fbpx
Wikipedia

Slab serif

In typography, a slab serif (also called mechanistic, square serif, antique or Egyptian) typeface is a type of serif typeface characterized by thick, block-like serifs.[1][2] Serif terminals may be either blunt and angular (Rockwell), or rounded (Courier). Slab serifs were introduced in the early nineteenth century.

Slab-serif type on the heading of a Chartist poster, 1848. Some headings and the lower passage are in Didone type, but much body text is slab serif.

Slab serifs form a large and varied genre. Some such as Memphis and Rockwell have a geometric design with minimal variation in stroke width: they are sometimes described as sans-serif fonts with added serifs. Others such as those of the Clarendon genre have a structure more like most other serif fonts, though with larger and more obvious serifs.[3][4] These designs may have bracketed serifs which increase width along their length before merging with the main strokes of the letters, while on geometrics the serifs have a constant width.

Display-oriented slab serifs are often extremely bold, intended to grab the reader's attention on a poster, while slab serifs oriented towards legibility at small sizes show less extreme characteristics. Some fonts oriented towards small print use and printing on poor-quality newsprint paper may have slab serifs to increase legibility, while their other features are closer to conventional book type fonts.

Slab serif fonts were also often used in typewriters, most famously Courier, and this tradition has meant many monospaced text fonts intended for computer and programming use are slab serif designs.[citation needed]

History edit

 
A sample of the typeface Egyptienne, a slab serif face based on the Clarendon model.
 
A sample of the typeface Rockwell, a slab serif face based on the geometric model.
 
A sample of the typeface Courier, a slab serif face based on strike-on typewriting faces.

Slab serif lettering and typefaces appeared rapidly in the early nineteenth century, having little in common with previous letterforms. As the printing of advertising material began to expand in the early nineteenth century, new and notionally more attention-grabbing letterforms became popular.[5] Poster-size types began to be developed that were not merely magnified forms of book type, but very different and bolder. Some were developments of designs of the previous fifty years: ultra-bold types known as "fat faces", which were related to "Didone" text faces of the period but much bolder.[6] Others had completely new structures: sans-serif letters, based on classical antiquity, and reverse-contrast letterforms. Some of the type designs appearing around this time may be based on signpainting and architectural lettering traditions, or vice versa.[a][citation needed]

The first known example of a slab-serif letterform is woodblock lettering on an 1810 lottery advertisement from London.[7] Slab-serif type was perhaps first introduced by London typefounder Vincent Figgins under the name "Antique", appearing in a type-specimen dated 1815 (but probably issued in 1817).[8][1][b]

Writing in 1825, the printer Thomas Curson Hansard wrote with amusement that slab-serif and other such display types were 'the outrageous kind of face only adapted for placards, posting-bills, invitations to the wheel of Fortune...Fashion and Fancy commonly frolic from one extreme to another.'[15]

Slab serifs declined following the growing popularity of sans-serif faces, with which they always competed.[16] Notable collections of original wood type are held by the Hamilton in Wisconsin[17][18] and the University of Texas at Austin, collected by Rob Roy Kelly, writer of a well-known book on American poster types.[19] Adobe Inc. has published a large collection of digitisations inspired by nineteenth-century wood type.[20][21][22][23]

Following Napoleon's Egyptian campaign and dissemination of images and descriptions via publications like Description de l'Égypte (1809) an intense cultural fascination with all things Egyptian followed. Suites of contemporary parlor furniture were produced resembling furniture found in tombs. Multicolored woodblock printed wallpaper could make a dining room in Edinburgh or Chicago feel like Luxor. While there was no relationship between Egyptian writing systems and slab serif types, either shrewd marketing or honest confusion led to slab serifs often being called Egyptians.[24] Historian James Mosley has shown that the first typefaces and letters called 'Egyptian' were apparently all sans-serifs.[8]

The term Egyptian was adopted by French and German foundries, where it became Egyptienne. A lighter style of slab serif with a single width of strokes was called 'engravers face' since it resembled the monoline structure of metal engravings. The term 'slab-serif' itself is relatively recent, possibly twentieth-century.[25]

Because of the clear, bold nature of the large serifs, designs with some slab serif characteristics are also often used for small print, for example in printing with typewriters and on newsprint paper. For example, Linotype's Legibility Group, in which most newspapers were printed during much of the twentieth century, were based on the "Ionic" or "Clarendon" style adapted for continuous body text.[26][27][28]

More loosely, Joanna, TheSerif, FF Meta Serif and Guardian Egyptian are other examples of newspaper and small print-orientated typefaces that have regular, monoline serifs (sometimes more visible in bold weights) but a general humanist text face structure not particularly influenced by nineteenth-century stylings (as Clarendons are). The term "humanist slab serif" has been applied to serif text faces in this style.[29][30]

Describing the process of designing slab serifs, modern font designers Jonathan Hoefler and Tobias Frere-Jones note that the structure of the large slab serifs imposes compromises on structure, with purely geometric designs harder to create in ultra-bold sizes where it becomes impossible to create a strictly monoline lower-case alphabet, and Clarendon-style designs harder to create in a lighter style.[3]

Sub-classifications edit

There are several main subgroups of slab serif typefaces:

Antique model edit

The earliest slab-serifs were often called "antiques" or "Egyptians". They were often quite monoline in construction and had similarities to nineteenth-century serif fonts, such as ball terminals.[3]

 
Miller and Richard's Oldstyle Antique. Just as Clarendon typefaces took the "Didone" or modern-face model as a basis for a slab-serif, it is based on their "Old Style" design inspired by type designs of the eighteenth century, made slightly bolder and lower in contrast. Originally intended for use as a bolder type for emphasis, it was often used for general-purpose body text for example if legibility was considered important.[31][32] Bookman is a derivative of this style.[33]

Clarendon model edit

Clarendon typefaces, unlike other slab serifs, actually have some bracketing and some contrast in size in the actual serif: the serifs often have curves so they change width and become wider as they approach the main stroke of the letter.[3] Examples include Clarendon and Egyptienne.[citation needed]

Italienne model edit

 
French Clarendon type (top) compared to a conventional Clarendon design.

In the Italienne model, also known as French Clarendon type, the serifs are even heavier than the stems, forging a dramatic, attention-drawing effect. This is known as reverse-contrast type. It is traditionally associated with use in circus and other posters, and is commonly seen in Western movies or to create a nineteenth-century atmosphere. It was most popular from the 1860s until the early twentieth century, particularly in the United States, although the basic concept originates from London printing of the 1820s and it was used outside the United States. It has often been revived since, for example by Robert Harling as Playbill and more recently by Adrian Frutiger as Westside.

Typewriter typefaces edit

Typewriter slab serif typefaces are named for their use in strike-on typewriting. These faces originated in monospaced format with fixed-width, meaning that every character takes up exactly the same amount of horizontal space. This feature is necessitated by the nature of the typewriter apparatus. Examples include Courier (on the geometric model) and Prestige Elite (on the Clarendon model).

A considerable variety of other names have been used, particularly in the 19th century: at the time the separation between typeface name and genre had yet to become established, so it is not clear if a name describes a specific typeface or is meant to refer to a subgenre.[34][35] For example, slab serifs on the French Clarendon model were also called 'Celtic', 'Belgian', 'Aldine' and 'Teutonic' by American printers, as well as 'Tuscan', a name which refers to slab serifs with diamond-shaped points on the sides of the letterform.[19]

Geometric model edit

 
Beton Bold in a metal type sample. Contrast is minimal and letterforms take the circle as a basic shape.

Geometric designs have no bracketing and evenly weighted stems and serifs. Early examples include Memphis, Rockwell, Karnak, Beton, Rosmini, City and Tower, several of which were influenced by geometric sans-serifs of the 1920s and 30s, especially Futura.[3] Recent well-known geometric sans-serifs include ITC Lubalin, Neutraface Slab and Archer.

Some monoline slab serifs such as Serifa, Helserif and Roboto Slab have been designed under the influence of neo-grotesque sans-serif fonts of the 1950s and 60s onwards, and these may be called "neo-grotesque" slab serifs.[36][37][38][39]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This can make tracing the descent of sans and slab-serif styles hard, since a trend can arrive in print directly and without apparent precedent from a signpainting tradition which has left less of a record.
  2. ^ Whether Figgins' foundry produced the very first slab-serif is a question that is unlikely to be ever confirmed, but Nicolete Gray felt that "it seems probable"[9] as his is the first foundry with a surviving specimen showing them. This first Figgins specimen to show them was an "1815" specimen containing 1817 watermarked paper, held by Oxford University Press; other 1815-dated Figgins specimens do not show it; another "1815" specimen that was held by Stephenson Blake with 1820 on the spine shows more.[9] No specimens are known from Figgins' main rivals who produced many slab serifs, the Caslon and Thorne (later Thorowgood) foundries, over the relevant period. Figgins had four sizes in c. 1817, nine c. 1820, and nineteen in a specimen dated 1821[9] but containing 1823 pages;[10] no Caslon specimens are known between 1816 and 1821 but the first surviving specimen from Caslon to show slab-serifs dates from 1821 and shows eleven sizes.[9][11] Thorne had four sizes in 1820.[12] Even fewer specimens survive from other foundries; none are known from Bower and Bacon between 1813 and 1826, by which time they had eighteen sizes.[13] Gray concluded that any of Figgins, Thorowgood and Caslon could have been first to issue a lower-case (already seen on the 1810 woodblock), as they all introduced ones around 1820.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Gray, Nicolete. "Slab-serif type design in England 1815-1845". Journal of the Printing Historical Society. 15: 1–35.
  2. ^ Twyman, Michael. "The Bold Idea: The Use of Bold-looking Types in the Nineteenth Century". Journal of the Printing Historical Society. 22 (107–143).
  3. ^ a b c d e . IDSGN. Archived from the original on 2019-04-28. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  4. ^ Challand, Skylar. . IDSGN. Archived from the original on 2022-10-27. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
  5. ^ Mosley, James (1963). "English Vernacular". Motif. 11: 3–56.
  6. ^ Kennard, Jennifer (3 January 2014). "The Story of Our Friend, the Fat Face". Fonts in Use. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  7. ^ Mosley, James. "The Nymph and the Grot: an Update". Typefoundry blog. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
  8. ^ a b James Mosley, The Nymph and the Grot: the revival of the sanserif letter. London: Friends of the St Bride Printing Library, 1999.
  9. ^ a b c d Gray 1980, p. 12.
  10. ^ Mosley 1984, p. 33.
  11. ^ Mosley 1984, p. 29.
  12. ^ Gray 1980.
  13. ^ Gray 1980, p. 22.
  14. ^ Gray 1980, pp. 12, 15.
  15. ^ Hansard, Thomas Curson (1825). Typographia, an Historical Sketch of the Origin and Progress of the Art of Printing. p. 618. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  16. ^ Tam, Keith. (PDF). KeithTam. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-02-18. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  17. ^ Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum
  18. ^ Analog, digital, virtual: @Home with Hamilton Wood Type by Molly Doane
  19. ^ a b "Rob Roy Kelly Wood Type Collection". University of Texas. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
  20. ^ Bringing Wood Type into the 21st Century by Angela Riechers
  21. ^ Hamilton Wood Type Collection – joint venture between P22 Type Foundry and the Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum
  22. ^ Wood Type Revival – created from hand-set letterpress prints of the original 19th century wood type by Matt Griffin & Matt Braun
  23. ^ Etna – typeface adapted by Mark Simonson from HWT Aetna
  24. ^ Carter, E., Day. B, Meggs P.: "Typographic Design: Form and Communication, Third Edition", page 35. John Wiley & Sons, 2002.
  25. ^ Biggs, John (1954). The Use of Type: The Practice of Typography. Blandford Press.
  26. ^ Hutt, Allen (1973). The Changing Newspaper: typographic trends in Britain and America 1622-1972 (1. publ. ed.). London: Fraser. pp. 100–2 etc. ISBN 9780900406225. The majority of the world's newspapers are typeset in one or another of the traditional Linotype 'Legibility Group', and most of the rest in their derivatives.
  27. ^ Alexander S. Lawson (January 1990). Anatomy of a Typeface. David R. Godine Publisher. pp. 277–294. ISBN 978-0-87923-333-4.
  28. ^ The Legibility of Type. Brooklyn: Mergenthaler Linotype Company. 1935. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  29. ^ Middendorp, Jan. Dutch Type. pp. 192 etc.
  30. ^ Bryan, Marvin (1996). The Digital Typography Sourcebook. New York: Wiley. pp. 144–145. ISBN 9780471148111.
  31. ^ Theodore Low De Vinne (1902). The Practice of Typography: A Treatise on Title-pages, with Numerous Illustrations in Facsimile and Some Observations on the Early and Recent Printing of Books. Century Company. pp. 233–241. ISBN 9780838309353.
  32. ^ Alexander S. Lawson (January 1990). Anatomy of a Typeface. David R. Godine Publisher. pp. 262–280. ISBN 978-0-87923-333-4.
  33. ^ Ovink, G.W. (1971). "Nineteenth-century reactions against the didone type model - I". Quaerendo. 1 (2): 18–31. doi:10.1163/157006971x00301. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  34. ^ Frere-Jones, Tobias. "Scrambled Eggs & Serifs". Frere-Jones Type. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
  35. ^ by Indra Kupferschmid
  36. ^ "Helserif". MyFonts. URW++. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  37. ^ Loxley, Simon (14 May 2012). "Font Wars: A Story On Rivalry Between Type Foundries". Smashing Magazine. Retrieved 20 March 2016.
  38. ^ Coles, Stephen. "Twitter post". Twitter. Retrieved 20 March 2016. [From a Helserif ad:] "Look what happened to Helvetica. It grew wings."
  39. ^ Budrick, Callie. "Vintage Fonts: 35 Adverts From the Past". Print. Retrieved 20 March 2016.

Cited literature edit

  • Gray, Nicolete (1980). "Slab-serif type design in England 1815-1845". Journal of the Printing Historical Society. 15: 1–35.
  • Mosley, James (1984). British type specimens before 1831: a hand-list. Oxford Bibliographical Society/University of Reading.

External links edit

  • George Bruce & Co. of New York, 1828 (& other) specimen books. Many examples of early slab serif type alongside other period display types.
  • From the company of Vincent Figgins: Specimen book, 1845. Many notable ornamented designs. Earlier books from the early 1800s survive and have been reprinted.

slab, serif, 1956, typeface, egyptienne, typeface, typography, slab, serif, also, called, mechanistic, square, serif, antique, egyptian, typeface, type, serif, typeface, characterized, thick, block, like, serifs, serif, terminals, either, blunt, angular, rockw. For the 1956 typeface see Egyptienne typeface In typography a slab serif also called mechanistic square serif antique or Egyptian typeface is a type of serif typeface characterized by thick block like serifs 1 2 Serif terminals may be either blunt and angular Rockwell or rounded Courier Slab serifs were introduced in the early nineteenth century Slab serif type on the heading of a Chartist poster 1848 Some headings and the lower passage are in Didone type but much body text is slab serif Slab serifs form a large and varied genre Some such as Memphis and Rockwell have a geometric design with minimal variation in stroke width they are sometimes described as sans serif fonts with added serifs Others such as those of the Clarendon genre have a structure more like most other serif fonts though with larger and more obvious serifs 3 4 These designs may have bracketed serifs which increase width along their length before merging with the main strokes of the letters while on geometrics the serifs have a constant width Display oriented slab serifs are often extremely bold intended to grab the reader s attention on a poster while slab serifs oriented towards legibility at small sizes show less extreme characteristics Some fonts oriented towards small print use and printing on poor quality newsprint paper may have slab serifs to increase legibility while their other features are closer to conventional book type fonts Slab serif fonts were also often used in typewriters most famously Courier and this tradition has meant many monospaced text fonts intended for computer and programming use are slab serif designs citation needed Contents 1 History 2 Sub classifications 2 1 Antique model 2 2 Clarendon model 2 3 Italienne model 2 4 Typewriter typefaces 2 5 Geometric model 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Cited literature 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp A sample of the typeface Egyptienne a slab serif face based on the Clarendon model nbsp A sample of the typeface Rockwell a slab serif face based on the geometric model nbsp A sample of the typeface Courier a slab serif face based on strike on typewriting faces Slab serif lettering and typefaces appeared rapidly in the early nineteenth century having little in common with previous letterforms As the printing of advertising material began to expand in the early nineteenth century new and notionally more attention grabbing letterforms became popular 5 Poster size types began to be developed that were not merely magnified forms of book type but very different and bolder Some were developments of designs of the previous fifty years ultra bold types known as fat faces which were related to Didone text faces of the period but much bolder 6 Others had completely new structures sans serif letters based on classical antiquity and reverse contrast letterforms Some of the type designs appearing around this time may be based on signpainting and architectural lettering traditions or vice versa a citation needed The first known example of a slab serif letterform is woodblock lettering on an 1810 lottery advertisement from London 7 Slab serif type was perhaps first introduced by London typefounder Vincent Figgins under the name Antique appearing in a type specimen dated 1815 but probably issued in 1817 8 1 b Writing in 1825 the printer Thomas Curson Hansard wrote with amusement that slab serif and other such display types were the outrageous kind of face only adapted for placards posting bills invitations to the wheel of Fortune Fashion and Fancy commonly frolic from one extreme to another 15 Slab serifs declined following the growing popularity of sans serif faces with which they always competed 16 Notable collections of original wood type are held by the Hamilton in Wisconsin 17 18 and the University of Texas at Austin collected by Rob Roy Kelly writer of a well known book on American poster types 19 Adobe Inc has published a large collection of digitisations inspired by nineteenth century wood type 20 21 22 23 Following Napoleon s Egyptian campaign and dissemination of images and descriptions via publications like Description de l Egypte 1809 an intense cultural fascination with all things Egyptian followed Suites of contemporary parlor furniture were produced resembling furniture found in tombs Multicolored woodblock printed wallpaper could make a dining room in Edinburgh or Chicago feel like Luxor While there was no relationship between Egyptian writing systems and slab serif types either shrewd marketing or honest confusion led to slab serifs often being called Egyptians 24 Historian James Mosley has shown that the first typefaces and letters called Egyptian were apparently all sans serifs 8 The term Egyptian was adopted by French and German foundries where it became Egyptienne A lighter style of slab serif with a single width of strokes was called engravers face since it resembled the monoline structure of metal engravings The term slab serif itself is relatively recent possibly twentieth century 25 Because of the clear bold nature of the large serifs designs with some slab serif characteristics are also often used for small print for example in printing with typewriters and on newsprint paper For example Linotype s Legibility Group in which most newspapers were printed during much of the twentieth century were based on the Ionic or Clarendon style adapted for continuous body text 26 27 28 More loosely Joanna TheSerif FF Meta Serif and Guardian Egyptian are other examples of newspaper and small print orientated typefaces that have regular monoline serifs sometimes more visible in bold weights but a general humanist text face structure not particularly influenced by nineteenth century stylings as Clarendons are The term humanist slab serif has been applied to serif text faces in this style 29 30 Describing the process of designing slab serifs modern font designers Jonathan Hoefler and Tobias Frere Jones note that the structure of the large slab serifs imposes compromises on structure with purely geometric designs harder to create in ultra bold sizes where it becomes impossible to create a strictly monoline lower case alphabet and Clarendon style designs harder to create in a lighter style 3 Sub classifications editThere are several main subgroups of slab serif typefaces Antique model edit The earliest slab serifs were often called antiques or Egyptians They were often quite monoline in construction and had similarities to nineteenth century serif fonts such as ball terminals 3 nbsp Miller and Richard s Oldstyle Antique Just as Clarendon typefaces took the Didone or modern face model as a basis for a slab serif it is based on their Old Style design inspired by type designs of the eighteenth century made slightly bolder and lower in contrast Originally intended for use as a bolder type for emphasis it was often used for general purpose body text for example if legibility was considered important 31 32 Bookman is a derivative of this style 33 Clarendon model edit Clarendon typefaces unlike other slab serifs actually have some bracketing and some contrast in size in the actual serif the serifs often have curves so they change width and become wider as they approach the main stroke of the letter 3 Examples include Clarendon and Egyptienne citation needed Italienne model edit nbsp French Clarendon type top compared to a conventional Clarendon design In the Italienne model also known as French Clarendon type the serifs are even heavier than the stems forging a dramatic attention drawing effect This is known as reverse contrast type It is traditionally associated with use in circus and other posters and is commonly seen in Western movies or to create a nineteenth century atmosphere It was most popular from the 1860s until the early twentieth century particularly in the United States although the basic concept originates from London printing of the 1820s and it was used outside the United States It has often been revived since for example by Robert Harling as Playbill and more recently by Adrian Frutiger as Westside Typewriter typefaces edit Typewriter slab serif typefaces are named for their use in strike on typewriting These faces originated in monospaced format with fixed width meaning that every character takes up exactly the same amount of horizontal space This feature is necessitated by the nature of the typewriter apparatus Examples include Courier on the geometric model and Prestige Elite on the Clarendon model A considerable variety of other names have been used particularly in the 19th century at the time the separation between typeface name and genre had yet to become established so it is not clear if a name describes a specific typeface or is meant to refer to a subgenre 34 35 For example slab serifs on the French Clarendon model were also called Celtic Belgian Aldine and Teutonic by American printers as well as Tuscan a name which refers to slab serifs with diamond shaped points on the sides of the letterform 19 Geometric model edit nbsp Beton Bold in a metal type sample Contrast is minimal and letterforms take the circle as a basic shape Geometric designs have no bracketing and evenly weighted stems and serifs Early examples include Memphis Rockwell Karnak Beton Rosmini City and Tower several of which were influenced by geometric sans serifs of the 1920s and 30s especially Futura 3 Recent well known geometric sans serifs include ITC Lubalin Neutraface Slab and Archer Some monoline slab serifs such as Serifa Helserif and Roboto Slab have been designed under the influence of neo grotesque sans serif fonts of the 1950s and 60s onwards and these may be called neo grotesque slab serifs 36 37 38 39 See also editList of slab serif typefacesNotes edit This can make tracing the descent of sans and slab serif styles hard since a trend can arrive in print directly and without apparent precedent from a signpainting tradition which has left less of a record Whether Figgins foundry produced the very first slab serif is a question that is unlikely to be ever confirmed but Nicolete Gray felt that it seems probable 9 as his is the first foundry with a surviving specimen showing them This first Figgins specimen to show them was an 1815 specimen containing 1817 watermarked paper held by Oxford University Press other 1815 dated Figgins specimens do not show it another 1815 specimen that was held by Stephenson Blake with 1820 on the spine shows more 9 No specimens are known from Figgins main rivals who produced many slab serifs the Caslon and Thorne later Thorowgood foundries over the relevant period Figgins had four sizes in c 1817 nine c 1820 and nineteen in a specimen dated 1821 9 but containing 1823 pages 10 no Caslon specimens are known between 1816 and 1821 but the first surviving specimen from Caslon to show slab serifs dates from 1821 and shows eleven sizes 9 11 Thorne had four sizes in 1820 12 Even fewer specimens survive from other foundries none are known from Bower and Bacon between 1813 and 1826 by which time they had eighteen sizes 13 Gray concluded that any of Figgins Thorowgood and Caslon could have been first to issue a lower case already seen on the 1810 woodblock as they all introduced ones around 1820 14 References edit a b Gray Nicolete Slab serif type design in England 1815 1845 Journal of the Printing Historical Society 15 1 35 Twyman Michael The Bold Idea The Use of Bold looking Types in the Nineteenth Century Journal of the Printing Historical Society 22 107 143 a b c d e Sentinel historical background IDSGN Archived from the original on 2019 04 28 Retrieved 15 July 2015 Challand Skylar Know your type Clarendon IDSGN Archived from the original on 2022 10 27 Retrieved 13 August 2015 Mosley James 1963 English Vernacular Motif 11 3 56 Kennard Jennifer 3 January 2014 The Story of Our Friend the Fat Face Fonts in Use Retrieved 11 August 2015 Mosley James The Nymph and the Grot an Update Typefoundry blog Retrieved 12 December 2015 a b James Mosley The Nymph and the Grot the revival of the sanserif letter London Friends of the St Bride Printing Library 1999 a b c d Gray 1980 p 12 Mosley 1984 p 33 Mosley 1984 p 29 Gray 1980 Gray 1980 p 22 Gray 1980 pp 12 15 Hansard Thomas Curson 1825 Typographia an Historical Sketch of the Origin and Progress of the Art of Printing p 618 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Tam Keith The revival of slab serif typefaces in the 20th century PDF KeithTam Archived from the original PDF on 2022 02 18 Retrieved 3 March 2016 Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum Analog digital virtual Home with Hamilton Wood Type by Molly Doane a b Rob Roy Kelly Wood Type Collection University of Texas Retrieved 23 October 2015 Bringing Wood Type into the 21st Century by Angela Riechers Hamilton Wood Type Collection joint venture between P22 Type Foundry and the Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum Wood Type Revival created from hand set letterpress prints of the original 19th century wood type by Matt Griffin amp Matt Braun Etna typeface adapted by Mark Simonson from HWT Aetna Carter E Day B Meggs P Typographic Design Form and Communication Third Edition page 35 John Wiley amp Sons 2002 Biggs John 1954 The Use of Type The Practice of Typography Blandford Press Hutt Allen 1973 The Changing Newspaper typographic trends in Britain and America 1622 1972 1 publ ed London Fraser pp 100 2 etc ISBN 9780900406225 The majority of the world s newspapers are typeset in one or another of the traditional Linotype Legibility Group and most of the rest in their derivatives Alexander S Lawson January 1990 Anatomy of a Typeface David R Godine Publisher pp 277 294 ISBN 978 0 87923 333 4 The Legibility of Type Brooklyn Mergenthaler Linotype Company 1935 Retrieved 29 April 2016 Middendorp Jan Dutch Type pp 192 etc Bryan Marvin 1996 The Digital Typography Sourcebook New York Wiley pp 144 145 ISBN 9780471148111 Theodore Low De Vinne 1902 The Practice of Typography A Treatise on Title pages with Numerous Illustrations in Facsimile and Some Observations on the Early and Recent Printing of Books Century Company pp 233 241 ISBN 9780838309353 Alexander S Lawson January 1990 Anatomy of a Typeface David R Godine Publisher pp 262 280 ISBN 978 0 87923 333 4 Ovink G W 1971 Nineteenth century reactions against the didone type model I Quaerendo 1 2 18 31 doi 10 1163 157006971x00301 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Frere Jones Tobias Scrambled Eggs amp Serifs Frere Jones Type Retrieved 23 October 2015 Type classifications are useful but the common ones are not by Indra Kupferschmid Helserif MyFonts URW Retrieved 19 March 2016 Loxley Simon 14 May 2012 Font Wars A Story On Rivalry Between Type Foundries Smashing Magazine Retrieved 20 March 2016 Coles Stephen Twitter post Twitter Retrieved 20 March 2016 From a Helserif ad Look what happened to Helvetica It grew wings Budrick Callie Vintage Fonts 35 Adverts From the Past Print Retrieved 20 March 2016 Cited literature edit Gray Nicolete 1980 Slab serif type design in England 1815 1845 Journal of the Printing Historical Society 15 1 35 Mosley James 1984 British type specimens before 1831 a hand list Oxford Bibliographical Society University of Reading External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Egyptienne George Bruce amp Co of New York 1828 amp other specimen books Many examples of early slab serif type alongside other period display types From the company of Vincent Figgins Specimen book 1845 Many notable ornamented designs Earlier books from the early 1800s survive and have been reprinted Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slab serif amp oldid 1191204982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.