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Plantin (typeface)

Plantin is an old-style serif typeface. It was created in 1913 by the British Monotype Corporation for their hot metal typesetting system and is named after the sixteenth-century printer Christophe Plantin.[1] It is loosely based on a Gros Cicero roman type cut in the 16th century by Robert Granjon held in the collection of the Plantin–Moretus Museum, Antwerp.[2]

The intention behind the design of Plantin was to create a font with thicker letterforms than were often used at the time: early printing on absorbent book paper led to ink spread, but by 1913 innovations in smoothing and coated paper had led to reduced ink spread and made old types often look skeletal on paper.[3] Monotype engineering manager Frank Hinman Pierpont visited the Plantin-Moretus Museum, where he acquired a printed specimen of historic types.[4]

Plantin was one of the first Monotype Corporation revivals that was not simply a copy of a typeface already popular in British printing; it has proved popular since its release and has been digitised. Monotype followed it with revivals of many other classic typefaces in the 1920s and 30s.[1] Plantin would later also be used as one of the main models for the creation of Times New Roman in the 1930s.[5] The Plantin family includes regular, light and bold weights, along with corresponding italics.

Inspiration edit

 
Steel punches, the masters used to stamp matrices used to cast metal type, at the Plantin-Moretus Museum. Its unique collection of original sixteenth-century matrices and punches inspired the Plantin design.
 
The Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp, a visit to which provided source material for Plantin's design.

At the time Plantin was released, Monotype's hot metal typesetting system, which cast new type for each printing job, was developing a reputation for practicality in trade and mass-market printing, but the designs offered by Monotype were relatively basic choices, such as a "modern" face, an "old style" and a Clarendon.[1]

James Moran and John Dreyfus suggested that an inspiration for the design may have been a c. 1910 family from the Shanks foundry known as "Plantin Old Style", advertised as highly legible.[6] This was actually a bold design based on Caslon, with no connection to Christophe Plantin or Granjon, but Dreyfus suggests it may have prompted Monotype to research Christophe Plantin and the collection of the Plantin-Moretus Museum.[7]

The Plantin-Moretus Museum was created in 1876 from Plantin's collection which had been preserved and added to by his successors in business. It is notable as the world's largest collection of sixteenth century typefaces.[8] Although Plantin commissioned types from Granjon, according to Hendrik Vervliet the specific type Pierpont's design was based on began to be used by the Plantin-Moretus Press only in the 18th century, after Plantin had died and his press had been inherited by the Moretus family.[9] (It has been reported that Plantin did use the long letters of the type as replacement letters to cast a type by Garamond shorter height, but Vervliet suggests that these may have been a set of slightly different characters cut by Granjon separately.[9][3][4][10])

Plantin was designed and engraved into metal at the Monotype factory in Salfords, Surrey, which was led by Pierpont and draughtsman Fritz Stelzer. Both were recruits to Monotype from the German printing industry.

The choice to revive a French Renaissance design was unusual for the time, since most British fine printers of the period preferred either Caslon or revivals of the fifteenth-century style of Nicolas Jenson (recognisable from the tilted 'e'), following the lead of William Morris's Golden Type, both of which Monotype would also develop revivals of.[1] However, other revivals of Aldine/French renaissance typefaces followed from several hot metal typesetting companies in the following decades, including Monotype's own Poliphilus, Bembo and Garamond, Linotype's Granjon and Estienne and others, becoming very popular in book printing for body text.

Design edit

 
Miller & Richard's Old Style, a delicate reinterpretation of pre nineteenth-century printing styles that became popular in the late nineteenth century. While offering a version of it as one of their first faces, Monotype in creating Plantin aimed to offer a more solid design that would print clearly.

The design for Plantin preserved the large x-height of Granjon's designs, but shortened the ascenders and descenders and enlarged the counters of the lowercase 'a' and 'e'.[4] Not all the letters were Granjon's: the letters 'J', 'U' and 'W', not used in French in the sixteenth century, were not his, and a different 'a' in an eighteenth-century style had been substituted into the font by the time the specimen sheet was printed.[9][11][12][13]

The 1742 specimen of Claude Lamesle (notable for its printing quality) provides a specimen of the Granjon type in its original state.[14][9] Mosley has close-up images of some characters of the face.[12][a]

Reception and usage edit

 
A sample image of Plantin created by Fontshop, showing infant styles and the condensed "News" and "Headline" styles sold for newspapers.

With its relatively robust, solid design compared to the Didone and "Modernised Old Style" faces popular in the early twentieth century (which Monotype already had made versions of), Plantin proved popular and was often particularly used by trade and newspaper printers using poor-quality paper in the metal type period and beyond. Monotype's advertising emphasised its popularity with advertisers, highlighting its use in the "Mrs Rawlins" series of adverts for washing starch.[16][17][18][19] As the basic font is relatively dark on the page, Monotype offered a 'light' version as well as a bold, which Hugh Williamson describes as "particularly suitable for bookwork."[20]

During the interwar period the face was adopted and popularized by Francis Meynell's Pelican Press and by C. W. Hobson's Cloister press, and also used occasionally by Cambridge University Press.[4] A custom version, "Nonesuch Plantin" was also cut for Meynell's Nonesuch Press, one of the first fine printers to use Monotype machines, with extended ascenders and descenders on the lower-case.[21] Type designer Walter Tracy noted that this changed the type's appearance to a surprising extent: "it look[s] not only more refined but as if it derived from another period: Fournier's, say [in the eighteenth century], not Granjon's."[22] It was appropriately used by the Bodley Head to print Meynell's autobiography.[23] Monotype also created a condensed version, News Plantin, for The Observer in the late 1970s.[24][1] An infant variety of the typeface called Plantin Infant also exists,[25] with single-story versions of the letters 'a' and 'g' and a 'y' with two straight sides.

The font was used as the signature font for ABC News from 1978 until 1999. In more recent usage, the magazine Monocle is set entirely in Plantin and Helvetica.[26] The body text of all Magic: The Gathering cards is also set in Plantin.

Designs inspired by Plantin edit

 
A comparison between Times New Roman and three typefaces originally considered as a basis for the Times project: Perpetua, Baskerville, and Plantin. Times is most based on Plantin, but with taller letters and its appearance "modernised" by adding eighteenth- and nineteenth-century influences similar to Baskerville and Perpetua, in particular enhancing the stroke contrast.

Plantin was the basis for the general layout of Monotype's most successful typeface of all, Times New Roman.[27][28] Times is similar to Plantin but "sharpened" or "modernised", with increased contrast (particularly resembling designs from the eighteenth and nineteenth century) and greater "sparkle".[29][30][31] Allan Haley commented that Times New Roman "looks like Plantin on a diet."[32]

As the Plantin design is in the public domain, adaptations and unofficial digitisations (including simple knock-offs) have been released. Galaxie Copernicus by Chester Jenkins and Kris Sowersby is a reinterpretation of Plantin.[33][34] Sowersby followed it with a newspaper typeface, Tiempos, influenced by Times New Roman[35][36] and later, in mid-2023, released a digital revival of the metal Plantin 110 cut itself—rather than a reinterpretation—called Martina Plantijn.[37] Fabric Serif by Sindre Bremnes and Frode Helland of Monokrom Type Foundry is another reinterpretation.[38][39] Other similar designs include Musee by DSType[40] and Erato by Hoftype.[41] In 2024 The Economist adopted a new typeface Economist Serif designed by Henrik Kubel and based on Plantin.[42]

Aldine 721 is Bitstream's version of Plantin[43][44] and Francisco Serial is a version by Softmaker.[45]

References edit

  1. ^ A better-quality digitisation of the whole specimen is available but it does not include this leaf.[15]
  1. ^ a b c d e Slinn, Judy; Carter, Sebastian; Southall, Richard. History of the Monotype Corporation. pp. 202–3 etc.
  2. ^ Schuster, Brigitte (2010). "Monotype Plantin: A Digital Revival by Brigitte Schuster" (PDF). Royal Academy of Art, The Hague (M.A. thesis). Retrieved 23 May 2014.
  3. ^ a b Carter, Sebastian (1995), Twentieth Century Type Designers, W. W. Norton & Company, pp. 28–29.
  4. ^ a b c d Morison, Stanley (7 June 1973). A Tally of Types. CUP Archive. pp. 22–24. ISBN 978-0-521-09786-4.
  5. ^ Meggs, Philip B.; Carter, Rob (1993), "29. Plantin", Typographic Specimens: The Great Typefaces, John Wiley and Sons, pp. 302–311, ISBN 978-0-471-28429-1.
  6. ^ "Plantin Old Style : typeface synopsis issued by P M Shanks & Co Ltd., typefounders, London, c1910 (image: Mike Ashworth)". 16 April 2019. Retrieved 2022-12-02.
  7. ^ Dreyfus, John (1995). Into Print: Selected Writings on Printing History, Typography and Book Production (1st hardcover ed.). Boston: David R. Godine. pp. 116–124. ISBN 9781567920451.
  8. ^ Mosley, James. "The materials of typefounding". Type Foundry. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  9. ^ a b c d Hendrik D. L. Vervliet (2008). The Palaeotypography of the French Renaissance: Selected Papers on Sixteenth-century Typefaces. BRILL. pp. 226–7. ISBN 978-90-04-16982-1.
  10. ^ Mann, Meredith. "Where Did Times New Roman Come From?". New York Public Library. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  11. ^ Mosley, James (2003). "Reviving the Classics: Matthew Carter and the Interpretation of Historical Models". In Mosley, James; Re, Margaret; Drucker, Johanna; Carter, Matthew (eds.). Typographically Speaking: The Art of Matthew Carter. Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 31–34. ISBN 9781568984278. Plantin was a recreation of one of the old types held at the Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp, of which a specimen, printed in 1905, had been acquired by Pierpont on a visit. The type from which the specimen was printed was not only centuries old and worn almost beyond use, but it was contaminated with wrong-font letters (notably the letter 'a') and the italic did not even belong to the roman. The revival, derived by Monotype from an indirect and confused original, is as sound a piece of type-making as was ever created in the 20th century…behind the foggy image of the roman type lies the...'Gros Cicero' Roman of Robert Granjon, acquired by the Plantin printing office after the death of its founder.
  12. ^ a b Mosley, James. . Typophile (archived). Archived from the original on 2011-10-13. Retrieved 16 December 2016. The consensus appears to be that not only the wrong-fount a in the cases at Antwerp but also the italic that Monotype adapted for their Plantin (which can be seen on that first page of the 1905 specimen) may be the work of Johann Michael Schmidt (died 1750), also known as J. M. Smit or Smid.
  13. ^ Lane, John A. (1995). "Arent Corsz Hogenacker (ca. 1579-1636): an account of his typefoundry and a note on his types Part two: the types". Quaerendo. 25 (3): 163. doi:10.1163/157006995X00017. Most of these sixteenth-century types were originally cut without the letters J, U, and W, which were added in the seventeenth century.
  14. ^ Lamesle, Claude (1742). Épreuves générales des caracteres. p. 55.
  15. ^ Lamesle, Claude (1742). Épreuves générales des caracteres.
  16. ^ "Monotype (advert)". Modern Publicity: 187. 1930. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  17. ^ Warde, Beatrice (1932). "Twenty Years of Advertising Typography". Advertiser's Weekly: 130. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  18. ^ Hackney, Fiona Anne Seaton. ""They Opened Up a Whole New World": Feminine Modernity and the Feminine Imagination in Women's Magazines, 1919-1939" (PDF). Goldsmith's College (PhD thesis). Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  19. ^ Lucy Lethbridge (14 March 2013). Servants: A Downstairs View of Twentieth-century Britain. A&C Black. pp. 187–8. ISBN 978-1-4088-3407-7.
  20. ^ Williamson, Hugh (1956). Methods of Book Design. Oxford University Press. p. 81.
  21. ^ Steeves, Andrew (14 April 2011). "Poetry Books for the Trala". Gaspereau Press. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  22. ^ Tracy, Walter. Letters of Credit. pp. 50–1.
  23. ^ Joseph Rosenblum (1995). A Bibliographic History of the Book: An Annotated Guide to the Literature. Scarecrow Press. pp. 407–8. ISBN 978-0-8108-3009-7.
  24. ^ Luna, Paul (1986). "Small Print". Designer. The first national to install a Lasercomp, it overcame the lack of suitable text faces by commissioning its own, a slightly condensed version of Plantin.
  25. ^ "Plantin Infant Font". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  26. ^ Coles, Stephen (February 13, 2009). "In Use: Plantin for Monocle". The FontFeed. FSI FontShop International. Retrieved 2009-12-23.
  27. ^ Rhatigan, Dan. "Time and Times again". Monotype. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  28. ^ Hutt, Allen (1970). "Times Roman: a re-assessment". Journal of Typographic Research. 4 (3): 259–270. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  29. ^ Lawson, Alexander (1990). Anatomy of a Typeface. New York: David R. Godine. pp. 270–294. ISBN 9780879233334. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  30. ^ Morison, Stanley. "Changing the Times". Eye. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  31. ^ Allan Haley (15 September 1992). Typographic Milestones. John Wiley & Sons. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-471-28894-7.
  32. ^ Haley, Allen (1990). ABC's of type. Watson-Guptill Publications. p. 86. ISBN 9780823000531.
  33. ^ Heck, Bethany (11 August 2017). "Galaxie Copernicus review". Font Review Journal. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  34. ^ "Village: Galaxie Copernicus about". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  35. ^ Sowersby, Kris. "Tiempos Design Information". Klim Type Foundry. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  36. ^ Thomson, Mark; Sowersby, Kris. "Reputations: Kris Sowersby". Eye. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
  37. ^ Sowersby, Kris. "Martina Plantijn Design Information". Klim Type Foundry. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  38. ^ "Fabric Serif in use - Fonts In Use". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  39. ^ "Monokrom Skriftforlag". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  40. ^ "Musee". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  41. ^ "Erato Font". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  42. ^ "Why has The Economist changed its typeface?". The Economist. 2024-02-07. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  43. ^ "Aldine 721 in use". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  44. ^ "Aldine 721 Font". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  45. ^ "Francisco Serial Font". Retrieved 14 January 2022.

External links edit

  • Plantin

plantin, typeface, plantin, style, serif, typeface, created, 1913, british, monotype, corporation, their, metal, typesetting, system, named, after, sixteenth, century, printer, christophe, plantin, loosely, based, gros, cicero, roman, type, 16th, century, robe. Plantin is an old style serif typeface It was created in 1913 by the British Monotype Corporation for their hot metal typesetting system and is named after the sixteenth century printer Christophe Plantin 1 It is loosely based on a Gros Cicero roman type cut in the 16th century by Robert Granjon held in the collection of the Plantin Moretus Museum Antwerp 2 PlantinCategorySerifClassificationOld style serifDesigner s Robert GranjonFrank Hinman PierpontFritz StelzerFoundryMonotypeDate created1913 The intention behind the design of Plantin was to create a font with thicker letterforms than were often used at the time early printing on absorbent book paper led to ink spread but by 1913 innovations in smoothing and coated paper had led to reduced ink spread and made old types often look skeletal on paper 3 Monotype engineering manager Frank Hinman Pierpont visited the Plantin Moretus Museum where he acquired a printed specimen of historic types 4 Plantin was one of the first Monotype Corporation revivals that was not simply a copy of a typeface already popular in British printing it has proved popular since its release and has been digitised Monotype followed it with revivals of many other classic typefaces in the 1920s and 30s 1 Plantin would later also be used as one of the main models for the creation of Times New Roman in the 1930s 5 The Plantin family includes regular light and bold weights along with corresponding italics Contents 1 Inspiration 2 Design 3 Reception and usage 4 Designs inspired by Plantin 5 References 6 External linksInspiration edit nbsp Steel punches the masters used to stamp matrices used to cast metal type at the Plantin Moretus Museum Its unique collection of original sixteenth century matrices and punches inspired the Plantin design nbsp The Plantin Moretus Museum in Antwerp a visit to which provided source material for Plantin s design At the time Plantin was released Monotype s hot metal typesetting system which cast new type for each printing job was developing a reputation for practicality in trade and mass market printing but the designs offered by Monotype were relatively basic choices such as a modern face an old style and a Clarendon 1 James Moran and John Dreyfus suggested that an inspiration for the design may have been a c 1910 family from the Shanks foundry known as Plantin Old Style advertised as highly legible 6 This was actually a bold design based on Caslon with no connection to Christophe Plantin or Granjon but Dreyfus suggests it may have prompted Monotype to research Christophe Plantin and the collection of the Plantin Moretus Museum 7 The Plantin Moretus Museum was created in 1876 from Plantin s collection which had been preserved and added to by his successors in business It is notable as the world s largest collection of sixteenth century typefaces 8 Although Plantin commissioned types from Granjon according to Hendrik Vervliet the specific type Pierpont s design was based on began to be used by the Plantin Moretus Press only in the 18th century after Plantin had died and his press had been inherited by the Moretus family 9 It has been reported that Plantin did use the long letters of the type as replacement letters to cast a type by Garamond shorter height but Vervliet suggests that these may have been a set of slightly different characters cut by Granjon separately 9 3 4 10 Plantin was designed and engraved into metal at the Monotype factory in Salfords Surrey which was led by Pierpont and draughtsman Fritz Stelzer Both were recruits to Monotype from the German printing industry The choice to revive a French Renaissance design was unusual for the time since most British fine printers of the period preferred either Caslon or revivals of the fifteenth century style of Nicolas Jenson recognisable from the tilted e following the lead of William Morris s Golden Type both of which Monotype would also develop revivals of 1 However other revivals of Aldine French renaissance typefaces followed from several hot metal typesetting companies in the following decades including Monotype s own Poliphilus Bembo and Garamond Linotype s Granjon and Estienne and others becoming very popular in book printing for body text Design edit nbsp Miller amp Richard s Old Style a delicate reinterpretation of pre nineteenth century printing styles that became popular in the late nineteenth century While offering a version of it as one of their first faces Monotype in creating Plantin aimed to offer a more solid design that would print clearly The design for Plantin preserved the large x height of Granjon s designs but shortened the ascenders and descenders and enlarged the counters of the lowercase a and e 4 Not all the letters were Granjon s the letters J U and W not used in French in the sixteenth century were not his and a different a in an eighteenth century style had been substituted into the font by the time the specimen sheet was printed 9 11 12 13 The 1742 specimen of Claude Lamesle notable for its printing quality provides a specimen of the Granjon type in its original state 14 9 Mosley has close up images of some characters of the face 12 a Reception and usage edit nbsp A sample image of Plantin created by Fontshop showing infant styles and the condensed News and Headline styles sold for newspapers With its relatively robust solid design compared to the Didone and Modernised Old Style faces popular in the early twentieth century which Monotype already had made versions of Plantin proved popular and was often particularly used by trade and newspaper printers using poor quality paper in the metal type period and beyond Monotype s advertising emphasised its popularity with advertisers highlighting its use in the Mrs Rawlins series of adverts for washing starch 16 17 18 19 As the basic font is relatively dark on the page Monotype offered a light version as well as a bold which Hugh Williamson describes as particularly suitable for bookwork 20 During the interwar period the face was adopted and popularized by Francis Meynell s Pelican Press and by C W Hobson s Cloister press and also used occasionally by Cambridge University Press 4 A custom version Nonesuch Plantin was also cut for Meynell s Nonesuch Press one of the first fine printers to use Monotype machines with extended ascenders and descenders on the lower case 21 Type designer Walter Tracy noted that this changed the type s appearance to a surprising extent it look s not only more refined but as if it derived from another period Fournier s say in the eighteenth century not Granjon s 22 It was appropriately used by the Bodley Head to print Meynell s autobiography 23 Monotype also created a condensed version News Plantin for The Observer in the late 1970s 24 1 An infant variety of the typeface called Plantin Infant also exists 25 with single story versions of the letters a and g and a y with two straight sides The font was used as the signature font for ABC News from 1978 until 1999 In more recent usage the magazine Monocle is set entirely in Plantin and Helvetica 26 The body text of all Magic The Gathering cards is also set in Plantin Designs inspired by Plantin edit nbsp A comparison between Times New Roman and three typefaces originally considered as a basis for the Times project Perpetua Baskerville and Plantin Times is most based on Plantin but with taller letters and its appearance modernised by adding eighteenth and nineteenth century influences similar to Baskerville and Perpetua in particular enhancing the stroke contrast Plantin was the basis for the general layout of Monotype s most successful typeface of all Times New Roman 27 28 Times is similar to Plantin but sharpened or modernised with increased contrast particularly resembling designs from the eighteenth and nineteenth century and greater sparkle 29 30 31 Allan Haley commented that Times New Roman looks like Plantin on a diet 32 As the Plantin design is in the public domain adaptations and unofficial digitisations including simple knock offs have been released Galaxie Copernicus by Chester Jenkins and Kris Sowersby is a reinterpretation of Plantin 33 34 Sowersby followed it with a newspaper typeface Tiempos influenced by Times New Roman 35 36 and later in mid 2023 released a digital revival of the metal Plantin 110 cut itself rather than a reinterpretation called Martina Plantijn 37 Fabric Serif by Sindre Bremnes and Frode Helland of Monokrom Type Foundry is another reinterpretation 38 39 Other similar designs include Musee by DSType 40 and Erato by Hoftype 41 In 2024 The Economist adopted a new typeface Economist Serif designed by Henrik Kubel and based on Plantin 42 Aldine 721 is Bitstream s version of Plantin 43 44 and Francisco Serial is a version by Softmaker 45 References edit A better quality digitisation of the whole specimen is available but it does not include this leaf 15 a b c d e Slinn Judy Carter Sebastian Southall Richard History of the Monotype Corporation pp 202 3 etc Schuster Brigitte 2010 Monotype Plantin A Digital Revival by Brigitte Schuster PDF Royal Academy of Art The Hague M A thesis Retrieved 23 May 2014 a b Carter Sebastian 1995 Twentieth Century Type Designers W W Norton amp Company pp 28 29 a b c d Morison Stanley 7 June 1973 A Tally of Types CUP Archive pp 22 24 ISBN 978 0 521 09786 4 Meggs Philip B Carter Rob 1993 29 Plantin Typographic Specimens The Great Typefaces John Wiley and Sons pp 302 311 ISBN 978 0 471 28429 1 Plantin Old Style typeface synopsis issued by P M Shanks amp Co Ltd typefounders London c1910 image Mike Ashworth 16 April 2019 Retrieved 2022 12 02 Dreyfus John 1995 Into Print Selected Writings on Printing History Typography and Book Production 1st hardcover ed Boston David R Godine pp 116 124 ISBN 9781567920451 Mosley James The materials of typefounding Type Foundry Retrieved 14 August 2015 a b c d Hendrik D L Vervliet 2008 The Palaeotypography of the French Renaissance Selected Papers on Sixteenth century Typefaces BRILL pp 226 7 ISBN 978 90 04 16982 1 Mann Meredith Where Did Times New Roman Come From New York Public Library Retrieved 2 February 2016 Mosley James 2003 Reviving the Classics Matthew Carter and the Interpretation of Historical Models In Mosley James Re Margaret Drucker Johanna Carter Matthew eds Typographically Speaking The Art of Matthew Carter Princeton Architectural Press pp 31 34 ISBN 9781568984278 Plantin was a recreation of one of the old types held at the Plantin Moretus Museum in Antwerp of which a specimen printed in 1905 had been acquired by Pierpont on a visit The type from which the specimen was printed was not only centuries old and worn almost beyond use but it was contaminated with wrong font letters notably the letter a and the italic did not even belong to the roman The revival derived by Monotype from an indirect and confused original is as sound a piece of type making as was ever created in the 20th century behind the foggy image of the roman type lies the Gros Cicero Roman of Robert Granjon acquired by the Plantin printing office after the death of its founder a b Mosley James Comments on Typophile thread Typophile archived Archived from the original on 2011 10 13 Retrieved 16 December 2016 The consensus appears to be that not only the wrong fount a in the cases at Antwerp but also the italic that Monotype adapted for their Plantin which can be seen on that first page of the 1905 specimen may be the work of Johann Michael Schmidt died 1750 also known as J M Smit or Smid Lane John A 1995 Arent Corsz Hogenacker ca 1579 1636 an account of his typefoundry and a note on his types Part two the types Quaerendo 25 3 163 doi 10 1163 157006995X00017 Most of these sixteenth century types were originally cut without the letters J U and W which were added in the seventeenth century Lamesle Claude 1742 Epreuves generales des caracteres p 55 Lamesle Claude 1742 Epreuves generales des caracteres Monotype advert Modern Publicity 187 1930 Retrieved 15 March 2017 Warde Beatrice 1932 Twenty Years of Advertising Typography Advertiser s Weekly 130 Retrieved 15 March 2017 Hackney Fiona Anne Seaton They Opened Up a Whole New World Feminine Modernity and the Feminine Imagination in Women s Magazines 1919 1939 PDF Goldsmith s College PhD thesis Retrieved 15 March 2017 Lucy Lethbridge 14 March 2013 Servants A Downstairs View of Twentieth century Britain A amp C Black pp 187 8 ISBN 978 1 4088 3407 7 Williamson Hugh 1956 Methods of Book Design Oxford University Press p 81 Steeves Andrew 14 April 2011 Poetry Books for the Trala Gaspereau Press Retrieved 12 March 2017 Tracy Walter Letters of Credit pp 50 1 Joseph Rosenblum 1995 A Bibliographic History of the Book An Annotated Guide to the Literature Scarecrow Press pp 407 8 ISBN 978 0 8108 3009 7 Luna Paul 1986 Small Print Designer The first national to install a Lasercomp it overcame the lack of suitable text faces by commissioning its own a slightly condensed version of Plantin Plantin Infant Font Retrieved 14 January 2022 Coles Stephen February 13 2009 In Use Plantin for Monocle The FontFeed FSI FontShop International Retrieved 2009 12 23 Rhatigan Dan Time and Times again Monotype Retrieved 28 July 2015 Hutt Allen 1970 Times Roman a re assessment Journal of Typographic Research 4 3 259 270 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Lawson Alexander 1990 Anatomy of a Typeface New York David R Godine pp 270 294 ISBN 9780879233334 Retrieved 6 March 2016 Morison Stanley Changing the Times Eye Retrieved 28 July 2015 Allan Haley 15 September 1992 Typographic Milestones John Wiley amp Sons p 106 ISBN 978 0 471 28894 7 Haley Allen 1990 ABC s of type Watson Guptill Publications p 86 ISBN 9780823000531 Heck Bethany 11 August 2017 Galaxie Copernicus review Font Review Journal Retrieved 13 September 2019 Village Galaxie Copernicus about Retrieved 14 January 2022 Sowersby Kris Tiempos Design Information Klim Type Foundry Retrieved 21 January 2019 Thomson Mark Sowersby Kris Reputations Kris Sowersby Eye Retrieved 12 September 2019 Sowersby Kris Martina Plantijn Design Information Klim Type Foundry Retrieved 29 December 2023 Fabric Serif in use Fonts In Use Retrieved 14 January 2022 Monokrom Skriftforlag Retrieved 14 January 2022 Musee Retrieved 14 January 2022 Erato Font Retrieved 14 January 2022 Why has The Economist changed its typeface The Economist 2024 02 07 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 2024 03 24 Aldine 721 in use Retrieved 14 January 2022 Aldine 721 Font Retrieved 14 January 2022 Francisco Serial Font Retrieved 14 January 2022 External links editPlantin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plantin typeface amp oldid 1215312150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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