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- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: General Info (4/6)
- Supersedes: <font-faq-4_817479312@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 14 Aug 1996 10:34:26 -0400
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
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- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
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- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
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- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- X-Web-Homepage: http://www.ora.com/homepages/comp.fonts/
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.fonts:48303 comp.answers:20517 news.answers:79238
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part4
- Version: 2.1.5
-
- Subject: 1.26. A Brief Introduction to Typography
-
- Space, time, and bandwidth are too limiting to provide a complete
- introduction to typography in this space. I'd be very willing to make
- one available for anonymous ftp, if you want to write one, but I'm not
- going to write it-I have neither the time nor the expertise. However,
- the following description of Times, Helvetica, and Courier will suffice
- for a start. For more information, several books on typography are
- listed in the bibliography.
-
- Comments by Laurence Penney:
- ============================
-
- Laurence Penney offers the following description of Times, Helvetica,
- and Courier:
-
- Times is a typeface designed in the 1930s for the Times newspaper in
- London and is now used widely in books, magazines and DTP. Its design
- is based on the typographical principles evolved since Roman times
- (upper case) and the 16th century (lower case). It is called a
- TRANSITIONAL typeface, after the typefaces of the 17th century which it
- resembles. Like all typefaces designed for typesetting large
- quantities of text, it is proportionally spaced: the i takes about a
- third the width of an M. Personally I don't like Times too much and
- prefer the more elegant Garamond and Baskerville, but these will
- probably cost you money... Note: The Transitionals came after the Old
- Styles (like Garamond) and before the Moderns (like Bodoni).
-
- Helvetica is an example of a SANS-SERIF typeface. These first appeared
- in the late 19th century in Germany and flourished in the 1920s and
- 30s, when they were regarded as the future of typography. It's more a
- geometric design than the humanist design of Gill Sans, but less
- geometric than Avant Garde and Futura. To my mind it lacks elegance,
- and Adrian Frutiger's Univers shows how this kind of typeface should be
- done. (Just compare the B, R, Q, a, g of Univers and Helvetica to see
- what I mean - and don't you just love Univers's superbly interpreted
- ampersand ?!) Helvetica is one of the few fonts that is improved by its
- BOLD version.
-
- Another interesting approach to sans-serif is Optima, by Hermann Zapf,
- which keeps the stroke-weight variations which sans-serifs usually
- reject. Use sans-serif fonts for the same applications as Times, above,
- but where you're less concerned with elegance, and more with a
- functional appearance - they're generally reckoned to be slightly less
- legible than good serifed fonts. They're also very suitable for display
- work.
-
- Courier is a typeface derived from typewriter styles. It should ONLY be
- used when you want to simulate this effect (e.g. when writing letters
- Courier usually appears "friendlier" than Times). Like all typewriter
- fonts, it is MONOSPACED (characters all have the same width) and is
- thus suitable for typesetting computer programs. However there are
- nicer looking monospace fonts than Courier (which has oversize serifs),
- that still remain distinct from the text fonts like Times and
- Helvetica. A good one is OCR-B, designed by Frutiger. Note that
- monospaced fonts are less economical on space than proportional fonts.
-
- [ed: Following the original posting of this message, Laurence Penny and
- Jason Kim discussed the issue privately. The following summary of
- their discussion may serve to clarify some of the more subtle points.
- My thanks to Laurence and Jason for allowing me to include this in the
- FAQ.]
-
- -----------------------------
-
- LP-1> The Transitionals came after the Old Styles (like Garamond) and
- before the Moderns (like Bodoni).
-
- JK> Not necessarily true! Ideologically, yes, but not chronologically.
- I believe, for example, that Bodoni predates New Century Schoolbook or
- some such typeface.
-
- LP-2> What I meant by "X came after Y" was "the first examples of X
- appeared after the first examples of Y" - it's called precis. Some
- people still make steam trains, but you can still say "Steam engines
- came before diesels." This is chronological, not ideological in my book.
-
- -----------------------------
-
- LP-1> Another interesting approach to sans-serif is Optima, by Hermann
- Zapf, which keeps the stroke-weight variations which sans-serifs
- usually reject. Use sans-serif fonts for the same applications as
- Times, above, but where you're less concerned with elegance, and more
- with a functional appearance - they're generally reckoned to be
- slightly less legible than good seriffed fonts. They're also very
- suitable for display work.
-
- JK> Slightly? I have several textbooks typeset by utter fools and they
- are a pain in the ass (and eyes) to read! Please don't encourage anyone
- to use Optima (or any sans serif fonts for that matter) "for the same
- applications as Times," which, need I remind you, was designed for
- *newspaper* work!!
-
- LP-2> OK, maybe I was a little over-generous to Univers, Helvetica,
- etc., but I think variation is extremely important in typography. Have
- you ever read the British magazine "CAR" ? That uses Helvetica light (I
- think) in a very legible and attractive way, IMO. I agree, though,
- Optima is crappy for text, but it's a very valuable experiment and
- looks beautiful when printed in high quality for titling, etc. And yes,
- *books* in Helvetica are generally awful.
-
- -----------------------------
-
- JK> Serifs have been scientifically shown to be a *lot* easier on the
- reader, as they guide the eyes along the lines.
-
- LP-2> In all tests I've seen the serifs have always won the day, but
- only with certain seriffed fonts, and fonts like Univers aren't far
- behind. The "tracking" advantage for serif fonts is reduced when you're
- talking about narrow newspaper/magazine columns.
-
- -----------------------------
-
- JK> You wrote a pretty short and partial history of type. Why ignore
- the roots of type (blackletter) as well as the climax (moderns-give an
- explanation) and subsequent 'post-modern' revivals?
-
- LP-2> I was just talking about the place the 3 most common DTP types
- hold in the history of typography, and a few associated pitfalls. It
- wasn't meant as a "history of typography" at all. Please feel free to
- provide such a history yourself.
-
- JK> I think any short list of specific faces is incomplete without
- mention of Palatino, the most popular Old Style revival in existence.
-
- LP-2> Do you? To my mind Palatino is grossly over used. You must agree
- it looks bad for dense text. It isn't a proper "oldstyle revival" at
- all, more of a "calligraphic interpretation" of it. Zapf designed it as
- a display face, and wasn't too concerned about lining up the serifs
- (check out the "t"). And it just *has* to be printed on 1200dpi devices
- (at least) to look good in small sizes. OK then, maybe a short list is
- incomplete without a caution NOT to use Palatino...
-
- JK> Also, if this is meant to be a "quick history/user guide for those
- fairly new to using fonts on desktop publishing systems," then I would
- recommend more directions about the proper uses of certain faces (e.g.,
- Goudy for shaped text, Peignot for display *only*) and styles (e.g.,
- italics for editorial comments, all-caps for basically nothing).
-
- LP-2> Okay, okay. I was only sharing a few ideas, not trying to write a
- book. Surely you agree that the 3 typefaces I chose are by far the most
- commonly used and abused these days? I don't think a discussion of
- Goudy or Peignot fits in very well here, unless we're hoping to make a
- very wide-ranging FAQL. Regarding styles: first, italics are used
- principally for *emphasis* (rather than bold in running text); second,
- all good books have a few small caps here and there, don't they? - all
- mine do...
-
- JK> Sorry if I come across as critical. I think the idea of making a
- FAQL is a good one, as is your effort. We just have to make sure it
- doesn't give any newbies the wrong impressions and further perpetuate
- the typographical morass we're facing today.
-
- LP-2> Sorry if I come across as defensive, but I stand by what I said
- and object to the suggestion that I am "perpetuating the typographical
- morass". (I don't know if you really intended this - apologies if you
- didn't.)
-
- Comments by Don Hosek:
- ======================
-
- Don Hosek offers the following additional notes:
-
- The "Times" in most printers is actually a newer version of the font
- than Monotype's "Times New Roman" which it is originally based on.
- Walter Tracy's _Letters of Credit_ gives an excellent history of the
- face which was based on Plantin and in the original cutting has metrics
- matching the original face almost exactly. Another interesting note
- about the face is that it is almost a completely different design in
- the bold: this is due to the fact that old-styles are difficult to
- design as a bold. Incidentally, the classification of Times as a
- transitional is not firm. It likely is placed there by some type
- taxonomists (most notably Alexander Lawson) because of the bold and a
- few minor features. Others, myself included, think of it as a old
- style. The typeface listed in the Adobe catalog as Times Europa was a
- new face commissioned in 1974 to replace the old Times (whose 50th
- birthday was this past October 3rd).
-
- Hermann Zapf is not particularly pleased with any of the
- phototypesetting versions of Optima. As a lead face, Optima is very
- beautiful. His typeface "World", used in the World Book Encyclopedia is
- one recutting for photocomp which improves the font somewhat. He is on
- record as saying that if he had been asked, he would have designed a
- new font for the technology.
-
- Subject: 1.27. A Brief History of Type
-
- Thomas W. Phinney contributes the following discussion of the history
- of type(1):
-
- Foreword
- ========
-
- It is difficult to cover all the developments and movements of
- typography in a short space. My separation of evolving technologies
- from the development of typefaces is an artificial one--designs and the
- technology used to create them are not truly separable--but perhaps it
- is conceptually useful.
-
- Where names of typefaces are used, I attempt to use the original name:
- there are often clones with very similar names.
-
- I shall update, clarify and correct this essay periodically, and will be
- happy to credit contributors. I can be e-mailed on CompuServe at
- 75671,2441 (Internet: 75671.2441@compuserve.com).
-
- Type Technology--The Four Revolutions
- =====================================
-
- Gutenberg (ca. 1450-1480) & The Impact of Printing
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Before the printing press, books were produced by scribes (at first,
- primarily based in monasteries, although by the 12th century there were
- many lay copiers serving the university market). The process of writing
- out an entire book by hand was as labor-intensive as it sounds (try it
- some time): so much so that a dozen volumes constituted a library, and a
- hundred books was an awe- inspiring collection.
-
- This remained true until the invention of movable type, the perfection
- of which is attributed to Johannes Gutenberg (although the Chinese had
- it several centuries earlier, and a Dutch fellow named Coster may have
- had some crude form a decade earlier). Gutenberg, although a man of
- vision, did not personally profit from his invention. He worked for over
- a decade with borrowed capital, and his business was repossessed by his
- investors before the first mass-produced book was successfully
- printed--the Gutenberg Bible of 1454, printed in Mainz by Fust and
- Schoeffer.
-
- Gutenberg's basic process remained unchanged for centuries. A punch made
- of steel, with a mirror image of the letter is struck into a piece of
- softer metal. Molten metal is poured into this, and you get type. The
- type is put into a matrix to form the page of text, inked, then pressed
- into paper.
-
- Within several decades typesetting technology spread across Europe.
- The speed with which it did so is impressive: within the first fifty
- years, there were over a thousand printers who set up shops in over two
- hundred European cities. Typical print runs for early books were in the
- neighborhood of two hundred to a thousand books.
-
- Some of these first printers were artisans, while others were just
- people who saw an opportunity for a quick lira/franc/pound. The modern
- view of a classical era in which craftsmanship predominated appears
- unjustified to scholars: there has always been fine craft, crass
- commercialism, and work that combines both.
-
- To those who have grown up with television, radio, magazines, books,
- movies, faxes and networked computer communications it is difficult to
- describe just how much of a revolution printing was. It was the first
- mass medium, and allowed for the free spread of ideas in a completely
- unprecedented fashion. The Protestant Reformation might not have
- occurred, or might have been crushed, without the ability to quickly
- create thousands of copies of Luther's Theses for distribution.
-
- Many groups sought to control this new technology. Scribes fought
- against the introduction of printing, because it could cost them their
- livelihoods, and religious (and sometimes secular) authorities sought to
- control what was printed. Sometimes this was successful: for centuries
- in some European countries, books could only be printed by government
- authorized printers, and nothing could be printed without the approval
- of the Church. Printers would be held responsible rather than authors
- for the spread of unwanted ideas, and some were even executed. But this
- was a largely futile struggle, and most such restraints eventually
- crumbled in the western world.
-
- Industrial Revolution: Steam, Line-casting & Automated Punch-cutting (start 1870-95; end 1950-65)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Amazingly, the printing press and the science of typecutting had only
- minor refinements from the late 1500s to the late 1800s. Towards the
- end of this period, the industrial revolution brought major innovations
- in printing technology. Rotary steam presses (steam 1814, rotary 1868)
- replaced hand- operated ones, doing the same job in 16 per cent of the
- time; photo-engraving took over from handmade printing plates.
-
- Typesetting itself was transformed by the introduction of line-casting
- machines, first Ottmar Mergenthaler's Linotype (1889), and then the
- Monotype machine. Essentially, line-casting allowed type be chosen,
- used, then recirculate back into the machine automatically. This not
- only introduced a huge labor savings in typesetting, (again, on the
- order of the 85% reduction in printing time), but also rendered
- obsolete the huge masses of metal type created by the previously
- existing type foundries.
-
- While typesetting and printing speeds increased phenomenally, so did the
- speed of punchcutting. In 1885, Linn Boyd Benton (then of Benton, Waldo
- & Company, Milwaukee) invented a pantographic device that automated the
- previously painstaking process of creating punches. His machine could
- scale a drawing to the required size, as well as compressing or
- expanding the characters, and varying the weight slightly to compensate
- for the larger or smaller size-- this last being a crude form of the
- "optical scaling" done by skilled typographers making versions of the
- same font for different sizes. In optical scaling, the thickest strokes
- retain the same relative thickness at any size, but the thinnest
- strokes are not simply scaled up or down with the rest of the type, but
- made thicker at small sizes and thinner at large display sizes, so as
- to provide the best compromise between art and readability.
-
- The economic impact of all these advances on the type industry cannot be
- overstated. For example, in the United States, the majority of type
- foundries escaped a bankruptcy bloodbath in 1892 by merging into a
- single company, called American Type Founders (ATF). Ultimately
- twenty-three companies merged into ATF, making it far and away the
- dominant American type foundry.
-
- Also around this time, the "point" measurement system finally reached
- ascendancy. In the earlier days of printing, different sizes of type had
- simply been called by different names. Thus, "Brevier" was simply the
- British name for 8-point type of any style. Unfortunately, these names
- were not standardized internationally; 8-point type was called "Petit
- Texte" by the French and "Testino" by the Italians. Such a naming
- system also allowed wonderful confusion, such as "English" referring
- both to blackletter type, and a 14-point size; "English English" was
- thus a 14-point blackletter!
-
- Pierre Simon Fournier had first proposed a comprehensive point system in
- 1737, with later refinements, but what was ultimately adopted was the
- later version developed by Francois Ambroise Didot. This put
- approximately 72 points to the inch (and now exactly 72 points to the
- inch on most computer- based typesetting systems).
-
- Photocomposition (Intertype et. al., start 1950-60, end 1975-85)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The first photocomposition devices (the French "Photon" and Intertype's
- Fotosetter) made their debuts as early as 1944, but didn't really catch
- on until the early 1950s. Typeface masters for photocomposition are on
- film; the characters are projected onto photo-sensitive paper. Lenses
- are used to adjust the size of the image, scaling the type to the
- desired size. In some senses this technology was an "improvement,"
- allowing new freedoms, such as overlapping characters. However, it
- also pretty much eliminated optical scaling (see 2.2, above), because
- in the rush to convert fonts to the new format, usually only one design
- was used, which was directly scaled to the desired size.
-
- Digital (start 1973-83)
- -----------------------
-
- The earliest computer-based typesetters were a hybrid between the above-
- mentioned photocomposition machines and later pure digital output. They
- each had their own command language for communicating with output
- devices. Although these machines had advantages, they also had
- problems. None of these early command languages handled graphics well,
- and they all had their own formats for fonts. However, some of these
- devices are still in service as of 1995, for use in production
- environments which require more speed and less flexibility (phone
- books, newspapers, flight schedules, etc.).
-
- In the late 1980s PostScript gradually emerged as the de facto standard
- for digital typesetting. This was due to a variety of reasons,
- including its inclusion in the Apple Laserwriter printer and its
- powerful graphics handling. When combined with the Macintosh (the
- first widely used computer with a what-you-see-is-what-you-get display)
- and PageMaker (the first desktop publishing program), the seeds were
- all sown for the current dominance of computer-based typesetting.
-
- Most high-end typesetting still involves printing to film, and then
- making printing plates from the film. However, the increasing use of
- high- resolution printers (600-1200 dots per inch) makes the use of
- actual printing presses unnecessary for some jobs. And the next step
- for press printing is the elimination of film altogether, as is done by
- a few special systems today, in which the computer can directly create
- printing plates.
-
- Today, although PostScript predominates, there are a variety of
- competing page description languages (PostScript, HP PCL, etc.), font
- formats (Postscript Type One and Multiple Master, Truetype and Truetype
- GX) computer hardware platforms (Mac, Windows, etc.) and desktop
- publishing and graphics programs. Digital typesetting is commonplace,
- and photocomposition is at least dying, if not all but dead. Digital
- typefaces on computer, whether Postscript or some other format, are
- generally outline typefaces, which may be scaled to any desired size
- (although optical scaling is still an issue).
-
- There has been considerable economic fallout from all this in
- typography. Although some digital type design tools are beyond the
- price range of the "average" user, many are in the same price range as
- the mid- to high-end graphics and desktop publishing programs. This,
- combined with the introduction of CD-ROM typeface collections, has
- moved digital type away from being an expensive, specialized tool,
- towards becoming a commodity. As a result of both this and the brief
- photocomposition interregnum, the previously established companies have
- undergone major shakeups, and even some major vendors, such as American
- Type Founders, have failed to successfully make the digital transition,
- and gone bankrupt instead (although at this time ATF appears to be
- undergoing a resurrection). More recently, even major digital type
- foundries have-dare one say foundered?-on the shoals of ubiquitous
- cheap typefaces (even a licensing deal with Corel Corp seems to have
- been insufficient to save URW).
-
- Although there is a new accessibility of type design tools for hobbyists
- and professional graphic artists, the decreasing value of individual
- typefaces has resulted in a decrease in the number of working type
- designers per se (both independents and company-employed).
-
- Type Forms Through the Centuries
- ================================
-
- One must keep in mind that although typefaces may have come into use at
- a particular point in time, they often continued in general use far
- beyond that time. Even after the rise of old style typefaces in the
- late 1500s, the blackletter type was commonly used for setting text for
- several centuries (well into the 1900s in Germany). With later
- interpretations of earlier forms being relatively common, the *style*
- of a given typeface may belong to a quite different period from that of
- the typeface itself! Further, many typefaces have very complex
- histories: a type could have been originally designed in metal at one
- time, reworked by someone else later, made into a phototypesetting face
- by another person, and then later created in digital form by yet
- another designer--who might have been working off of any of the above
- as the basis of their work.
-
- The classification system used here (old style, transitional, modern,
- sans serif, slab serif, etc.) has the virtues of being both simple and
- widely used. However, the precision and artistic accuracy of this
- system is perhaps dubious: see Robert Bringhurst's Elements of
- Typographic Style or his article in the first issue of Serif magazine
- for a more thorough system.
-
- In discussing the differences between type, one must refer to a number
- of technical terms. For illustrations of these terms, see also the
- downloadable graphics file TYPHS_72.GIF or TYPHS300.GIF. The numbers
- refer to the dots per inch of the graphic when scaled to a full page:
- 72 dpi is a low resolution suitable for screen viewing, while 300 dpi
- is better-suited to laser printing. With any luck, both should be
- available for FTP or download from the same site as this file. If so,
- you would be well advised to refer to these pictures for illustrations
- of both these terms and the differences between different categories of
- typefaces. If you are a newcomer to typography, some sort of visual
- reference is essential to understand the differences between fonts
- explained here. Your options include: the aforementioned graphics
- files; type samples from a book, manual or font vendor's catalog; or
- simply viewing or printing out the fonts you have available on your
- computer system, if you have a reasonable variety.
-
- Definitions
- -----------
-
- Contrast: The degree of difference between the thick and thin strokes in
- a font (if any).
-
- Stress (axis): The angle at which contrast occurs, usually ranging from
- vertical to a somewhat back-slanted diagonal. This can best be noted by
- looking at, for example, the letter "O" and noting if the bottom left is
- thicker than the top left, and the top right is thicker than the bottom
- right. If this difference exists, the letter has diagonal stress. If
- the two halves of the "O" are a mirror image of each other, with the
- sides thicker than the top/bottom, then the letter has vertical stress.
- If the top and bottom of the "O" are the same thickness as the sides,
- there is neither contrast nor stress.
-
- Serifs: Those "finishing strokes" or "fillips" going off the ending
- lines of a letter. For example, when the number "1" or the letter "i"
- are drawn with a bar across the bottom, the two halves of the bar are
- serifs. If the serif is joined to the letter by a slight flaring out,
- it is said to be "bracketed."
-
- Early Letterforms
- -----------------
-
- Although writing itself can be traced back to several millennia B.C., to
- Egyptian hieroglyphics and Sumerian cuneiform inscriptions, modern
- letter forms have their most immediate heritage in Roman inscriptions
- from around 50- 120 AD, such as the one on the base of Trajan's Column
- in the Roman Forum (114 AD, digital version by Twombly for Adobe, 1989).
-
- Although early Latin writing was heavily influenced by these chiseled-
- in-stone letterforms, over the centuries it evolved into a variety of
- other shapes, including uncials and the related Carolingian script. It
- is through this period of the sixth to tenth centuries that we see the
- development of the lower case (minuscule) letter as a different shape
- from the upper case (capital).
-
- Type forms similar to what we now think of as "normal" letter shapes
- evolved from the Carolingian (or Caroline) minuscule. The Carolingian
- letters are so-called because of their adoption by the Emperor
- Charlemagne (late 10th century) as a standard for education. Digital
- revivals of these exist, such as Carol Twombly's Charlemagne (1989).
-
- By the fifteenth century, italics also existed, in the form of a cursive
- script which had developed in Rome and Florence. However, italics at
- this time were a completely separate entity from the upright
- letterforms, as they remained in the early days of printing.
-
- Blackletter
- -----------
-
- The first printed types exemplify what most people think of as medieval
- or "old English" lettering, with ornate capitals, roughly diamond-shaped
- serifs, and thick lines. As a group, these typefaces are called
- "blackletter." They evolved from the Carolingian by a gradual movement
- towards narrowing and thickening of lines.
-
- The general sort of blackletter used by Gutenberg in his first Bible is
- called textura (a shareware digital version of Gutenberg's bible face is
- available, called "Good City Modern"). The other sorts of blackletter
- are fraktur, bastarda and rotunda. Probably the most common blackletter
- revival typefaces in use today are Cloister Black (M.F. Benton, 1904,
- from J.W. Phinney) and Fette Fraktur.
-
- It is worth noting that although these typefaces seem very hard to read
- to us today, this is due as much to familiarity as to any objective
- lesser clarity. Fraktur was in use in Germany well into the 1900s,
- though it was gradually being superseded by Roman typefaces. The Nazis
- at first fostered a return to Fraktur, then outlawed it as a "Jewish
- typeface" in 1940.
-
- Studies from mid-century found that people can read blackletter with a
- speed loss of no more than 15%. However, there is subjectively more
- effort involved. Blackletter is today most appropriate for display or
- headline purposes, when one wants to invoke the feeling of a particular
- era.
-
- Old Style Typefaces: Centaur, Bembo, Jenson, Garamond, Caslon
- -------------------------------------------------------------
-
- E.P. Goldschmidt, as explained by Stanley Morison, claimed that "the
- supersession of black-letter was not due to any 'technical advance,' it
- was the visible expression of a changed attitude of mind." The
- Renaissance was typified by an obsession with things "classical," in
- the Greco-Roman sense, which had major implications for typography. The
- neo-classical letterforms were somewhat more condensed than the
- Carolingian shapes, but much rounder and more expanded than the
- blackletter.
-
- Old style type is generally considered "warm" or friendly, thanks to
- its origins in Renaissance humanism. The main characteristics of old
- style typefaces are low contrast with diagonal stress, and cove or
- "bracketed" serifs (serifs with a rounded join to the stem of the
- letter). The earliest (Venetian or Renaissance) old style typefaces
- (originally 15th-16th Century) have very minimal contrast, and a sloped
- cross-bar on the lower-case "e." One such is Bruce Rogers' Centaur
- (1916), based on Jenson. Similarly, Monotype's Bembo (1929) is based on
- the work of Francesco Griffo, circa 1499.
-
- Italics at this point were still independent designs, and were generally
- used completely separately; a whole book could be set in italics.
- Probably the most famous italic of the period is Arrighi's (1524),
- which may be seen today as the italic form of Centaur. Likewise, the
- italic form of Bembo is based on the italic of Tagliente (also 1524).
-
- Later or baroque old style type (17th Century) generally has more
- contrast, with a somewhat variable axis, and more slope of italic. The
- most common examples are the types of Garamond and Caslon, many variant
- revivals of which exist in digital form.
-
- Transitional Type: Baskerville, Fournier
- ----------------------------------------
-
- "Transitional" type is so-called because of its intermediate position
- between old style and modern. The distinguishing features of
- transitional typefaces include vertical stress and slightly higher
- contrast than old style typefaces, combined with horizontal serifs. The
- most influential examples are Philippe Grandjean's "Romain du Roi" for
- the French Crown around 1702, Pierre Simon Fournier's work circa 1750,
- and John Baskerville's work from 1757 onwards. Although today we
- remember Baskerville primarily for his typeface designs, in his own
- time people were much more impressed by his printing, which used an
- innovative glossy paper and wide margins.
-
- Later transitional types begin to move towards "modern" designs.
- Contrast is accentuated, and serifs are more flattened. Current
- examples of such are based on originals from approximately 1788-1810,
- and are dominated by British isles designers, such as Richard Austin
- (Bell, 1788), William Martin (Bulmer) and Miller & Richard (Scotch
- Roman).
-
- For currently available examples of transitional type, there are many
- types which bear Baskerville's name, descending from one or another of
- his designs. Less common today is P.S. Fournier's work, although
- several versions of it are available in digital or metal form. Although
- Scotch Roman has been a very common face in metal type usage since
- Monotype's 1920 revival, it is not a common digital face. Bell, on the
- other hand, is included in a Microsoft Font Pack, and Bulmer has
- received more attention since its revival by Monotype in late 1994.
-
- Modern Type: Didot, Bodoni, Walbaum
- -----------------------------------
-
- "Modern" typefaces are distinguishable by their sudden-onset vertical
- stress and strong contrast. Modern serifs and horizontals are very thin,
- almost hairlines. Although they are very striking, these typefaces are
- sometimes criticized as cold or harsh, and may not be quite as readable
- for very extensive text work, such as books.
-
- A number of designers, perhaps semi-independently, created the first
- modern typefaces in the late 1700s and early 1800s. One of the first,
- and ultimately the most influential, was Giambattista Bodoni, of Parma,
- Italy. Ironically, historians of type often relate the development of
- the "modern" letterforms to a then-current obsession with things
- Roman--in this case the strong contrast and sharp serifs of classical
- Roman inscriptions. Although similar interests
-
- Today, the most common "modern" typefaces are the dozens of
- reinterpretations of Bodoni's work (which itself evolved over time).
- One of the most successful reinterpretations is the 1994 ITC Bodoni by
- Stone et. al., featuring three different optical sizes. Although little
- is seen of Didot, a reinterpretation by J.E. Walbaum (ca. 1800) sees
- occasional use.
-
- Sans Serif & Slab Serif
- -----------------------
-
- These type forms made their first appearances around 1815-1817. Both are
- marked by simpler letterforms with (usually) relatively uniform stroke
- weight, lacking significant contrast, often geometric in underlying
- design.
-
- The earliest forms of sans and slab typefaces tended to be heavy, often
- monolithic, display faces, but there quickly evolved a wide range of
- styles. Although the earliest designs are not much used today, their
- descendants are common enough.
-
- Sans Serif (a.k.a. Gothic or Grotesque)
- .......................................
-
- Sans serif letters have no serifs, as the name suggests. The low
- contrast and absence of serifs makes most sans typefaces harder to
- follow for general reading. They are fine for a sentence, passable for
- a paragraph, but are difficult to use well in, say, the text of a book.
- The terminology of sans serif types can be confusing: essentially,
- gothic or grotesque are both generic names for sans serif (although
- Letter Gothic, confusingly, is more of a slab serif type).
-
- In sans serif faces, the italics are often, although not always, simply
- a sloped (mechanically obliqued) version of the roman letters, making
- them totally subordinate to the roman.
-
- By far the most common sans is Helvetica (1951, Miedinger), despite
- being abhorred by many typographers. Helvetica does have the advantage
- of coming in a huge range of weights and widths, which makes it
- versatile, and its ubiquitous character makes it easy to match. Other
- general-purpose sans serifs include Univers (Frutiger, 1952+), Arial
- (Monotype), Franklin Gothic (M.F. Benton, 1903) and Frutiger (Frutiger,
- 1975).
-
- Sprouting from the Art Deco movement in the 1920s and 30s (see Art
- Deco), radical geometrical shapes began to be used as the basis for
- sans serif designs.
-
- There are a few other common sans faces which do not fall cleanly into
- the above categories. Eric Gill's 1928 Gill Sans has an almost
- architectural quality, and its greater contrast and humanistic design
- makes it better-suited than most sans serif typefaces to setting bodies
- of text. The same can perhaps be said of a number of late 20th Century
- humanistic sans faces (see below)
-
- Slab Serif (Egyptian)
- .....................
-
- These faces have block-like rectangular serifs, sticking out
- horizontally or vertically, often the same thickness as the body
- strokes. There is some debate about the origin of slab serif
- typefaces: did they originate by somebody adding serifs to a sans face,
- or were they conceived independently?
-
- But even if they had a separate genesis as a family, it is certainly the
- case that many of the most common and popular slab serif forms have been
- created by adding slab serifs to sans faces by the same designer (e.g.
- Adrian Frutiger's 1977 Glypha from his Univers, Herb Lubalin's 1974
- Lubalin Graph from his Avant Garde). Other slab serif faces include
- Berthold City (Trump, 1930), Memphis (Weiss, 1930), Serifa (Frutiger,
- 1968) and Silica (Stone, 1990).
-
- The Clarendons or Ionics are an offspring of the slab serif typefaces in
- which the serifs are bracketed. These are often used in newspaper work,
- because their sturdy serifs hold up well under adverse printing
- conditions. The most famous member of this sub-family is Century
- Schoolbook (M.F. Benton, 1924-35).
-
- Decorative & Display Type
- -------------------------
-
- Fat Faces
- .........
-
- The "Fat Face" types were an offshoot of the moderns, intended for
- display purposes (that is, to be attention-getting for use in large
- sizes, particularly advertising). The first such types appeared from
- 1810-1820. They further exaggerated the contrast of modern typefaces,
- with slab-like vertical lines and extra emphasis of any vertical
- serifs, which often acquired a wedge shape. Bodoni Ultra, Normande and
- Elephant are all examples of fat face types which are closely based on
- early to mid-19th Century originals, and are available in digital form.
-
- Wood Type
- .........
-
- Wood type answered some of the needs of display advertising during the
- industrial revolution. It derives its name from the fact that instead of
- being made of metal, the type is carved from wood, cut perpendicular to
- the grain. It is distinguished by strong contrasts, an overall dark
- color, and a lack of fine lines. It may be unusually compressed or
- extended. Many wood types have an "Old West" feel, because they are most
- strongly associated with America in the 1870-1900 period. Some of the
- wood types most widely available today are those in an Adobe pantheon
- released in 1990, which includes Cottonwood, Ironwood and Juniper
- (Buker, Lind & Redick).
-
- Script, Brush, Italic & Freehand
- ................................
-
- Script typefaces are based on handwriting; but often this is handwriting
- with either a flexible steel nib pen, or a broad-edged pen, and is thus
- unlike modern handwriting.
-
- Some common scripts based on steel nib styles include Shelley (Carter,
- 1972), Coronet (Middleton, 1937-38), and Snell Roundhand (Carter, 1965,
- based on Snell ca. 1694).
-
- Script faces based more on the broad-edged tradition include the
- contemporary Park Avenue (Smith, 1933).
-
- There are also monoline scripts, which lack significant contrast in the
- letter strokes. One such is Freestyle Script.
-
- Brush typefaces look as if they were drawn with that instrument, which
- most of them were, at least in the original design from which the
- metal/film/digital face was created. Some of them resemble sign-painting
- lettering, such as Balloon (Kaufmann, 1939), Brush Script (Smith,
- 1942), and Dom Casual (Dom, 1952).
-
- Brushwork can also be the basis for script, as with Present Script
- (Sallaway, 1974) and Mistral (Excoffon, 1953)
-
- Although modern typography typically relegates the italic to a second-
- class citizenship subordinate to the roman, there are still some italic
- typefaces designed as such in their own right. The best known is
- doubtless Zapf Chancery (Zapf, 1979). Others include Medici Script
- (Zapf, 1974) and Poetica (Slimbach, 1992).
-
- Art Nouveau
- ...........
-
- The late Victorian era, from 1880 to World War I, was characterized by
- this ornamental style of art, with its organic, asymmetrical, intricate
- and flowing lines. This "Art Nouveau" (French, meaning "new art")
- produced similarly distinctive typography, which saw a revival during
- the 1960s.
-
- There are a fair number of digital revivals of art nouveau faces,
- although few are widely used. Some of the more common digital art
- nouveau typefaces are Arnold Boecklin (Weisert, 1904), Artistik,
- Desdemona, Galadriel and Victorian.
-
- Art Deco
- ........
-
- If Art Nouveau was about finding beauty in organic intricacy, Art Deco
- was perhaps about finding beauty in geometric simplicity. First
- appearing in the 1920s and 30s, Art Deco made a comeback in the 1970s
- and 80s as well.
-
- Almost by definition, Art Deco meant sans serif type. The most common
- such face is Avant Garde (1974, Lubalin), which is striking but hard to
- read at length. A more graceful geometric sans is Futura (Renner,
- 1927-39). There are also more quirky faces in this category, such as
- Kabel (Koch, 1927-30). A recent popular Art Deco display face is ITC
- Anna (1991?).
-
- Synthesis
- ---------
-
- Many of the most interesting typefaces of the twentieth century does not
- fit any of the above categories, or at least not easily. The reason is
- that they reflect not merely a single style, but cumulative experience,
- and the merger of different styles. This is perhaps true even of that
- most mundane of typefaces, Times New Roman (Lardent/Morison, 1931),
- which has old style, transitional and modern elements.
-
- Synthesis and Serif Type
- ........................
-
- Although there are many practitioners of this synthesis, the most famous
- is Hermann Zapf. His Palatino (1948) and Zapf Renaissance (1987) are
- modern typefaces with the spirit of Renaissance letterforms. Melior
- (1952), Zapf Book (1976), and Zapf International (1977) all reflect an
- obsession with the super-ellipse, a rectangulated circle, as the basis
- for letter shapes.
-
- There have also been many modern revivals of old style which, while
- close to old style in spirit, are not direct revivals of a specific
- original, and show modern influences in the proportions or
- lettershapes. These include the Granjon-inspired Galliard (Carter, 1978)
- and Minion (Slimbach, 1989).
-
- Synthesis and Sans Serif Type
- .............................
-
- After 1950, many designers began to explore a wide range of starting
- points as the basis for sans serif designs. Aldo Novarese's Eurostile
- (1964-5) takes sans serif forms and distorts them towards square and
- rectangular shapes. Zapf's 1958 Optima is a masterful blend of sans
- serif shapes with Roman and calligraphic influences. Shannon (Holmes &
- Prescott Fishman, 1981) is a sans serif based on celtic manuscript
- proportions. Several designers have reinterpreted ancient Greek
- lettering for a modern sans serif alphabet: most popularly Carol
- Twombly's Lithos (1989), and most recently Matthew Carter's Skia GX
- (1994). Koch's Neuland (1930?) has a rough-hewn strength. Hans Eduard
- Meier's Syntax (1969) is one of the earliest sans typefaces which
- clearly echo renaissance roman letterforms. More recent sans faces
- often draw on a humanistic background, from Spiekerman's Meta to
- Vereschagin's Clear Prairie Dawn.
-
- "Grunge" Typography
- ...................
-
- The most recent typographic wave is one which has sometimes been called
- grunge typography, after the musical movement originating in Seattle.
- Although it is far too early to judge the ultimate impact of grunge, I
- see the form as the merger of the industrial functionalist movement
- called Bauhaus (contemporary with Art Deco, named after the
- architectural school) with the wild, nihilistic absurdism of Dadaism.
- Grunge, like many typographic/artistic movements before it, is a
- rebellion; but this rebellion denies not only the relevance of anything
- previous, but sometimes even the relevance of legibility itself, in the
- belief that the medium *is* the message.
-
- As grunge type designer Carlos Segura of T-26 says, "Typography is
- beyond letters. Some fonts are so decorative, they almost become
- 'visuals' and when put in text form, they tell a story beyond the
- words-a canvas is created by the personality of the collection of words
- on the page."
-
- Grunge typefaces and typography are seen in magazines such as RayGun.
- Some examples of grunge typography are the work of Barry Deck (Template
- Gothic, Cyberotica, Truth), Nguyen's Droplet, Goren's Morire and Lin's
- Tema Cantante.
-
- Sources
- =======
-
- Published Sources:
- ------------------
-
- Although much of this information is based on prior knowledge, I also
- actively consulted the following publications:
-
- Bauermeister, Benjamin. A Manual of Comparative Typography. Van
- Nostrand Reinhold Co., New York, NY: 1988. ISBN 0-442-21187-2.
-
- Bringhurst, Robert. The Elements of Typographic Style. Hartley &
- Marks, Vancouver, BC: 1992. ISBN 0-88179-033-8. The modern classic in
- the field.
-
- Byers, Steve. The Electronic Type Catalog. Bantam Books, New York:
- 1991. ISBN 0-553-35446-9.
-
- Eisenstein, Elizabeth L. The Printing Press as an Agent of Change.
- Cambridge University Press, New York: 1979. ISBN 0-521-29955-1.
-
- Harper, Laurel. "Thirstype: Quenching a Type Craving" in How: the
- Bottomline Design Magazine, vol. 10, #1, Jan-Feb 1995. Although not
- usually a thrilling magazine, had several pieces on typography in this
- issue (see Segura, below).
-
- Letraset Canada Limited. Letraset Product Manual. Letraset, Markham,
- Ontario, Canada: 1985.
-
- Meggs, Philip B. "American Type Founders Specimen Book & Catalog 1923"
- in Print Magazine, vol. 48 #1, Jan-Feb 1994. Contains some interesting
- info on the effects of industrialization on the type industry.
-
- Sutton, James & Bartram, Alan. An Atlas of Typeforms. Percy, Lund,
- Humphries & Co., Hertfordshire, UK: 1968. ISBN 1-85326-911-5.
-
- Morison, Stanley & Day, Kenneth. The Typographic Book: 1450-1935.
- University of Chicago Press, Chicago: 1963.
-
- Segura, Carlos & Nelson, Lycette. "Typography in Context: Never Take a
- Font at Face Value" in How: the Bottomline Design Magazine, vol. 10,
- #1, Jan-Feb 1995.
-
- Tracy, Walter. Letters of Credit: a View of Type Design. David R.
- Godine Co.: 1986.
-
- Updike, Daniel Berkeley. Printing Types: Their History, Forms & Use.
- Harvard Press: 1962.
-
- Zapf, Hermann. "The Expression of Our Time in Typography" in Heritage
- of the Graphic Arts. R.R. Bowker Company, New York: 1972. ISBN
- 0-8352-0213-5.
-
- Personal Contributions:
- -----------------------
-
- In addition to written sources, which are identified above, I would like
- to thank the following for their helpful comments and corrections (any
- errors are, of course, my responsibility): Robert Hemenway, Mary Jo
- Kostya, and Dan Margulis
-
- ---------- Footnotes ----------
-
- (1) Version 1.02 14 Apr 1995
-
- This is Info file compfont.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.55 from the
- input file FAQ.texinfo.
-
- Subject: 1.28. The Role of National Orthography in Font Design
-
- This article was constructed from postings by Anders Thulin, Charles A.
- Bigelow, and "fieseler" from Jan 1994.
-
- An open question: what role does national orthography play in the
- asthetics of a given font?
-
- Given that uppercase letters occur more frequently in German than in
- English, are German font designs better for typesetting German (because
- the designer is more concious of the relationship between capitals and
- lowercase)? Similarly, are French designs better for typesetting French
- because the designer is more atuned to the appearance of accents?
-
- Speaking of accents, there are apparently fonts in which the dots over
- the "i" and "j" are not at the same height as the dieresis over
- accented vowels. (Does anyone have an example of this?) Surely this is
- an error that a designer accustomed to working with accented letters is
- unlikely to make?
-
- Subject: 1.29. Interesting Fonts
-
- There's no end of interesting fonts, so this is really just a catch-all
- category.
-
- Highway Gothic
- ==============
-
- Kibo (James Parry) provides the following discussion of Highway Gothic:
-
- Highway Gothic is The Font Company's name for their interpretation of
- the font used on most official road signs in the United States. (The
- Font Company added a lowercase to most styles.)
-
- I don't think it has an official name. There is a government
- publication which shows the fonts (revised in the seventies to make the
- heights metric); I got a copy of it once, from a library specializing in
- transportation, and digitized Series E(M) (normal-width bold caps with
- lowercase, the only USDOT font with lowercase) for a special project. I
- don't think the specs have changed since the seventies.
-
- Besides E(M) with lowercase, there is a slightly lighter alphabet
- without lowercase, and three condensed styles. I recall there was also
- a set of really distorted letters for use in painting vehicle lanes,
- plus a few symbols for bike paths etc. The alphabets included letters
- and digits only--any periods or hyphens you see on signs are apparently
- unofficial.
-
- Where can I get extravagant initial caps?
- =========================================
-
- Don Hosek writes:
-
- I doubt that most decorated initials can be made to work in the type 1
- format because of their complexity. Color only makes things worse.
-
- One of the best choices for medieval and renaissance decorated alphabets
- hasn't been mentioned yet: BBL Typographic (they have an ad on p. 39 of
- Serif 1). A demo disk is available for \$10, B&W alphabets are \$50 each
- and full color alphabets are \$60.
-
- BBL Typographic
- 137 Narrow Neck Road
- Katoomba, NSW 2780
- AUSTRALIA
- 011-61-47-826111
- 011-61-47-826144 FAX
-
- also distributed by:
-
- Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies
- LN G99
- State University of New York
- Birmingham, NY 13902-6000
-
- I know the work only from the Serif ad, but it's gorgeous there (even
- nicer in color, although they decided not to spend the extra money for
- color in their ad... only a select few in Katoomba & Claremont have seen
- the ad in full color). Of course Serif-related disclaimers apply.
-
- Jon Pastor contributes:
-
- Check out the Aridi initials, color EPS initials, available on the
- Monotype CD (and, presumably, on the Adobe CD as well, although they
- don't advertise this; Monotype did, in a recent mailing).
-
- To which Don Hosek amends:
-
- The Aridi initials are part of the Type Designers of the World
- collection and are available on the MT CD but not the Adobe CD. Adobe
- has their own line of decorated initials available on their CD. Also
- see the catalogs from FontHaus, FontShop and Precision Type.
-
- If you want something really unique, why not hire a calligrapher. It
- may be cheaper than you think.
-
- Robert Green adds:
-
- Although they might not be on the Adobe CD, the Fall 1994 Font &
- Function advertises an Adobe "Initial Caps" collection of decorative
- initial caps designed by Marwan Aridi.
-
-