston (Monotype machine, 1887) and a few decades later the emergence of phototypesetting. The result: Compilation and typographical design of the text could be more and more controlled by keyboards in contrast to manual typesetting.

A result of the industrialisation process was the unimagined number and distribution of new typefaces. Whether digital variants of Garamond and Bodoni or new contemporary type designs like Futura, Times, and Helvetica, nearly all currently used typefaces have their origin either in the following and ongoing digital typesetting era or are based on designs of this epoch. The basis was the appearance of large type foundries and type manufacturers. The result: Successful typefaces could quickly gain the status of a trademark—and therefore were able to assign a unique "branding" to products or publications.

Chicago contributed much to typography design at this time as Frederic Goudy, designer of 123 typefaces, founded several presses. Oswald Cooper, designer of Cooper Black studied under Goudy.[12]

Besides the traditional typography of books graphic design became a more or less independent branch. The tensions between those two branches significantly determined the stylistic development of 20th century's typography.

Art nouveau and New Book Art edit

 
Eckmann, 1901.

Since impressionism the modern art styles were reflected in graphic design and typography too. Around 1890 art nouveau became popular. Its floral ornaments, the curved forms, as well as the emphasis on graphical realisation inspired the type designers of the start of the 20th century. A popular art nouveau font was Eckmann, designed by graphic artist Otto Eckmann. Furthermore, the influence of art nouveau was expressed in a lot of book illustrations and ex libris designs.

Altogether the return to the roots of book art become stronger around the start of the 20th century. It was initiated by British typographer, socialist, and private press publisher William Morris as well as by the Arts and Crafts Movement, which refers to him. Essentially this movement initiated three things: a return to the antiqua-models of the Renaissance, clarity and simplicity of book illustrations, and straightforward technical processes during the production of printed matters. An immediate consequence of the Arts and Crafts Movement was the establishment of the private press movement, which more or less was committed to Morris' ideals, and whose remains partially are still present today. An established meeting point of this scene in Germany for example is the Mainzer Minipressen-Messe, which actually is held every two years.

Especially the New Book Art movement, which formed in the decade before World War I, was influenced by the Arts and Crafts Movement. The young type designers of the pre-war era, among them Fritz Helmuth Ehmcke and Friedrich Wilhelm Kleukens, rejected both the late typographical classicism and the ornaments of the popular art nouveau. The new ideal became a tidy and straightforward book typography, which dedicated itself to the ideas of the Renaissance. Walter Tiemann in Leipzig, Friedrich Hermann Ernst Schneidler in Stuttgart, and Rudolf Koch in Offenbach as instructors were the mentors of this kind of typography. They stayed influential in the field of book typesetting until a long time after the end of World War II.

European avant-garde typography edit

During the 1920s, typographers in central and eastern Europe experimented with forms of avant-garde typography. The main places of development of avant-garde artists had been: Budapest, Zagreb, Belgrade and, after 1924, also Prague. However, since 1925 avant-garde typography had been spreading to the cities of western and eastern Europe and, as a result, the previous cities gradually lost their relevance.[13]

In 1924 two exhibitions important for development of avant-garde typography were organized: one by Ljubomir Micić (the First International Zenitistic Exhibition of New Art in Belgrade) and the other by Ion Vinea and Marcel Iancu (the First International Exhibition Contimporanul).

Avant-garde typography in Poland edit

Among the most important Polish artists were Władysław Strzemiński and Mieczysław Szczuka – in their works they were referring to poetry and valued the art of publishing (printing) books more than other forms of art. Władysław Strzemiński is recognized as the precursor of avant-garde typography in Poland – he was one of the first artists to set aside the primal shape of letters. He thought the content was not as important as the way it was presented because in order to understand the message of a poster/cover, one had to understand what the artist tried to communicate with the arrangement of words or each letter. The inscriptions started to be constructed in a way to catch the eye – unlike “traditional” typography which was perceived as an addition to a text. As a form of inspiration, architecture also began to lose its value because avant-garde artists were drawing their ideas from paintings and graphics. Jan Tschichold, the creator of one of many definitions and the most known theoretician of avant-garde typography stated that its basic rules should be lack of symmetry, contrast and total freedom of creation. Contrary to other genres of art, avant-garde creators were also its theoreticians and researchers.[14][15]

See also edit

General edit

Related history edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Meggs, Philip B. (2006). Meggs' history of graphic design. Alston W. Purvis (4th ed.). Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 70. ISBN 0-471-69902-0. OCLC 58829979.
  2. ^ printing in England
  3. ^ Steinberg, S. H. (1961) Five Hundred Years of Printing. Harmondsworth: Penguin; pp. 94, 96, 98
  4. ^ a b Nesbitt, Alexander The History and Technique of Lettering (c) 1957, Dover Publications, Inc. ISBN 0-486-20427-8 OCLC 654540. The Dover edition is an abridged and corrected republication of the work originally published in 1950 by Prentice-Hall, Inc. under the title Lettering: The History and Technique of Lettering as Design.
  5. ^ Diderot, Denis (1765). Encyclopédie ou Dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers. Paris. pp. Vol. 8, p. 73.
  6. ^ "The Life of a Dead Typeface: The Origins of Civilité | Newberry". www.newberry.org. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  7. ^ Rome Reborn: The Vatican Library & Renaissance Culture/ Orient to Rome
  8. ^ Marini, Igino. "The Fell Types". Retrieved 23 August 2014.
  9. ^ Meggs, Philip B. (1998). A History of Graphic Design (Third ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 108–109. ISBN 978-0-471-29198-5.
  10. ^ Penney, Chris. "Dr B T Davis's bequest" (PDF). Research Libraries Bulletin (6): 21. ISSN 1355-9877. Retrieved 2008-10-16.
  11. ^ Cleeton, Glen U. (2006). General printing. Charles W. Pitkin, Raymond L. Cornwell (3rd ed.). Saratoga, Calif.: Liber Apertus Press. pp. v. ISBN 0-9785881-4-2. OCLC 85812126.
  12. ^ Ruggie-Saunders, Cathie (2013). For the love of letterpress : a printing handbook for instructors & students. Martha Chiplis. London. ISBN 978-1-4081-3941-7. OCLC 840432025.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ Karel Srp i Lenka Bydžovská. Rozlomená doba 1918-1928 Avangardy v strednej Európe/Years of Disarray 1908-1928 Avant-gardes in Central Europe.
  14. ^ Hoels Henk, Lentjes Ewan (2016). Triumf typografii. Kraków: wydawnictwo d2d.pl.
  15. ^ Hoeks, Henk; Lentjes, Ewan; Bil'ak, Peter (2015). The triumph of typography : culture, communication, new media. Arnhem: Uitgeverij Terra. ISBN 978-90-8989-628-5. OCLC 919438630.

Sources edit

  • Burke, James The Day the Universe Changed (c) 1985, ISBN 0-316-11695-5. Eight moments in history when a change in knowledge radically altered man's understanding of himself and the world. Chapter 4. Matter of Fact, details on the development of moveable type in Korea and Europe.
  • Heller, Steven and Meggs, Phillip B Texts on Type: Critical Writings on Typography (c) 2001, Allworth Press, Allworth Communications, New York. ISBN 1-58115-082-2. A compilation of over fifty texts on the history, practice, and aesthetics of type design and typography. Section 4 Movement: Defining Modernism essays by Herbert Bayer, Jan Tschichold, Jeffery Keedy.
  • Man, John The Gutenberg Revolution:The story of a genius that changed the world (c) 2002 Headline Book Publishing, a division of Hodder Headline, London. ISBN 0-7472-4504-5. A detailed examination of Gutenberg's life and invention, skillfully interwoven with the underlying social and religious upheaval of Medieval Europe on the eve of the Renaissance.
  • McKitterick, David. Print, Manuscript, and the Search for Order, 1450-1830" N.Y. & Cambridge:{Cambridge University Press,2003 ISBN 0-521-82690-X. Deals with the social, religious, and technical influences on typography and book design.
  • Swanson, Gunnar Graphic Design and Reading: explorations of an uneasy relationship (c) 2000, Allworth Press, Allworth Communications, New York. ISBN 1-58115-063-6. The Myth of Content and the Encyclopedestrianization of Communication by James Souttar; Tracing the Invisible by Katie Salen.

External links edit

  • Comp.fonts FAQ: General Info Section four of six of the newsgroup FAQ
  • Twenty Faces
  • Planet typography A magazine on contemporary typography + a directory, a manual and other topics related to typography
  • The Printed Book 2008-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
  • ABC typography. A virtual type museum
  • "A brief history of the Fell Types". Igino Marini. 2009. Retrieved 8 April 2013.

history, western, typography, this, article, about, history, western, typography, from, 15th, century, 20th, century, development, typography, asia, history, printing, east, asia, contemporary, typography, typography, this, article, multiple, issues, please, h. This article is about the history of Western typography from the mid 15th century to the 20th century For the development of typography in Asia see History of printing in East Asia For contemporary typography see Typography This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German October 2015 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 8 946 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in 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message Modern typographers view typography as a craft with a very long history tracing its origins back to the first punches and dies used to make seals and coinage currency in ancient times The basic elements of typography are at least as old as civilization and the earliest writing systems a series of key developments that were eventually drawn together into one systematic craft While woodblock printing and movable type had precedents in East Asia typography in the Western world developed after the invention of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg in the mid 15th century The initial spread of printing throughout Germany and Italy led to the enduring legacy and continued use of blackletter roman and italic types A piece of cast metal type Garamond style long s i ligature See also movable type Contents 1 Medieval design roots 2 Classical revival 3 Transition from humanistic minuscule to roman type 4 Development of roman type 5 Italic type 6 Renaissance Germany and Switzerland 7 16th century France 7 1 De Colines Estienne and Augereau 7 2 Garamond 7 3 Robert Granjon 8 Transition to modern type 17th and 18th century 8 1 Fell types 8 2 Caslon 8 3 Fleischmann 8 4 Baskerville 8 5 Modern romans 9 19th and 20th century typography 9 1 Industrialization 9 2 Hot type and phototypesetting in the 20th century 9 3 Art nouveau and New Book Art 9 4 European avant garde typography 9 4 1 Avant garde typography in Poland 10 See also 10 1 General 10 2 Related history 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 External linksMedieval design roots edit nbsp First page of the first volume of the Gutenberg Bible printed with an early textur typeface c 1455 In this copy the decorative colored initials were hand lettered separately by a scribe Typography type founding and typeface design began as closely related crafts in mid 15th century Europe with the introduction of movable type printing at the junction of the medieval era and the Renaissance Handwritten letterforms of the mid 15th century calligraphy were the natural models for letterforms in systematized typography 1 The scribal letter known as textur or textualis produced by the strong gothic spirit of blackletter from the hands of German area scribes served as the model for the first text types Johannes Gutenberg around 1450 invented a lead type mold applied it to an alphabet of about 24 characters and used known press technology to print ink on paper Prior printing had been done with woodblocks but movable type was impossible due to fragility of wood at small sizes Gutenberg employed the scribe Peter Schoffer to help design and cut the letterpunches for the first typeface the D K type of 202 characters used to print the first printed books in Europe A second typeface of about 300 characters designed for the 42 line Bible c 1455 was probably cut by the goldsmith Hans Dunne with the help of two others Gotz von Shlettstadt and Hans von Speyer Cultural tradition ensured that German typography and type design remained true to the gothic blackletter spirit but the parallel influence of the humanist and neo classical typography in Italy the first country outside of Germany with a printing press catalyzed texture into four additional sub styles that were distinct structurally rich and highly disciplined Bastarda fraktur rotunda and Schwabacher Notably early printed manuscripts matched the style of handwritten manuscripts and did not contain title pages page numbers or headings 1 The rapid spread of movable type printing across Europe produced additional Gothic half Gothic and Gothic to Roman transitional types Johann Bamler s Schwabacher Augsburg appeared in 1474 The half Gothic Rotunda type of Erhard Ratdolt c 1486 was cut to suit Venetian taste In 1476 William Caxton having learned his craft on the Continent printed the first books in England with a so called Batarde type an early Schwabacher design but soon abandoned it 2 The early printers in Spain were Germans who began printing in contemporary roman types but soon gave these up and adopted Gothic typefaces based on the letterforms of Spanish manuscripts Valencia in the Kingdom of Aragon was the location of the first press established in 1473 From there printers moved to other cities to set up presses Roman types were used by the printers of Salamanca for their editions of classical authors Printing in Portuguese began at Lisbon in 1495 the first book printed in Portugal was a Hebrew book printed in 1489 3 Classical revival editIn Italy the heavy gothic styles were soon displaced by Venetian or old style Latin types also called antiqua The inscriptional capitals on Roman buildings and monuments were structured on a euclidean geometric scheme and the discrete component based model of classical architecture Their structurally perfect design near perfect execution in stone balanced angled stressing contrasting thick and thin strokes and incised serifs became the typographic ideal for western civilization The best known example of Roman inscriptional capitals exists on the base of Trajan s Column inscribed c 113 nbsp Roman inscriptional capitals on the base of Trajan s Column c 113 In their enthusiastic revival of classical culture Italian scribes and humanist scholars of the early 15th century searched for ancient lower case letters to match the Roman inscriptional capitals Practically all of the available manuscripts of classical writers had been rewritten during the Carolingian Renaissance and with a lapse of three hundred years since the widespread use of this style the humanist scribes mistook Carolingian minuscule as the authentic writing style of the ancients as opposed to blackletter incorrectly seen as the lettering of the Goths that conquered Rome Dubbing it lettera antica they began by copying the minuscule hand almost exactly combining it with Roman capitals in the same manner as the manuscripts they were copying 4 nbsp Sample of Carolingian writing from the Carolingian Gospel Book produced between 820 and 830 ADUpon noticing the stylistic mismatch between these two very different letters the scribes redesigned the small Carolingian letter lengthening ascenders and descenders and adding incised serifs and finishing strokes to integrate them with the Roman capitals By the time moveable type reached Italy several decades later the humanistic writing had evolved into a consistent model known as humanistic minuscule which served as the basis for type style we know today as Venetian 4 Transition from humanistic minuscule to roman type editThe classically endowed city of Rome attracted the first printers known to have set up shop outside Germany Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweynheim closely followed by the brothers Johann and Wendelin of Speyer de Spira and the Frenchman Nicolas Jenson The sequence of appearance and production dates for types used by these printers have yet to be established with certainty all four are known to have printed with types ranging from textur Gothic to fully developed romans inspired by the earlier humanistic writing and within a few years the center of printing in Italy shifted from Rome to Venice Some time before 1472 in Venice Johann and Wendelin issued material printed with a half Gothic half roman type known as Gotico antiqua This design paired simplified Gothic capitals with a rationalized humanistic minuscule letter set itself combining Gothic minuscule forms with elements of Carolingian in a one step forward half step back blending of styles Around the same time 1468 in Rome Pannartz and Sweynheim were using another typeface that closely mimicked humanistic minuscule known as Lactantius Unlike the rigid fractured forms of Speyer s half Gothic the Lactantius is characterized by smoothly rendered letters with a restrained organic finish The Lactantius a departed from both the Carolingian and Gothic models a vertical backstem and right angled top replaced the diagonal Carolingian structure and a continuous curved stroke replaced the fractured Gothic bowl element For details on the evolution of lower case letterforms from Latin capitals see Latin alphabet Development of roman type editMain article Roman type Nicolas Jenson began printing in Venice with his original roman font from 1470 Jenson s design and the very similar roman types cut by Francesco Griffo c 1499 and Erhard Ratdolt c 1486 are acknowledged as the definitive and archetypal roman faces that set the pattern for the majority of western text faces that followed The Jenson roman was an explicitly typographic letter designed on its own terms that declined to imitate the appearance of hand lettering Its effect is one of a unified cohesive whole a seamless fusion of style with structure and the successful convergence of the long progression of preceding letter styles Jenson adapted the structural unity and component based modular integration of Roman capitals to humanistic minuscule forms by masterful abstract stylization The carefully modelled serifs follow an artful logic of asymmetry The ratio of extender lengths to letter bodies and the distance between lines results in balanced harmonious body of type Jenson also mirrors the ideal expressed in renaissance painting of carving up space typographic white space with figures letters to articulate the relationship between the two and make the white space dynamic nbsp Nicolas Jenson s roman type used in Venice c 1470 Later old style or Venetian book romans such as Aldines and much later Bembo were closely based on Jenson The name roman is customarily applied uncapitalized to distinguish early Jenson and Aldine derived types from classical Roman letters of antiquity Some parts of Europe call roman antiqua from its connection with the humanistic lettera antica medieval and old style are also employed to indicate roman types dating from the late 15th century especially those used by Aldus Manutius Italian Manuzio Roman faces based on those of Speyer and Jenson are also called Venetian See also IncunabulumItalic type editMain article Italic type The humanist spirit driving the Renaissance produced its own unique style of formal writing known as cursiva humanistica This slanted and rapidly written letter evolved from humanistic minuscule and the remaining Gothic current cursive hands in Italy served as the model for cursive or italic typefaces As books printed with early roman types forced humanistic minuscule out of use cursiva humanistica gained favor as a manuscript hand for the purpose of writing The popularity of cursive writing itself may have created some demand for a type of this style The more decisive catalyst was probably the printing of pocket editions of Latin classics by Aldus Manutius However even as printing overtook production of previously handwritten materials increased literacy created a greater demand for documents and thus calligraphers saw increased work 1 The Aldino italic type commissioned by Manutius and cut by Francesco Griffo in 1499 was a closely spaced condensed type Griffo s punches are a delicate translation of the Italian cursive hand featuring letters of irregular slant angle and uneven height and vertical position with some connected pairs ligatures and unslanted small roman capitals the height of the lower case t The fame of Aldus Manutius and his editions made the Griffo italic widely copied and influential although it was not the finest of the pioneer italics The Aldino style quickly became known as italic from its Italian origin Around 1527 the Vatican chancellery scribe Ludovico Arrighi designed a superior italic type and had the punches cut by Lauticio di Bartolomeo dei Rotelli The more modular structure of Arrighi s italic and its few ligatures made it less a copy of the cursive hand than Griffo s Its slightly taller roman capitals a gentler slant angle taller ascenders and wider separation of lines gave the elegant effect of refined handwriting nbsp Italic type designed by Ludovico Arrighi c 1527 This elegant design inspired later French italic types Surviving examples of 16th century Italian books indicate the bulk of them were printed with italic types By mid century the popularity of italic types for sustained text setting began to decline until they were used only for in line citations block quotes preliminary text emphasis and abbreviations Italic types from the 20th century up to the present are much indebted to Arrighi and his influence on French designers Swiss art historian Jakob Burckhardt described the classically inspired Renaissance modello of dual case roman and cursive italic types as The model and ideal for the whole western world Venetian pre eminence in type design was brought to an end by the political and economic turmoil that concluded the Renaissance in Italy with the sack of Rome in 1527 Renaissance Germany and Switzerland editSoon after 1500 roman typefaces began to gain popularity north of the Alps for printing of Latin literature Johann Froben of Basel Switzerland set up his press in 1491 and by about 1519 when he printed Erasmus s famous edition of the Greek New Testament he had established a set of standards for humanistic printing which were widely copied throughout the German speaking world and also in Spain and to a lesser extent in England His principal type is wholly roman in the shape of the characters but retains an echo of gothic influence in the angled serifs and the way the thick and thin strokes are organized it was coupled with mated sets of woodcut initials often designed by distinguished artists and with two larger sizes of uppercase letters for use in title pages and headings Froben was the first to use such display typefaces consistently breaking away from the Italian tradition in which title pages and headings tended to be set in the same size as the main text By using these large faces Froben developed the title page as a fully organized artistic whole Froben s italic face is based on that of Aldus but more even and uniform in effect These Swiss books are the first to have been designed in every detail as printed artifacts rather than as adaptations of manuscript technique After about 1550 this Swiss German tradition was gradually overwhelmed by French influence Towards the end of the 16th century the Wechel family of Frankfurt previously based in Paris was producing fine books which used French typefaces in conjunction with heavy but resplendent woodcut ornaments to achieve a splendid page effect but soon after 1600 there was a general marked decline in the quality of both skill and materials from which German printing did not recover until the 20th century 16th century France editTypography was introduced to France by the German printers Martin Crantz Michael Freyburger and Ulrich Gering who set up a press in Paris in 1470 where they printed with an inferior copy of the Lactantius type Gothic types dominated in France until the end of the 15th century when they were gradually supplanted by roman designs Jodocus Badius Ascensius Josse Bade in partnership with Henri Estienne established a press in Paris in 1503 Printing with undeveloped Roman and half Gothic types the French pair were too occupied meeting the demand for Humanistic and classical texts to design any original types of their own French books nonetheless began to follow the format established by Italian printers and Lyon and Paris became the new centers of activity Eventually the French government fixed a standard height for all type to ensure that different batches could be used together 5 De Colines Estienne and Augereau edit After their 1494 invasion of Italy the French were greatly influenced by Renaissance culture and later set about converting French culture from Gothic to neo classical The required phonetic and orthographic changes to French language hindered the evolution of type design in France until the late 1520s At the end of this period roman types introduced by Robert Estienne Simon de Colines and Antoine Augereau began a phase of type design with a distinctly French character Robert Estienne carried on the establishment of his father Henri Estienne who had died in 1520 Simon de Colines had been the elder Estienne s assistant married his widow and set up his own press The de Colines roman of 1531 resembled Griffo s 1499 roman but did not copy it closely Narrower forms and tighter letter fit a with low angled bowl elevated triangular stem serifs on i j m n and r flattened baseline serifs delicately modeled ascender serifs and graceful fluid lines characterize the French style Robert Estienne s roman of 1532 was similar to the de Colines face which Estienne complemented with a fine italic type based on that of Arrighi The craftsmen who cut the punches for the romans used by Estienne and de Colines remain unidentified In 1532 Antoine Augereau cut the punches for a roman type very close to Estienne s The lower cases of the Estienne and Augereau types became the basis for post Renaissance old style typography and were copied by French typographers for the next 150 years Garamond edit nbsp Garamond type revival by Robert Slimbach The svelte French style reached its fullest refinement in the roman types attributed to the best known figure of French typography Claude Garamond also Garamont In 1541 Robert Estienne printer to the king helped Garamond obtain commissions to cut the sequence of Greek fonts for King Francis I of France known as the grecs du roi A number of roman faces used in Garamond s publishing activities can be positively attributed to him as punch cutter From the dates of their appearance and their similarity to romans used by Estienne Christoffel Plantijn and the printer Andre Wechel the types known as Canon de Garamond and Petit Canon de Garamond shown on a specimen sheet issued by the Egenolff Berner foundry in 1592 are generally accepted as Claude Garamond s final roman types Robert Granjon edit nbsp Evangelium Sanctum Domini Nostri Jesu Christi in Arabic 1590 with Arabic types of Robert Grandjon Typographia Medicea Rome Robert Granjon worked in the second half of the 16th century mainly at Lyon but was also recorded at Paris Rome and Antwerp He is still famous because of his Civilite types imitating French gothic cursive calligraphy 6 His main contribution was an italic type known as Parangon de Granjon Italic type design had apparently become corrupted since the Arrighi and Aldine models Granjon s italic had a greater slant angle slanted roman capitals and reduced weight and rigor These qualities and its contrasting thick and thin strokes gave it a dazzling appearance that made it difficult to read It was nevertheless the main influence for italic type design until the Arrighi model was revived in 1920 In the 16th century Western printers also developed Oriental types such as Francois Savary de Breves or Robert Granjon usually with the objective of proselytizing the Catholic faith 7 Transition to modern type 17th and 18th century editBaroque and rococo aesthetic trends use of the pointed pen for writing and steel engraving techniques effected a gradual shift in typographic style Contrast between thick and thin strokes increased Tilted stressing transformed into vertical stressing full rounds were compressed Blunt bracketed serifs grew sharp and delicate until they were fine straight lines Detail became clean and precise Transitional roman types combined the classical features of lettera antiqua with the vertical stressing and higher contrast between thick and thin strokes characteristic of the true modern romans to come The roman types used c 1618 by the Dutch printing firm of Elzevir in Leyden reiterated the 16th century French style with higher contrast less rigor and a lighter page effect After 1647 most Elzevir faces were cut by the highly regarded Christoffel van Dyck whose precise renditions were regarded by some experts at the time as finer than Garamond s Fell types edit nbsp Specimen of Fell type English roman quoting Cicero s First Oration against Catiline From mid 16th century until the end of the 17th interference with printing by the Crown thwarted the development of type founding in England most type used by 17th century English printers was of Dutch origin The lack of material inspired Bishop of Oxford Doctor John Fell to purchase punches amp matrices from Holland c 1670 1672 for use by the Oxford University Press The so named Fell types presumed to be the work of Dutch punchcutter Dirck Voskens mark a noticeable jump from previous designs with considerably shorter extenders higher stroke contrast narrowing of round letters and flattened serifs on the baseline and descenders The design retained a retrogressive old style irregularity smooth modeling from vertical to horizontal and angled stressing of rounds except a vertically stressed o Fell capitals were condensed even width with wide flattened serifs all characteristics of the definitive modern romans of the late 18th century Fell italic types were distinguished by high contrast matching the Fell romans wider ovals a split branching stroke from the stems of m n r and u and long flat serifs prefiguring modern They repeated the non uniform slant of French models and the capitals included swash J and Q forms An open source digitisation of the Fell Types has been released by designer and engineer Igino Marini 8 Caslon edit nbsp Caslon English roman from a sample issued by the Caslon foundry and quoting the same text Compare against the Fell type The first major figure in English typography is reckoned by type historians to have ended the monopoly of Dutch type founding almost single handedly The gun engraver turned punchcutter William Caslon spent 14 years creating the stable of typefaces on the specimen sheet issued in 1734 The complete canon included roman italic Greek Hebrew Arabic etc Caslon s Great Primer roman and English roman were retrogressive designs that very closely followed the Fell types and the roman of Miklos Nicholas Kis c 1685 falsely attributed to Anton Janson Caslon s slightly bracketed serifs and old style irregularity were not novel but a precise cut and perpendicularity gave legibility to the forms Caslon s italic structures follow the Fell italics but at a condensed width and with conventional branching from stems William Caslon s prodigious output was influential worldwide Caslon type and its imitations were used throughout the British Empire It was the dominant type in the thirteen American colonies of British America introduced by Benjamin Franklin for the second half of the 18th century and was used for the United States Declaration of Independence Caslon marks the rise of England as the center of typographic activity citation needed Fleischmann edit Joan Michael Fleischman 1701 1768 was born in Nurnberg where he trained as a punchcutter He found employment with Dutch type founders in Holland and settled there c 1728 At the Enschede foundry in Haarlem he cut punches for a large amount of material Some time after 1743 he produced a distinguished roman design related to the preceding transitional types but departing from them It prefigured modern romans with sparse transaxial modeling joining the vertical stressing to hairline thins and ball ends Fleischmann borrowed from the general mode of Phillipe Grandjean s and Louis Simonneau s Romain du Roi commissioned by Louis XIV in 1692 9 for the Imprimerie Royale but did not imitate that face Fleischmann s capitals were a new variety an even width scheme compressed rounds all vertical stressing and triangular beak ends of E F L T and Z all characteristics prefiguring the classical moderns of Bodoni and Didot Fleischmann s italic bore some resemblance to Granjean s but had longer ascenders and followed the established Dutch structures for h v and w Fleischmann was held in great esteem by his contemporaries his designs exerting a decisive influence in the last quarter of the 18th century Renowned French punchcutter Pierre Simon Fournier 1712 1768 confessed to having copied Fleischmann s design and was first to dub contrast types like the Fells Caslon and Fleischmann modern Fournier s rococo influenced designs Fournier and Narcissus and his Modeles des Caracteres 1742 continued the romaine du roi style and adapted it for his own modern age Like Baskerville his italics were inspired by handwriting and the engraved lettering known as copperplate hand Fournier also published a two volume Manuel Typographique in which he recorded much European typographic history and introduced the first standardized system of type size measurement the point Baskerville edit nbsp The Baskerville typeface designed by John Baskerville About 1751 John Baskerville having found financial success in producing goods from sheet metal moved into the printing business His roman and italic types appeared later than Fleischman s but are considered transitional and partly retrogressive with a return to lower contrast smooth transaxial modeling finely modeled bracketed serifs and long stems The exquisite design and finish of Baskerville s roman however combining elegance and strength was modern His roman design and especially his italic were rococo influenced His letterforms are an intentional transition between old style forms and modern styles 1 They were informed by his prior experience as a writing master and the influences of his time The types of Joseph Fry Alexander Wilson and John Bell closely followed Baskerville and through his correspondence with European type founders Baskerville s influence penetrated most of western Europe Baskerville was a meticulous artist who controlled all aspects of his creation devising more accurate presses blacker inks and paper sealed with hot rollers to ensure crisp impressions Of particular note the lower storey of his lowercase g does not fully close Derivatives of Baskerville are often identified thus A modern revival of Baskerville a font called Mrs Eaves is named after Baskerville s mistress turned wife Sarah Eaves the widow of Richard Eaves 10 Modern romans edit nbsp Facsimile of sample published with genuine Bodoni types by the Officina Bodoni in 1925 The font shown is the digital Bodoni Monotype c 1999 nbsp Didot type Revival designed in 1991 by Adrian Frutiger for Linotype foundry True modern romans arrived with the types of the Italian Giambattista Bodoni and the French Didots Completing trends begun by the Fell types Fleischman Fournier and Baskerville the so called classical modern romans eschewed chirographic and organic influences their synthetic symmetric geometry answering to a rationalized and reformed classical model driven by the strict cartesian grid philosophy of Rene Descartes and the predictable clockwork universe of Isaac Newton The classical appellation of modern romans stems from their return to long ascenders and descenders set on widely spaced lines and a corresponding light page effect reminiscent of old style occurring at a time of classical revival Bodoni was foremost in progressing from rococo to the new classical style He produced an italic very close to Baskerville s and a French cursive script type falling in between italic type and joined scripts The roman types of Francois Ambroise Didot and son Firmin Didot closely resemble the work of Bodoni and opinion is divided over whether the Didots or Bodoni originated the first modern romans At any rate the Didots mathematical precision and vanishing of rococo design reflected the enlightenment of post revolution France under Napoleon Francois Ambroise also designed maigre and gras types corresponding to later condensed and expanded font formats The Spanish designer Joaquin Ibarra s roman was influenced by Baskerville Didot and Bodoni but hewn nearer to old style and used in the same classical manner including spaced capitals In England modern romans resembling Bodoni s were cut for the printer William Bulmer c 1786 by the punchcutter William Martin who had been apprenticed to Baskerville and influenced by him Martin s italic mirrored the open tail g and overall finesse of Baskerville s In Britain and the United States modern romans emerging around 1800 and totally dominant by the 1820s took a somewhat more rounded less geometrical form than the designs of Didot and Bodoni an obvious difference is that in Anglo American faces the upper case C has only one serif at the top whereas in European designs it has two 19th and 20th century typography editIndustrialization edit The 19th century brought fewer stylistic innovations The most notable invention was the rise of typefaces with strengthened serifs Forerunners were the so called Egyptienne fonts which were used already at the beginning of the 19th century Their name likely comes from the enthusiasm of the Napoleonic era for the orient which in turn was started by Napoleon s invasion in Egypt In fact slab serif fonts e g Clarendon from 1845 were newspaper fonts whose serifs were strengthened in order to prevent damage during the printing process Stylistically the serif fonts of the mid 19th century appeared very robust and otherwise had more or less neo classical design features which changed during the course of time By the application of the slab serif design feature and by appending serifs to more and more typefaces an independent intermediate group of heterogeneous fonts emerged during the 20th century Meanwhile the slab serifs are listed as an independent group in most typeface classifications besides both main groups serif and sans serif Slab serif and sans serif types were rarely used for continuous bodies of text their realm was that of advertisements title pages and other attention catching pieces of print By about 1820 most western countries were using modern romans and italics for continuous texts This remained true until the 1860s when so called old style faces a largely English speaking phenomenon came into use These went to the opposite extreme from the modern faces thick strokes were attenuated and serifs at the end of thin strokes as in C E L and T were narrow and angled whereas in modern faces they were broad and vertical or nearly so All the upper case characters were somewhat condensed narrowed Old style faces remained popular until about 1910 Above all the 19th century was innovative regarding technical aspects Automatic manufacturing processes changed the print as well as the graphical illustrations The illustration of printed matters could be considerably standardised due to the lithography technique invented by Alois Senefelder Finally another invention was photography whose establishment at the end of the 19th century led to the first halftoning and reproduction procedures The step by step development of a modern mass society provided a growing demand of printed matters Besides the traditional letterpress beginnings of a newspaper landscape as well as a broad market for publications advertisements and posters of all kinds appeared The challenges had changed since printing and typography had been a straightforward craft for centuries it now had to face the challenges of an industry ruled mass society Further information on the 19th century French Warnery type foundry Hot type and phototypesetting in the 20th century edit nbsp Monotype machine nbsp Exlibris 1921The 90 years between 1890 and 1980 coined typography until now The craft of printing became an industry the sixth largest in the United States 11 The fabrication and application of typefaces more and more were affected by industrial manufacturing processes Significant incidents were the invention of the hot type machine by Ottmar Mergenthaler Linotype machine 1886 and Tolbert Lanston Monotype machine 1887 and a few decades later the emergence of phototypesetting The result Compilation and typographical design of the text could be more and more controlled by keyboards in contrast to manual typesetting A result of the industrialisation process was the unimagined number and distribution of new typefaces Whether digital variants of Garamond and Bodoni or new contemporary type designs like Futura Times and Helvetica nearly all currently used typefaces have their origin either in the following and ongoing digital typesetting era or are based on designs of this epoch The basis was the appearance of large type foundries and type manufacturers The result Successful typefaces could quickly gain the status of a trademark and therefore were able to assign a unique branding to products or publications Chicago contributed much to typography design at this time as Frederic Goudy designer of 123 typefaces founded several presses Oswald Cooper designer of Cooper Black studied under Goudy 12 Besides the traditional typography of books graphic design became a more or less independent branch The tensions between those two branches significantly determined the stylistic development of 20th century s typography Art nouveau and New Book Art edit nbsp Eckmann 1901 Since impressionism the modern art styles were reflected in graphic design and typography too Around 1890 art nouveau became popular Its floral ornaments the curved forms as well as the emphasis on graphical realisation inspired the type designers of the start of the 20th century A popular art nouveau font was Eckmann designed by graphic artist Otto Eckmann Furthermore the influence of art nouveau was expressed in a lot of book illustrations and ex libris designs Altogether the return to the roots of book art become stronger around the start of the 20th century It was initiated by British typographer socialist and private press publisher William Morris as well as by the Arts and Crafts Movement which refers to him Essentially this movement initiated three things a return to the antiqua models of the Renaissance clarity and simplicity of book illustrations and straightforward technical processes during the production of printed matters An immediate consequence of the Arts and Crafts Movement was the establishment of the private press movement which more or less was committed to Morris ideals and whose remains partially are still present today An established meeting point of this scene in Germany for example is the Mainzer Minipressen Messe which actually is held every two years Especially the New Book Art movement which formed in the decade before World War I was influenced by the Arts and Crafts Movement The young type designers of the pre war era among them Fritz Helmuth Ehmcke and Friedrich Wilhelm Kleukens rejected both the late typographical classicism and the ornaments of the popular art nouveau The new ideal became a tidy and straightforward book typography which dedicated itself to the ideas of the Renaissance Walter Tiemann in Leipzig Friedrich Hermann Ernst Schneidler in Stuttgart and Rudolf Koch in Offenbach as instructors were the mentors of this kind of typography They stayed influential in the field of book typesetting until a long time after the end of World War II European avant garde typography edit During the 1920s typographers in central and eastern Europe experimented with forms of avant garde typography The main places of development of avant garde artists had been Budapest Zagreb Belgrade and after 1924 also Prague However since 1925 avant garde typography had been spreading to the cities of western and eastern Europe and as a result the previous cities gradually lost their relevance 13 In 1924 two exhibitions important for development of avant garde typography were organized one by Ljubomir Micic the First International Zenitistic Exhibition of New Art in Belgrade and the other by Ion Vinea and Marcel Iancu the First International Exhibition Contimporanul Avant garde typography in Poland edit Among the most important Polish artists were Wladyslaw Strzeminski and Mieczyslaw Szczuka in their works they were referring to poetry and valued the art of publishing printing books more than other forms of art Wladyslaw Strzeminski is recognized as the precursor of avant garde typography in Poland he was one of the first artists to set aside the primal shape of letters He thought the content was not as important as the way it was presented because in order to understand the message of a poster cover one had to understand what the artist tried to communicate with the arrangement of words or each letter The inscriptions started to be constructed in a way to catch the eye unlike traditional typography which was perceived as an addition to a text As a form of inspiration architecture also began to lose its value because avant garde artists were drawing their ideas from paintings and graphics Jan Tschichold the creator of one of many definitions and the most known theoretician of avant garde typography stated that its basic rules should be lack of symmetry contrast and total freedom of creation Contrary to other genres of art avant garde creators were also its theoreticians and researchers 14 15 See also editGeneral edit Movable type Printing Printing press Punchcutting Typesetting Typometry printing Typography VOX ATypI classificationRelated history edit History of printing in East Asia History of sentence spacing Spread of European movable type printingReferences editCitations edit a b c d Meggs Philip B 2006 Meggs history of graphic design Alston W Purvis 4th ed Hoboken N J John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 70 ISBN 0 471 69902 0 OCLC 58829979 printing in England Steinberg S H 1961 Five Hundred Years of Printing Harmondsworth Penguin pp 94 96 98 a b Nesbitt Alexander The History and Technique of Lettering c 1957 Dover Publications Inc ISBN 0 486 20427 8 OCLC 654540 The Dover edition is an abridged and corrected republication of the work originally published in 1950 by Prentice Hall Inc under the title Lettering The History and Technique of Lettering as Design Diderot Denis 1765 Encyclopedie ou Dictionnaire raisonne des sciences des arts et des metiers Paris pp Vol 8 p 73 The Life of a Dead Typeface The Origins of Civilite Newberry www newberry org Retrieved 2020 11 10 Rome Reborn The Vatican Library amp Renaissance Culture Orient to Rome Marini Igino The Fell Types Retrieved 23 August 2014 Meggs Philip B 1998 A History of Graphic Design Third ed John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 108 109 ISBN 978 0 471 29198 5 Penney Chris Dr B T Davis s bequest PDF Research Libraries Bulletin 6 21 ISSN 1355 9877 Retrieved 2008 10 16 Cleeton Glen U 2006 General printing Charles W Pitkin Raymond L Cornwell 3rd ed Saratoga Calif Liber Apertus Press pp v ISBN 0 9785881 4 2 OCLC 85812126 Ruggie Saunders Cathie 2013 For the love of letterpress a printing handbook for instructors amp students Martha Chiplis London ISBN 978 1 4081 3941 7 OCLC 840432025 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Karel Srp i Lenka Bydzovska Rozlomena doba 1918 1928 Avangardy v strednej Europe Years of Disarray 1908 1928 Avant gardes in Central Europe Hoels Henk Lentjes Ewan 2016 Triumf typografii Krakow wydawnictwo d2d pl Hoeks Henk Lentjes Ewan Bil ak Peter 2015 The triumph of typography culture communication new media Arnhem Uitgeverij Terra ISBN 978 90 8989 628 5 OCLC 919438630 Sources edit Burke James The Day the Universe Changed c 1985 ISBN 0 316 11695 5 Eight moments in history when a change in knowledge radically altered man s understanding of himself and the world Chapter 4 Matter of Fact details on the development of moveable type in Korea and Europe Heller Steven and Meggs Phillip B Texts on Type Critical Writings on Typography c 2001 Allworth Press Allworth Communications New York ISBN 1 58115 082 2 A compilation of over fifty texts on the history practice and aesthetics of type design and typography Section 4 Movement Defining Modernism essays by Herbert Bayer Jan Tschichold Jeffery Keedy Man John The Gutenberg Revolution The story of a genius that changed the world c 2002 Headline Book Publishing a division of Hodder Headline London ISBN 0 7472 4504 5 A detailed examination of Gutenberg s life and invention skillfully interwoven with the underlying social and religious upheaval of Medieval Europe on the eve of the Renaissance McKitterick David Print Manuscript and the Search for Order 1450 1830 N Y amp Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 0 521 82690 X Deals with the social religious and technical influences on typography and book design Swanson Gunnar Graphic Design and Reading explorations of an uneasy relationship c 2000 Allworth Press Allworth Communications New York ISBN 1 58115 063 6 The Myth of Content and the Encyclopedestrianization of Communication by James Souttar Tracing the Invisible by Katie Salen External links editColorado College picture catalogue of Incunabula Comp fonts FAQ General Info Section four of six of the newsgroup FAQ Twenty Faces Planet typography A magazine on contemporary typography a directory a manual and other topics related to typography The Printed Book Archived 2008 10 18 at the Wayback Machine ABC typography A virtual type museum A brief history of the Fell Types Igino Marini 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Western typography amp oldid 1180112939, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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