An Investigation into the growing popularity of script typefaces and
Transcription
An Investigation into the growing popularity of script typefaces and
Rochester Institute of Technology RIT Scholar Works Theses Thesis/Dissertation Collections 5-1-1997 An Investigation into the growing popularity of script typefaces and the technical means by which they are created today Yacotzin Alva Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.rit.edu/theses Recommended Citation Alva, Yacotzin, "An Investigation into the growing popularity of script typefaces and the technical means by which they are created today" (1997). Thesis. Rochester Institute of Technology. Accessed from This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Thesis/Dissertation Collections at RIT Scholar Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of RIT Scholar Works. For more information, please contact ritscholarworks@rit.edu. Rochester Institute of Technology SCHOOL OF PRINTING MANAGEMENT AND SCIENCES An Investigation into and the the Growing Popularity of Script Typefaces Technical Means A by which They are thesis project submitted requirements School of for the degree in partial of College of Imaging Arts Rochester Institute fulfillment Master Printing Management and of Created Today. and of Science in Sciences Sciences Yacotzin Alva Thesis Advisor: David Pankow Technical Advisor: Archibald Provan the of the of the Technology Rochester, New York of the School of Printing Management and Sciences Rochester Institute of Technology Rochester, New York Certificate ofApproval Master's Thesis This is to certify that the Master's Thesis of Yacotzin Alva With a major in Graphic Arts Publishing has been approved by the Thesis Committee as satisfactory for the thesis requirement for the Master of Science degree at the convocation of May, I997 Thesis Committee: David Pankow Thesis Advisor Marie Freckleton Graduate Pro am Coordinator Director or,Designate An Investigation into Growing Popularity of Script Typefaces and the Technical Means by which They are Created Today. the I, Yacotzin Alva, hereby grant permission my thesis in whole or in part. to the Wallace Memorial Any reproduction will not be for Library of R.LT to reproduce commercial use or profit. Acknowledgments I would like to express my appreciation to the people who completion of this research. Pankow, Curator has of the Especially, I would like have been to extend Cary Graphic Arts Collection, for my a great support sincerest gratitude during to the David the assistance and guidance that he given me. I would also questionnaires like for to thank Professor Archie Provan, their support and for providing this project. in and the type me with the designers necessary who returned material to complete Table List of of Contents Tables vi Abstract Chapter vii i Introduction History i of script faces 2 Precursors * 3 Development Technical of script n considerations Endnotes for Chapter Chapter faces 14 1 16 2 Review of literature in the field of study 17 Chapter 3 Methodology 20 Chapter 4 The influence Digital tools of for technology 21 design 22 type Ikarus 22 Metafont 23 Fontographer 23 FontLab 23 FontStudio 24 Endnotes for Chapter 4 25 IV Chapter 5 Script typeface classification Script Joined typeface script Unjoined 26 definitions 28 faces script 30 faces 41 Endnotes for Chapter 5 83 Chapter 6 Questionnaire results and conclusions Conclusions 84 91 Endnotes for Chapter 6 93 Chapter 7 Recommendations Appendix 94 of typefaces 95 designers 101 11 Index Appendix for further study 1 Index Appendix and suggestions of in Index Bibliography of type foundries 109 in List Table i: Latin alphabet letterform of Tables styles and dates and Figures of popular use 3 Figure i: Roman Figure 2: Capitalis quadrata 5 Figure 3: Capitalis rustica 5 Figure 4: Uncials 5 Figure 5: Half-uncial 6 Figure 6: Insular 7 Figure Carolingian 7: capitals of the Trajan Column script 5 8 minuscule Figure 8: Bastarda 10 Figure 9: Gothic book hand 10 Figure 10: Humanistic 10 Figure 11: Edward Johnston Figure 12: Copperplate cursive handwriting 12 14 VI Abstract The examination of designed It is types. early if it to type imitate forms, designs of handwriting. specimen catalogues of dering variety written mostly masters. of structures broad-edged pen, scripts derived from forms and even the paint can. sify as style, the many historic are faces days devices. and breaking are legibility, ments by the contemporary new ground in and technical fit. Such when types were cast from brush. In script faces powerful computer type design scripts, especially since all by the a typeface as a script seventeenth- and eighteenth- last century because addition of a in and determine how letterforms. have been digital technology point pen then attempted to clas order to fascinating experimentation would Therefore, bewil to such traditional sources, for type Many recent very limits much more metal or even when types were made Also included of script as script are traditional models, while some explore the software. software and types of great originality. porary designers design type known designs numerous examples of such written as possible are faces writing implement. historical introduction Today, the number and variety of script faces in number of different writing instruments, includ the structure of these radically different from large typically label those of the by a felt-tipped marker, pencil, ruling pen, ball this thesis project, the author prepared a designers script spray developed created the steel pen, and the have been inspired we century list differ from such classified as a pen or other restricted to styles Modern be forms. Today, the nineteenth more recent scripts For Strictly speaking, having been written with though these are the of derived from were look century writing ing form some discloses invariably a matter of opinion which typefaces should retains the Type book current type specimen any of difficult in photocomposition increasing at a rapid rate due to improve this thesis project also reviews some of the now available which allow designers to create are the results of a questionnaire sent to selected contem faces. Vll Chapter 1 Introduction For 6,000 years, humans have tive symbol set alphabet (in for the communicated through written symbols. a particular language Western World ), were the ples afford us a window to the past. The basic design lished during practical the from the were created and As use today. from ture however, was broad-edged led soon as these the established early seventeenth lines made giving by rise of pointed-pen of were by century, and to a style of italic fixed in metal, handwriting; fifteenth The century. derived evolution and a today sweeping influence types as well as the script little there was the printer and the type a new for chance were estab elegant and part of their how on faces texts that we a radical depar founder. Personal communication, profession, that of the with the establishment of copperplate writing master, of personality, today is intellect, in by professionals styles, ranging from For a least a variety disposable a traditional or unconventional which requires a script with at variety and amateurs alike. scrawled and mood often shine through. kinds broad-edged the next 300 years, a written with a wide swiftly as a means to emulate the pointed pen soon replaced the as copperplate. practiced a mixture of one writes writing is communication, burin. The handwriting known with results Whether engraving illustrations, formal handwriting had evolved handwriting styles were everyday activity one's long These letterforms had the engraver's pointed handwriting of calligraphy. style, the end of the alphabet we use the most elegant styles. of an by latin of the exam by the early sixteenth century and correspondents and record-keepers were reproducing letterforms is forms was still carried on through in forms to the creation of roman and of The pen. the earliest pictograms to our current recording human endeavor; surviving the products of a were "norms" By the pen, time of this and evolution of an effec by a quest for simplicity and efficiency. For centuries, means of elements or structural already established trained primary Italian Renaissance letterforms character driven was handwritten documents languages, from or The manner, Ultimately, bare of instruments. It note to a a formal the fine or informal primary minimum of piece purpose legibility. 1 History of Script faces Script types, because they derive from into a tidy classification made in imitation definition is classes of types that predominate based are Carolingian minuscule. Europe America, study and will not Italic Aldus Manutius scholars. roman 3.) types; cursive or corsiva used in define be to declare typefaces can To begin capitals used on be that traced with, there hemisphere: roman, derived from were be them good printer uses organize means different back to A and script. monuments and on the preferred over structures. handwrit general stylistic italic, decorative, in Roman typefaces blackletter forms in For that reason, this separate study black- of well worthwhile. by Francesco for printing italic, Italy as it Griffo da Bologna in pocket books at that time. Italic for the for the use of 1501 of the classics was called almost freer in design, sparingly to add types are much to they are four are a common origin. blackletter it since everywhere, was an Venetian printer humanist imitation of the types soon were used as companions to their shapes are calm alongside the clear, serious and upright Decorative The and were used to might difficult are is hard roman types came to faces based first developed This early Cancellaresca be would required. inscriptional both script since all the western In general, include any types were in on the though letter scripts, however, 2.) definition thus the simplest ten origins, a more precise i.) Roman types the word handwriting. However, of handwriting styles, "script" Even scheme. different people; things to a profusion of sometimes so much so as to interest to roman.2 be barely recognizable. a title page or to grab the attention of a reader. 4.) Script types long after the derived from designs It is important sidered, it would graphic styles of highly Because what of less handwritten letterforms of roman and bear in be difficult to only types of the distinguish between italic Italy during the fifteenth century, humanistic hand variation of the it was adopted by the beauty, cursive version formed the basis early and script Axrighi, Celebrino, Amphiareo, Tagliente, flourished its and styles that persisted and evolved italic forms had been fixed. mind that were first developed in example times to those Vatican and which as the official sixteenth faces. The century has inspired be con Chancery hand for and characterized Palatino to was a by the calli cursive, some notable hand for its documents. A of a typeface cut around the years 1500-1501 for some italics. some the publisher Aldus Manutius faces.3 script For faces changes of Venice. This new type of Aldus served as the model the purposes of this thesis share a common in writing then, it is important origin, the latter instruments, are for many subsequent to emphasize that though predominantly designs that italic italic and developed along with techniques and tastes. Precursors All and script typefaces grew out of it may be mary of the useful to basic pre-Gutenberg inscriptional lettering and developments in stylistic the latin alphabet since the ca. 1-500 Rustic Capitals ca. 1-500 Uncials ca. 300-900 Half-Uncials ca. 400-900 Caroline Minuscule 783-1000 Gothic ca. 1150-1500 Bastarda ca. 1200-1500 Humanistic ca. 1400- ca. 1400- Copperplate ca. 1600- Foundational 1916 (Italic) TABLE I. LATIN ALPHABET LETTERFORM STYLES AND DATES OF POPULAR USE book-length handwriting was manuscripts. increasingly relegated noted in Table 1 is first century Square Capitals to about 1450, bookhands briefly review them here. Table i below provides a brief chronological sum Cursive Humanistic Up manuscript With the used to reproduce all development of the 4 forms of text, from informal printing press, to personal communication and record-keeping. more fully explained in the sections which a.d. follow. notes to however, handwriting was Each of the stylistic forms Square Capitals ters and can of be or Capitalis Quadrata their seen at finest in Trajan in Rome. Square Capitals nique of by turning chiselling, are famous inscription the attempted to the pen in imitate a certain way emperors wished to immortalize imperial inscriptions were planned and executed with These formal letters, also called Though Square Capitals script in known as ous. latter looked almost these edge the like letters form. condensed the reserved U. The a Square the are the goals of clarity, have been freer, and letters that the Rustic Capitals move legibility, for scribes empire. the began brush such as the elliptical."6 more used may have been influenced by further away from known Christian manuscripts, pen and ink as of balance."5 manuscripts. to use a compact First beginning A, X, and seen of the letters is obvi V; the thin strokes that cut with a Roman the one The Rome, All facets and economical. survived until the curved, in thick and finest a vertical compression of the Q_became were reserved compressed, seen straight were now G, O, of the glory the tech between craft let Column of the letters, derived from highly developed for monuments, Capitals, suggest that the pen or Only two was a declare also inscriptional base at the c.e.) the capital first century, Rustic Capitals had been impression papyrus or parchment. its generally compared to strokes that characterize giving and Rustic Capitals (1-500 c.e.) These "When Diagonal deeds majuscules, may were a papyrus manuscript of sixth century. their (114 carved that an exaggerated contrast "Stone inscriptional carving and thin strokes was created. early Roman related to plainly used left-oblique specifically on capital style through by Prudentius and the other by Sedulius, were written in Rustic Capitals. Both in styles were used the Roman but were later revived in Carolingian period as times where book-hands and went out of style by the sixth century they were basically used for tides, headings, and begin nings of chapters. Another book-hand, of the third from the century fifth and Uncial, the the The in the oldest copies of the Bible, had by the evolved end beginning of the fourth century and was the literary hand for fine books to the eight centuries to the vellum substrate. seen in certain parts of pen makes rounded Europe. It forms easily; owes its form these rounded to the quill pen and letters supplanted the capitals.7 angular ones of the earlier St. Jerome, (ca. term derived from high, letters in 340-420) the latin manuscripts, an term early for church patriarch, was the 'inch', when he although it first one to call them condemned the use of was not until the eighteenth excessively century Uncials, large, a inch- that the name of this specific script style was attached to them. as headings in the spread of monastic Uncials were still around in "modern" manuscripts written in more Christianity allowed scripts. diffusion the of both uncial and c.e., where they served fifth and sixth centuries, half-uncial scripts as the major During the hands.3 "formal" All 800 three foregoing scripts belong to the family ot hands. VELAMENACAN VOTAFVTVRAE DESCITQVETVEl^ Figure 2. Capitalis quadrata. Fragment of Virgil's Sangallensis. jrd or 4th century. iVONUSiN-MONUS' ViaVliOiKOi&LCK VI-LlNVS-KAEGtLLi-D Figure j. Capitalis 6th century. later and are rustica. The dots have perhaps been intended to indicate added the word divisions. Figure The 1. Roman shapes faithfully from column capitals if the classical the best of the Trajan Column. Roman capital copied characters of the Trajan inscription. ikjsu;v pjequi si <\Iiut INKC&US Figure Italy, j. end hum\Nis Uncials. of the 6th century. Literate Romans did not handwriting was by in an used usually there was a tendency when but less precise This cursive -without led is from have or informal cursive roman deviations from The letters the same character and first letters in form a more direct capitals, but and economical the capitals, changes that were by scratching produced by as those written three centuries of formal the Differences in writing the scripts immediately. affecting the cursive scripts of the developed from was to make the to considerable and materials also caused script to evolve. tablet will not formal book hand. A writing writing quickly manner and developed gradually the most people who wrote their correspondence on wax tablets or papyrus cursive script. everyday in write Christianity instruments the surface of a wax quill on vellum or papyrus.lt that most of our small letters or minuscules trace their origin. A modified form, mixture of uncial and cursive script resulted minuscule script called France, and the modern because Half-Uncial, quickly gained popularity, Roman alphabet. of the ascenders and h, k, and appeared in the and more words could half-uncial could be instead have ascenders, fifth century be script more considered an marking descenders imaginary horizontal lines, which appeared The half-uncials four 1 which and g, southern a significant were j, p, q, in written per page. and y, the sixth. Cursive for which did. could c. the be writing letters: b, d, f written more cursives and vernacular au Hait'unz'.ai Book of Kills, of of letters fall between where used as a tjoc iTTpTjatt) aXLTRjplius Figure small Italy and development documentary hands They eRajLTinapicnsquasi From in first have descenders. These hybrid forms Half-uncials important link between Roman the of the development the The in of the extensions of certain script and than the uncials themselves particularly step forward important two, because development the Europe, on some of its characters. of and thrived in in -th century. rapidly, influenced book-hand hands. the and "Each from monastic scriptorium cursive and Hands. Between developed its documentary elegance, by of their own the hand, thickening Book of Kells, an Insular the script. Irish They Such half-uncials, with scripts are scribes developed known what is be identified easily can It is considered to outstanding example of the have reached its Insular script, high influences as by National known their serifs, the wedge-shaped tops of the ascenders, of the curve in some of the vertical strokes. ment in the provinces.''9 the sixth and the ninth centuries, the the most important national and hands own variations on uncials and and point of in Trinity- College as clarity by the develop Library, Dublin.10 The Visigothic used in a vertical script or form with this script was scripts evolved Tote tana was and the script developed became laterally very ornamental, but lacked from the later Roman in the the seventh century compressed and legibility of the in decorative. A Insular script. All pen was page written the national bookhand.11 cursive and the tendency to transform mdueRcucmrouajbusTiru^-ps ^^^biceboGjas cjuocurngu^ii^ii^j^ us ruclomum iUjcinan6j&-"QbwG( lecrjojcheRiutT-aos < Tx^TTicajiurnttb--^*.' ^cexjurjcs iUj pi*cmdi033bcriJU~iiE-Tf )o<rrnceuaccrn a^r^za^toterrio. vna.jTH]tea:ifX]()a3JU^cuTJ8f25ajK/bCeD Figure 6. Insular The Book Spain. The of script Kells, late 8th or ear/v qth Century. it into a The gentle, rounded Scrip tura Francisca, hands was that prevailed Carolingian minuscule, developed during change in calligraphic taste a Quarter-Uncial but appeared its clear letters berore 7S5, won Carolingian script was supervised its use many writing during Charlemagne) it a proud place of the remained the developed bv formalizing this all religious books, had become script. for then under by English in in northern scholar as the literary . from Littera Galhca of Alcuin menxi scripts. Carolingian Its half- earliest version written by a Frankish The forms and who standardized its for minuscule, the production and he is usually minuscule spread and was soon adopted legal documents. The the vertical proportions of the elongated ascenders and descenders in ft ae-fr duortarrr 2cpudfbrnctipfofirmiff j. influence of not certain whether was responsible *rcxdr>m Con fuLarrr From St. IVandriile. as the result of a until about the year 1000. Carolingian works and direction, fixed national a mixture of cursives and Charlemagne Alcuin, minuscule. Beginning of gth century or Italy. The Carolingian hand history of the in Europe script The Carolingian extremely arose the projects is known secular They developed hands.12 Figure as the ninth century, under the Gospel Book dominant the xAlcuin's exaggerated known for Renaissance humanists. It is in Charlemagne's publishing Carolingian script, which tor manuscripts that utilized what credited with convents after dedication m the Godescalc. It the in Frankish important as a guide scribe called of the seventh and eighth centuries. Carolingian Minuscule (named uncial, also as a reaction against the ornamental characters of the that appeared at about the same time later became extremely the book hand a medieval for principle of letter forms, the national "By the eleventh more common in century, capitalization the thirteenth century, minuscule as an authoritative script its Italy guaranteed The variety phase of fine faces invention in both though types as a of success art were in the ninth a tendency a striking developed in the period of the the letters preceding it lifeless hard though to read. rotunda, appeared after ments, of and and so on. 1200, for in being lighter the transitional period played for rediscovery scripts and various centuries. Antiqua. They The The Bastarda known Northern and casting of of last printing penmanship more compressed and aspect."14 and more angular of its a the from Carolingian, the hand freely. It too offers precise, angular, compressed, clear and or for lettre batarde, a cursive freer ancestor; by at its worst, lack of curves and its best in the thirteenth their term in the form batarde, black letter, of the blackletter script, faster, giving it sometimes used the to docu impression describe this history in which this script was popular. During characterized spiritual humanists works of the classic written lettre "gothic" striving for so-called at government and commercial scholars wrote this script the forgotten etc., They were given names such as Italian Renaissance as the it writing scripts were characterized blackletter. The and of man libraries, writing the gothic) come for university studies, for literature. The also assumed clear called by development blacker assumed a practicality have been versions revived the monasteries, Carolingian centuries constituted the became the script scripts were predominant. the remains of antiquity, instead "As blackletter became name of the period of art of the world spread of lines. than the standard style, is derived from the the Blackletter manuscripts vernacular era. letters since the lacking blackletter century in France. Its many fraktur, it became began; France, Germany, fifteenth somewhat angular when forms, emphasized verticals and straight three centuries, The the standardization effected post-Gutenberg letters contrast to the earlier letter, words being due, amongst other possible reasons, to lateral compression or to to make rounded ornamental For through the eleventh to Middle Ages (sometimes scripts of the and the sixteenth. calligraphic production of manuscripts and the black, was century important internationally."13 which features changed shapes of and fixed in and was the nib of the quill pen was cut wider, the The Blackletter initial of the Carolingian was much older than saw by freedom, and the scientific in blackletter authors which they found in minuscule of the it really for dis spiritual nothing Latin the enthusiasm tenth and eleventh was and therefore called of the classics accorded with the spirit of the "new birth," and it Littera humanists adopted the earlier handwriting hands for gradually came their own usage. to slope Carolingian hands developed into humanistic replaced Humanistic earlier scripts. blackletter forms letters the rapid direction of the Humanistic cursive. By as the standard script writing, the writing. The humanistic script looks similar to the the middle of the for the 14J2. [Tffloimosjglrtqtms 9. a ftjhtffl Blackletter book hand Wurzburg, middle of the rjth century. rvwm quod partim vro vwlwntat? cu oartim W hrotrrto ctpud icctzres namo < Figure to. et obferuatumt co own Humanistic /6th century. IO u4im notcww cursive. ligatures thick and thin Figure 8. Bastarda. Figure written fifteenth century, minuscule, more closely spaced. smug hottuheg Renaissance classics. Carolingian eliminating differences between Western Upper Bavaria, upright These rapidly scribes attempted to eliminate most of the abbreviations and ters are more even and regular, the the in Through used but its strokes and in the charac making Development With and introduction the few basis for the types from The italic, simpler humanistic on the latter derives from diagonal kind, but a cursive. are also cursive characteristics. not all as Chancery for the writings of A more flourished version of the script came to in Italy, the scribe It of official script in a book-script briefs in 1522 that italic types, Operina, in Arrighi, 1522 for types for are of scripts. sury the alphabets, manual briefs to deal wood-blocks, and appeared Netherlands, Germany, The end of the sixteenth beginning more of a period of exaggerated, Carolingian letter appeared and helped by its the use of in in 1524. a linking joins, Its humanistic adoption in cursive the in European Papal countries. Littera de brevi or Littera Cancellaresca with hand by chancery La Operina. printer, scribe, and italic handwriting. The instruction in writing and designer pages oi illustrate La the by G. A. Tagliente, contains even In 1540, G. B. Palatino other countries pen- slope and compression of acceptance as well as a offer its and owes published a valuable trea including France, Switzerland, Spain, England.15 century decay commemo former derives from that the correspondence. termed as a writer of apostolic engraved Similar books throughout most documents, and convenience of the handwriting, manual on first writing from roman period, the purposes of contrast and joined. The contributed to be is beautiful Cancellaresca hand. Another very popular writing-book, more scripts and blackletter the papal chanceries and recommended as a general produced the printed letters and have must Ludovico degli Arrighi in his was printers Fluency is The clarity both use by italic lowercase roman and italic letters its a certain scripts to seek the easier course and to avoid uneconomical those of a to Though blackletter Europe for replaced the eventually type used particularly hand led the sixteenth century. longer necessary, no book. tendency of the hand while the by hand was a more cursive variant of the revived lifts. A difference between formal hand in book a writing to use on correspondence, official supplementary sloping to the Script Typefaces and other parts of hands, a skill and the occasional is derived from form made Germany Handwriting became certificates, emphasis, in typefaces Italy, based Europe. rative the 1450s, lengthy manuscript books were were of printing in of of in and the the possibly because beginning Italian hand. As of the seventeenth time went by, century cursives the calligraphers and engravers wanted to 11 marked the became keep a more and distinction between whose words as well as in hands in show fine and the By ing in a style lovers masters were half of the known called for carefully as ronde in of cursives italics and pen eighteenth century however, did handwriting. engraving mainstay styles. of social Many These were accompanied calligraphy from at the teenth-century italic Foundational written a cursive Round Hand and flourishes. are often exceedingly based on used in his specimen developed, among books. Not to release numerous script calligraphic in advertising for formal by on flow copperplate became the legal documents. Toward the designs, and until the nine faces based hands influenced others, while others scripts that showed more contrast were released and in some cases and outline versions. ebb by made possible the end of the nineteenth century, by Edward half-uncial, Carolingian which he script which was in Winchester. This encouraged to master. of them while still others were used its lowest was many became widely century, by bold Handwriting was stages, going soon with controlled pressures of the pen. foundries begin type of them were printing, end of the nineteenth modern who included France The hairlines the end of the eighteenth century, elaborate script typefaces were Bodoni, wrote and those of the nineteenth cen century which the copperplate style predominated. shading Giambattista teenth In Pans, Louis Barbedor typography. were connected copy-books of the second tury by letters England. English writing The book typefaces and their Johnston, minuscules italic." named based script His influence "heavy on a late Carolingian became one of the and compressed script 1916 from standards a and that calligraphy was Owe nw npyjctuhp^Mlorqiud-f My Jtaffoffaith io wall<ub07is/ MyjPtip fjY; ym/nwrtzd diet. Figure //. EdwardJohnston. Handwriting, 1924. 12 blackletter 1919 he later in developed in tenth-century profound.16 on modern a renaissance handwriting whose Between but to a six created the manuscript calligraphers were Type founders had late not until the scripts were distinctively in nineteenth This informal typeface display treatments of pen and century did they began display contemporary 1932. attempts to popularize degenerate descendants essence the Rudolf Koch in acteristic intermittent made script is scripts of brush to see extensive use. of the mid-nineteenth techniques. Many A large field of number of new script display Holla, designed by direct forerunner and opened a new of these century faces. The first to obtain acceptance was called sometimes cited as the today, display scripts for many years, but of most of the char design based designs were different on influenced by Koch's innovation. Throughout the twentieth century, of scripts which were radical instruments, many Recendy, on of them suggesting desire that our type designers letters originally handwritten numerous typefaces to reflect the age-old page, based famous fashioned inspired satisfy personality technical with foundries pens, pencils, released a brushes, flood and more the needs of modern advertising. by handwritten to capture the increasingly to and type scripts have appeared, and spirit of the society has not lost its and they handwritten appetite continue word on the for fine as well as informal handwritten letterforms. The variety ous centuries, only guess of structures characteristic of modern scripts separates them which is due primarily at what the next to the use of new and century will bring. For now, centuries resists attempts to arrange script types chapter in into those of previ different writing instruments. One the can diversity of writing styles over the past a consistent classification scheme. this thesis proposed one answer to the problem. 13 from A later Technical Considerations Most of the pre-twentieth century hands, written with a broad-edged historic scripts may be divided into two pen, and the copperplate-hands,wntten categories: with a the book- flexible pointed may be straight pen. The may be edged pen or oblique. The a quill, a reed, or a metal strokes naturally produced edge, a thin stroke (hair-line) gradations governed by the by The edge the edged pen are a thick stroke as wide as the pen's at right angles to the thick direction as used today. pen, stroke, and intermediate thicknesses and of the stroke and the angle of the pen. strokes have pointed pen held Curved gradations of mathematical regularity The eighteenth- so that the down aim was to imitate and nineteenth-century stroke employs enough pressure to the strokes the copperplate that the pen was not master in The hair-line edged pen, commercial of an whilst the early its own of the splay engraving letter copperplate- was made hand resulted Both kinds easy are the uniform gradations of the copperplate-hands. up flexible Seemingly, the points of the pen. tool produced. nib. of require a Therefore, it could be the said house. corsiva or chancery hair-line hands by strokes are produced 6ci/uca//j7?zJ%rt&<y natural and a sideways movement of an from easy ui wMffiuZttv/i/iu /j/. by a release of pressure on the Not movements. so natural and foamy, u/diaru^azcAcj tu net'dtrtx ow'ycyai'wz&au'ertdu, norfar//utc/i. c/cxcc&dt/i S^diK'tttty, 7wt to <fc- r/t&toui6s t-n (Mrc/aijuizj, narwi ortr (3nt7J>r to vc 6raoj] Figure With 12. the exception of traditional copperplate o-eneral use today ventionalized that were available early them still available. in before Copperplate formal scripts, 1925. Formal the nineteenth century, and The majority of them few, if copperplate scripts innumerable have been 14 there are series were produced since 1945. any script designs became rigidly con produced, many A very few in of alternatives to formal copperplate equally limited nineteenth- and century ry writing masters, For technical were they copybook such as ones, limitations human hand can font. The largely in tradition, which French the upright overshadowed by ronde the more derived from have tried to imitate easily introduce during the period when space. a wide variety Each character of forms As in type was cast paper, the which find itself in difficult had problem to solve concerned the to match perfectly in design kerning or 15 in metal faces, the of its where every of the occupy a matrix.1' own required overhanging par because handwriting, ligatures and physical space with combination. in Script metal type must creation versions of certain characters were also cut as were all the most scripts eighteenth-centu metal type. opposed to on the requires familiar inclined their use was 1938. handwriting encountered throughout the process. tradition, but the models of the Monotype Dorchester Script, issued in were not common three-dimensional Alternative letter were available centuries, typefounders ticularly joined strict designs for a script portions of other letter it the might Endnotes for Chapter i. Adobe Systems, Sanvito. A Two-Axis Multiple Master Typeface (California: Adobe Inc., 2. 1993). Albert Kapr, The Art ofLettering. The History, Anatomy, (Munich: K.G. Saur, 3. Max Caflisch, "On 4. Leda Avrin, Scribes, the 5. Ibid, 178. 6. Ibid, 181. 7. Alfred Fairbank, 8. Avrin, 183-184. 9. Ibid, 10. Johanna History of Script and of the Roman Letterforms Font & Function 15 (1995): Books. The Book Artsfrom Antiquity 1991), to the 4. Renaissance 178. A Book of Scripts (Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1968), 8. 185. Drucker, The Alphabetic Labyrinth. The Letters in 1995), 11. Kapr, 12. Drucker, 13. Avrin, 14. Ibid, 15. Erik Lindegren, ABC ofLettering History and Imagination (London: 96-98. 40. 100. 190. 192. 1976), Avrin, Jan Typefaces," Library Association, Thames 8c Hudson Ltd, 17 and Aesthetics 1983), 327-329. Scripts (Chicago: American 16. Systems and Printing Types (Sweden: Lindegrens Boktryckeri 72. 200. van der Ploeg, "Script Types", Print % (April-May 1954): 16 17-18. AB, Chapter Review The following abstracts project. raphy A complete Literature in describe books list of book and that were journals the Field of particularly helpful in consulted for Study the completion of this thesis this project is contained in bibliog the at the end. A Book of Scripts, This of 2 by Alfred text was written information on the roman alphabet to by (Baltimore, Maryland: Penguin Books, a prominent twentieth-century British It origins of script styles. mid-twentieth-century of these calligraphic hands a good place to and provides an begin covers a wide calligraphic styles. important 1968) calligrapher and contains much from range, the beginnings This book discusses classification scheme. may distinguish between that the reader number of examples so book is Fairbank. the It the of the importance also contains a different script styles. large This research. Scribes, Scripts and Books. The Book Artsfrom Antiquity to the Renaissance, by Lefla Avrin. (Chicago: American This book ment Library Association, provides a complete before and throughout information for anyone provides a good year of publication and teristics. but The the age of printing. by R. It is letterforms, demonstrating an important book author states S. Hutchings. (London: introduction includes most of them would broad field progress of their develop and a complete source of interested in letterforms. A Manual of Script Typefaces, This book history and 1991) that ocMackay, 1965) to the script types that were available some notes on the history of script "typographers know find it difficult Cory Adams to define what the term design." of type l7 they in metal up to the types and their main charac mean when precisely to they speak of scripts, anyone unfamiliar with the Anatomy ofa Typeface, by Alexander Written by Alexander Lawson, famous types, and clarity. development Though it does not and deal states that this uses, their antecedents with script many typefaces, but book is "not rather for history, on typeface authority faces Lawson's book is enormously helpful for its romans), Lawson their an Lawson. (Boston: David R. Godine, for written importance, and their extensive background that curious part of the population that discussed types be yet are information. believes letters have a series of with precision the printer convinced that there are ed and that the production of the perfect typeface remains a goal to by future book documents this directly (almost all of the the subtleties of refinement as applied to roman and cursive as 1990) the opposite; that be to as much too already fully investigat desired by present designers." type ABC of Lettering and Printing Types, by Erik Lindegren. (Sweden: Lindegrens Boktryckeri AB, 1976) This book proved including script tion to be faces an important "genealogy" of various on the their (Cambridge: Cambridge historical very helpful in tool determining types 1981) yet made. In italic by Helm Wotzkow. particular it describes these types. (New York: Dover Publications, 1967) This book is which are a practical guide to the art of necessary to hand-lettering. Wotzkow gives hand-lettering, continuing with is extremely helpful in understanding how what other illustrations to University Press, context and provides comparison with The Art ofLettering. Its Mastery and Practice, Inc., a descrip thorough History ofLetter-forms in Manuscripts and Print, by one of the most thorough studies of script faces in history of typefaces, bookhands. With its curves, this book becomes " This is the designs. "On Script Types, in Selected Essays Stanley Morison. because it carefully describes and their connection to manuscript of character shapes and types of the source texts describe and considers the an analysis of various script styles came importance of consist of alphabets and other examples that explain various points the author the is discussing. The 18 advice on the special different layout, goes is full of beyond and style. have been drawn especially for text This characters. into being. It spacing, weight, tools information, from this The book the most elementary (such as the selection of the "To learn how is certainly how and not always to The Art ofLettering, History, Anatomy, This book Saur, learn why, but and includes development more than 13,000 font fonts from reference books covers every known of issue and sizes are learning by Albert Kapr. transition and 1995) typefaces available sources. today in digital form. It It is considered one of the ever produced. Century, by Mac McGrew. (Delaware: Oak Knoll typeface that anyone included along with interested in Encyclopedia of Typefaces, This is Inc., sixty different has been designed tieth century in America. Detailed descriptions for of 1993) This book source way Publishing, by Jeff Level, Bruce Newman of the almost American Metal Typefaces of the Twentieth Books, the surest of the alphabet. more complete catalogs most comprehensive know why is considerations. history of writing and lettering, including a study of the Brenda Newman. (New York: Precision Type one of the to Aesthetics of the Roman Letterforms, The Complete Font Software Resourcefor Electronic This is to numerous professional 1983) provides a complete of characters and the tools) how." finally knowing (Munich: K.G. drawing a major It includes tions for easy reference. illustrated in metal during the twen face, including designers, foundries, dates version of the full alphabet. It is an important type. by Jaspert, Berry 8c Johnson. international their sources. an of each and cast reference essentially a wide selection of faces 19 (London: Bath Press, concerned with metal type arranged alphabetically 1983) faces, designers under and three main sec Chapter 3 Methodology 1. A history of script typefaces was prepared, including their origins subsequent in books 2. A 3. and careful able to research 4. in were classified An important invention of printing. design modern software tools enable type This background software and designers not of a system include all developed existing script and year of creation aspect of this thesis issues selected related designer who agreed to participate received a questionnaire. in Chapter 6 of this thesis. by letters, by electronic for naire are: John Benson Beatty Tobias Frere-Jones Robert Slimbach Hermann Zapf 20 the catalog avad- now of script but because typeface sample contemporary mad, Their The contemporary type designers Richard authorities. is faces. of their huge accompanied type designers to the proliferation of script was made rized history (where known). Contact various ways: and research was conducted digital technology author, faces. Each involved contacting solicit their opinions and views on various by the bookhands to create types of great originality. foundry specimens generated samples by means its designer in manuscript and through correspondence with various type catalog does name of after the made of the powerful type determine how number, the by the journals, study was Extensive These development in faces. and person-to-person. responses have been to Each summa who completed the question Chapter 4 The Influence The huge increase in result of technical ments have Before hand changed the practice of type printing press, books the was a labor-intensive one, of the middle sequence of innovations Linotype (1885) later and translated punch in to printing metal at into its describe neither Hell in ode ray directly allied (crt) is or plate or when process of invention At last, the type could type of movable refinements industrial by the revolution developed by be designed a in by the to the hand- brought introduction The punch-cutting machine, book a writing casting from it in transformed machines. of the pantograph of the method changed Linn Boyd Benton in on a to the growth of offset-lithographic printing, World War II. The Without costly in and The a matrix and Typesetting was Monotype casting drawing board and engraving a matrix in terms of time nor laser to either paper or device.2 output imaged onto a typesetters were a the type was no terms of capital outlay. formulas in digital form (a output for was longer the a development brass die but a the economic constraints of metal type production, typeface pro An important breakthrough in puter-based late 1800s, composition, photosetting tube to a 1400s to the "post-metal" 1965), the production of them. scribes. striking develop technological Johannes Gutenberg. Minor character, much a size.1 stored as mathematical of to is very matrices without the technical and economic restrictions of after phototypesetting by Major or so actual photographic negative. to each adapted to cut matrices. directly duction was after, increased and were produced technology. invention the Another innovation, of late the soon and, dramatically with 1884, from design last century process. manufacturing attributed for a punch cutting over the which remained true until the fifteenth century, mold were added major the type Technology designs the number of typeface developments in of In drum in type a now a technique film the is often still used now by the generally German firm coated with an emulsion of silver via a cath press or design technology hybrid between misnomer; type is first introduced very latest digital Although developments, type can be output printing device. started around 1973. The earliest com the photocomposition machines and pure/digital 21 devices. Each device had its The Apple Macintosh typesetting been by because tool echoed on the all computer was PC hands it in process. More recently, design the The type. immediacy of Mac and this new as a flexibility. and Using digital taken everyone with the arrival of result of and some of these developed into PC have designers (and designers, whose fonts have ty its platform as well. manufacturers), the and put to soon the of language introduced in 1984 "Mac" "interface"; user-friendly own command a low-cost devices of service. its design original virtues have in PostScript format (now types typesetting away from type-designing in personal computer with a comprehensive graphic Many else), thus are still and now supplied traditional typesetters de-mystifying the whole production programs, everyone has the opportunity democracy is visible in the work of many contemporary type started to change perceptions and chadenge accepted notions of beau legibility.3 and DIGITAL TOOLS FOR TYPE DESIGN Digital typesetting has brought software major packages Fontographer, FontLab new opportunities specially designed avadable and for the creation of type to create fonts: type faces. There are five Ikarus, Metafont, FontStudio. Ikarus The Ikarus designed system was device-independent digital sets the standard autotracing width tables ly or maximum imaging and for quality in the issued advertising accuracy Ikarus by Hell. design text setting, as well as typography. and a high level needs a separate program called from type manipulation. importation from PS Typel for specialized by Dr. Peter Karow of URW in Germany for high quality and system was Latest for The system, and production. and the Models T3 fonts. Ikarus touching Ikarus has and be created by scanning, kern and display type used in high to the em which ensures For autotracing capabilities, Ikarus typeface produced Marconi in 1977, designed by many type foundries, can produce multiple 15,000 x 15,000 units LinusM. The first 22 can overlapping of precision and control. version: 3.0. used by Hermann for electronic composition Zapf the previous year and Metafont Designed between 1977-1979 fessor font of electrical generation system that reads in characters fonts, graphical text files devices algebraic which font information to print. optimum generation. fonts. Latest form, image Metafont, it is is design. Each type parameter-driven type (weight, by Metafont and It is for considered an is defined character design software, meaning can width, cap-height, x-height, etc.) most useful the outline of for printing high quality documents. of screen previewers make use of the pixel of the programming language specificady developed for font specify produced In its highly portable a "programs" prepared with information various characteristics of the to the name of metric as a sub-program. prior a professor of computer science and pro or other elements symbols, Typesetting systems like TeX make use printer Knuth, Stanford University. Metafont is at engineering Donald E. by be the specified family of related the generation of an entire 2.71.4 version: Fontographer In 1985, Altsys Corporation introduced Fontographer for line font for any editor personal computer. fonts from scratch. Fontographer has platforms. Having gone the It was designed between any many lighter through several upgrades two and fonts the world for for versions of on the system. unique opportunities capabilities heavier for fitting outlines the to was the modify existing fonts first out or create new flexibility of being used on both Window and Macintosh in tains over 200 enhancements to the previous one. the creation of Macintosh. It the The last ten years, the and latest version 4.1 con font experimentation, allowing encourages existing fonts building new fonts provides auto-hinting, images. Fontographer is kerning, and the most popular by blending tools provide pressure-sensitive and calligraphic pen designer. It of scanned It the auto-tracing font editor in computers." personal FontLab FontLab was designed in St. Petersburg, Russia, introduced commercially in 1993, in 1997 a very and wiU be the in early upgraded to version 1990 2.5 in 1994, by SoftUnion. FontLab while version 3.0 wiU first Windows-based Multiple Master digital responsive system and provides not only the normal 23 font typeface editor. creation tools but also be 2.0 was released FontLab is many style and modification functions. It is to create, modify, enhance or i) ScanFont, by SoftUnion is a picture and imports and 2) font and exports a digital typeface editor simplify Type 1 used or both TrueType and be the TrueType fonts for auto-tracing converter and can for and Windows and includes anything Type 1 fonts, converting scannable obsolete used two utilities: converting TIFF files into font used to put It is environment. characters It into font format. It format fonts to Type 1 TrueType formats. FindFont, by SoftUnion is used for searching fonts by user-defined selection criteria. FontStudio FontStudio is an produced elegant, intuitive other standard font user by Letraset. interface. It functions. Untd editor available. Latest It is the second most popular contains ad the the release of necessary font drawing, editor on the 24 with measuring, scaring Fontographer 4.0, FontStudio version 2.0. Mac was the and best-designed Endnotes for Chapter 4 1. Norman Walsh (Ed). (1992-1996). A BriefHistory of'Type. [Homepage fonts of The Comp. FAQ], [Online]. Available: http://www.ora.com/homepages/comp.fonts/FAQ/cf_28.htm 2. Ron Eason and Sarah Rookledge, Rookledges International Directory of Type Designers. A Biographical Handbook (New York: The Sarabande 3. Norman Walsh (Ed). (1996-last update). Press, 1994): xix-xx. Digital Type Design Tools. [Homepage ofThe Comp. fontsFAQ], [Online]. Available: http://www.Hb.ox.ac.uk/internet/news/faq/archive/fonts-faq.part6.html 4. Nicholas Fabian (Ed). (1994-last Fabian], [Online]. Available: 5. James Felici (Ed). (1994-last update). Digital Toolsfor Type Design [Homepage of http://webcom.net/nfhome/digital.htm update). Fontographer 4.0.4. [Homepage of MacWorld Communications, Inc.], [Online]. Available: http://www.macworld.eom/q/@345030tskjkt/pages/october.94/Reviews.1006.html 25 Nicolas Chapter 5 Script Typeface Classification As indicated by large the number of script included in selection of examples for types cads a revaluation of their place this classification, today's in design type history growing as well as type classification systems. One has only the popularity to turn the pages of and variety distant relationship to freely rendered brush tated by new are of script types. heights More or pen treatments letters, and and more these of abandon. potentially Under such as numerous as the ble to obtain many many script The fodowing important tial and current personal faces evolved. influenced The by liberties more or phrase shows a new conceptions These strongly the line confirmation of forms personalized limitations imposed or so that today's difficult of personal based to designers classify script handwriting, upon are dic by lay often reach types; they often By studying type specimen catalogs, it There were also many expected. originady is based names in type defying a particular face 26 was possi cases where the foundry catalogs. on a personal opinion and faces. In many cases, however, judgement in assigning entirely for fodowing script typeface classification was based on an as possible. different classification the most part hmits have been lifted more samples than same typeface appeared under and there a smart stylized many different kinds classification and examination of as have magazines and newspapers circumstances, it is organization.1 ready Here formal types, but for the caprices of the out conditions. contemporary is dlustrated with the most the author was required to exercise substan to a certain category. CLASSIFICATION: JOINED Formal page 30 ... Ronde 35 Freestyle Monotone Inline 36 .... . 38 . 40 .... UNJOINED Formal 41 Informal 47 Civilite 52 Chancery 53 Freestyle 55 Monotone 70 Inline 78 Miscedaneous .... 27 ... 79 Script Typeface Definitions JOINED. Joined scripts are those in which ad lowercase characters join one with each other. UNJOINED. These include the those typefaces where one or more lowercase characters do not join with foflowing character. FORMAL. Joined detads and or unjoined script typefaces created with great care and particular attention to legibility. Each character is elegant and wed balanced. INFORMAL. Unjoined They often script typefaces with a casual express a more look, evoking a friendly and informal quality. lively personality. CIVILITE. Unjoined, upright script typefaces with ornamental flourishes. RONDE. Joined, flourishes upright script typefaces derived from the Civilite and decorated with ornamental throughout their characters. CHANCERY. Unjoined combine ishes the of the script typefaces spontaneity and based on the practicality chancery hands of a more chancery hand. 28 formal of the Italian Renaissance. typeface with the calligraphic They flour FREESTYLE. Joined pen or a or unjoined script typefaces designed with a casual look and created either by a brush. MONOTONE. As their name style throughout ad implies, these script typefaces, joined or unjoined, have a monotone the characters. INLINE. In line typefaces are created with a writing tool that includes a double line in the stroke of the character. MISCELLANEOUS. This category they can not be easdy contains all those script typefaces which categorized. 29 display such unusual features that JOINED. FORMAL Amazone. Designed by Leonard H. D. Smith for Amsterdam in 1959. 7K> citica^k<flzimnapqAjAMjLUM^ American Script. Introduced by ATF in 1898. ' /? Shown in 1906 as American Script No. 2. s afcj&f$^^imn*fy.t^uwM:ui Aristocrat. Designed Balmoral. Designed by Donald Stevens for Letraset by Martin Wait for Letraset 1994. 1978. d<eM^iuhnjw^Mmc^iL Baltimore Script. Designed by Samuel Winfield (Tommy) Thompson. Cut Baltimore Type in 1955. 30 by George Batte for JOINED. FORMAL Bank Script. Designed by James Bond Script. Introduced by West for BBccS ATF in in 1895. 1905. a vcaelgn Unlrnno-fiqsKA iavwzuo, Cantate. Designed by J.J. Siercke for Bauer 1958. cuuxieyfjfAjgAcvrisnxif^^ Commercial Script. Designed by Morris Fufler Benton in 1906. Cut J< Copperplate bold. Issued Diane. Designed by by Stephenson Blake in Roger Excoffon for Olive 1953. foundry 31 in 1956. by ATF in 1908. JOINED. FORMAL Hednda Rook. Designed by Agta. Invitation Script. Cut bv Inland Type foundry in 1896. ctucczel&sitjjci^n.mci/ia/xd-cu'i' Isadora. Designed by Kris Holmes. Issued by ITC in oa-ccy.'K 1985. cA78CVTTQ^7J7<lX?A7VGTQT^STl[yWXyZ ctbAzdefgfufhh]^i^qr6tiimjM^fz Juliet. Designed by Aldo Novarese for Nebiolo in ao-cdeia,nipli Kiinstler Script. Designed by Hans 1955. Cm n ah a, i &ft uv-ccutt Bohn for Stempel Type Palace Script. Created for Stephenson Blake af c/sf/ type />///,- '/j* foundry * /'/"/ foundry in in 1923. >jA( nriu '/ r 1957. JOINED. FORMAL Sackers English Script. Agfa. a ^ca^r/.Ac^Ai'/7nyrLcfir//>ui./cry uca&y: Sackers Italian Script. Agfa. Shelley Allegro. Designed Shelley Andante. by Matthew Designed Carter for Linotype, by Matthew Carter for 1972. Linotype, 1972. au-ca&oanoi./clrrino-ha'xi.fu, ucaxux, SheUey Volante. Designed by Matthew Carter for Linotype, JO 1972. JOINED. FORMAL Sloop Script. Designed by Richard Lipton for the Font Bureau in 1994. "M-'y^y/.f OC Sned Roundhand. Designed Charles Sned, the by Matthew Carter English writing for Linotype master and author of around 1966. "The Pen-man's 1694. a 6-c de^-Aifk l/nn ofc<jtr>s-cu mo-jciyz Font Company. Yorkshire. Issued by The Young Baroque. Designed by Donald Young for Letraset in 1984. -^ Youthline. Stephenson Blake type foundry 1952 aocaefa YJuf/ttfTtrt^ps-otutwj^ 34 Based on the hand Treasury open'd", of JOINED. RONDE Adscript. Designed Fuller Benton for ATF in by Morris 1914. abcdei^atiijkimnahurfdi ww xwz French Plate Script. Designed by Sidney Clayde Gaunt for BB8cS in aln.'tli.'J a nii French Script. Attributed Gando Ronde. Designed Cl & e to g fr S Carter X Z a TypoUpright. Also known inncnqtoluvw-xiiT William Schraubstadter. Cut by Matthew Q 8 tcl as c1 and 1904. by Hans-Jorg X J? 31c Tl 0 Stephenson Blake in Hunziker for Linotype in S> Q.# 5 n\[ "Linoscript". Released atc<ic|.a.lii Designed V WX tactefataukliuiiopawtiuM'acu: by ATF as an interpretation nineteenth-century French Scripts. Wedding Plate Script. 1905. by Sidney j Icunuapt] xj.lu\NO.x.ij : Clyde Gaunt for BB8cS in i-Occ/e/a&if/c ai 35 Ctnnopq to 1904. /'aiUSxux of the 1970. y % JOINED. FREESTYLE Bickley Script. Designed Brush. Designed by by Alan Meeks for Letraset Robert E. Smith for ATF ic in 1942. AgeVS?$Tyi$X^7K7lOP2'RSl'U'l/'Ws1C'ty'$ Charme. Designed by Helmut Matheis Elegance. Designed for by Karlgeorg Hoefer Ludwig 8c Mayer for type foundry in 1958. Ludwig 8c Mayer 1968. J ^LKA KV 0^2 ,_J^44J. Mistral. Designed by Roger Excoffon for OUve Type foundry in 1953. Based on handwriting. PiECWGHtMLMNOPQ&WWYZ 36 his own JOINED. FREESTYLE Rage Italic. Designed by Ron Zwingelberg for Letraset in 1984. a^C &?CfW$K?riri0roQ^STW'Wy;'tylif. Repro Script. Designed by Jerry Muden for ATF in 1953. A'ZtlijGH3$KJ.'L%0'?a'R S j U 0 U % (Locit^tjkljklnfiofxfaiittLVwttJ'i Slogan. Designed by Aldo Novarese for Nebiolo type foundry 1957. Vlaclimir Script. Vladimir Andrich. URW. y?3t?Z)S7'^c7?rj?YW^ <YyMM^ 37 (f Z JOINED. MONOTONE Elan. Designed by Hans Mohnng for Stempel Foundry in 1937. S&iuckm gie da6 SzeJUai Kaufmann Script. Designed by Max Richard Kaufmann for ATF in 1936. Aiie^wqjr'9gK2MMP2(i'i,uwjnj2 Mandate. Designed by Robert H. Middleton for Ludlow in 1934. afiCQtfSxggXcfynTiopQJisju v&XVZ xzhx^h^cjAi/AlmjwpjcjAAt^ Medial Script. Issued by ATF in 1909. CUrwAA'CCW'i' Jysjists Signal. Designed by WWege. Berthold type 3* o-wnxisAs^ foundry Co^myjvaynyi^ 1931. MCdit^miniynhOvansiiuviijK^z 38 JOINED. MONOTONE Swing Bold. Issued by Monotype 1955. ABG'ZWqjr!!)gMMP2(lS WVIOXtyS Wendy. Designed Veltro. Nebiolo by Garret Boge for Letter Perfect foundry 1931. type Vertical Writing. Introduced by Joseph W. in 1989. by Boston foundry for ATF and shown in 1897. Patented in 1898 Phinney. ai3CjaeriG,>tJlXXmUGPJ2RJ3ll,rlrTU-XlQ. '' I D \ p p a i>cci t let w i u ft 1 777,77.0 Q.-CUt^LLL-l>LOX V :h'? 39 JOINED. INLINE Cabarga Cursiva. Designed by Demetno E. and Leslie Cabarga for Letraset oScxlefgAifMlm-n&p qps-kiM) wklj-z Grevton Script. Designed bv Gerhard Schwekendiek for Letraset 1991. aScdedhfiiiilmtiofiqt'eStutHi^yz Inscription. Designed by Alan Meeks for Letraset 40 1983. 1982. UNJOINED. FORMAL Adagio. Designed by Karl Klauss for Gensch 8c Heyse in 1953. aScdef'/ftajllliioioprjiJtuvwxi/z Ariadne. Designed by Gundrun Zapf- von Hesse for Stempel Foundry around 1954. WBCrDCTJlJ3XLM7{0eB Artscript. Designed the writing of by Sol Hess for Lanston Monotype in Servidori of Madrid, 1939. Released until 1948. 1798). abdcjghiMmnopqrstuvrvxyz, Bemhard Cursive or :3S<'- Madonna. Designed by Lucian Bernhard for Bauer in ' abcaclglnjklmnopctrslufic.rvz Bernhard Tango. Designed by Lucian Bernhard for ATF in 1934. ABGDE7SHiJKLmnOVQRSTUV\VXrZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvu'xiiz 41 1925. (Based on UNJOINED. FORMAL Boulevard. Designed by Gunter Gerhard Lange for Berthold type foundry in 1955. abcc^pf^hijkhniicrYjusliivivxijz Byron. Designed by Pat Hickson for Red Rooster Typefounders 1993. ^2 60) ^Qyj9Cj:DMJ\rO 9Q tf cSJ-^UXJXs) aDcde/g/i///mnopqrsiuvu>ryz CanceUaresca Script. Designed by Alan Meeks for Letraset ajjcdef Corsiva. Designed by Patricia A 1982. cAif.kJrrinopursTui.'uSZif'z Saunders for Monotype 1991. C<D{E(FgHU'KC M^fO(pQyXSTWtWXXZ aSccfefgfujXCmnopqrstwvw^cyz El Greco. Designed by Gunter Gerhard Lange for Berthold type abcdcjahijklmno-pqrstuvrvxijz foundry in 1964. 3X^Z UNJOINED. FORMAL Florentine Cursive. Designed by R.H. Middleton for Ludlow in 1956. xsem^Cdfyxxxxx/oxxxisx'vx^xx/xi a Floridian Script. Designed bcclefg li ijk Im n opcfrs tu OiOxijz by Agfa. 35SG2)79J{ZJJC/S'WrX03:><2!X<SU<UVWXyZ aocdeJ-tyhijklmnopsTrstuuwxyz Formal Script. Adaptation done by R.H. Middleton in 1956 for Ludlow. Derived from Typo Script. '/.//A-//??,/?, o//q/'3/yy-yvs/:. zy-y. a.ftcf/e/'a/>-/ LeGriffe. Designed by Andre-Michael 5Z<BC<D Lubac for Eisner 8c Flake <Efg (fXvjjK UNO TO ?v_5 T W (LDcacfaluydmiiovarstuvwxvE. Liberty. Designed by Wdliard T. Sniffin for ATF in iXA&@Qo9gidiS 1973. 1927. XXi:m^\Q abcaejgnjjklninop^rsiuvwxyz 43 V <W v> v^ UNJOINED. FORMAL Mayfair Cursive. Designed by Robert H. Middleton for Ludlow in 1932. je&ex&drQmgvixm nxxxji&xu \x\ 'xyz aocae]aniinlinaopqr$,iu\wxijz Medici Script. Designed :T?3 by Hermann Zapf for Linotype CD'I'T 5 Jilf X-LM X' 1974. OX: QRS'TUVW XT Z abcdefgfiii^lmnopqrstuviviyz Nova Script. Designed by George F. Trenholm for Intertype in 1937 MCTi%MJJ<MJ\0mJ^Ubmy2 socaefjgniiRlmnopqrsluiluJxijz Nuptial Script. Designed by Intertypes design group under the direction 7U3G2)&l?QJf3?JC!m'X07><23ZS aXccfefgXi/Xfmnop (frsfuuaixy Piranesi Italic. Designed by Wdlard T Smffin for ATF of Edwin Shaar. 1952. JcUVXXyZ z in 1930. XXCXXXCJ{XXJXXXH^CXCXSXXXX\'XX. aocaefgni-jriirrinopq'istuvwxqz 44 UNJOINED. FORMAL Pompeian Cursive. Drawn 71 S by Oswald Bruce Cooper for BB8cS J a J> Cm Qi 0) & 3 g <d( J a 0 c Poppl-residenz. Designed a c I In 6 1 by Friednch j k ( 111 n in 1927. o |) t| Poppl for Berthold r type r s I f"~) u foundry in v u> QcPQ, x v 1977. aocaefj/fifXcm)) opcpstia ncryx Quid Script. Issued by Keystone type foundry in 1899 or earlier. TLBCV^TQHIJKCMNOPQ^SJUVWXyZ ahc^ejghijklrrmopqrstu^xyz Stationers Semiscript. Designed by Sidney Clyde Gaunt for BBScS in 1899. aocnefg nil ki riT.no no r'stuvtrxuz Thompson Quillscript. Designed by Samuel Wmfield (Tommy) Thompson for ATF 7l3CVSTqHlJKM^OTC^SOUVVXyz aficdejghijh Imnopq 45 rstu^rixijz in 1952. UNJOINED. FORMAL Tiranti. Designed bvTony Forster XX c X for Letraset in 1993. } X^ C7 :< XXK XX\ I X X X QXX XXl ^ g& XX X abcdefqhijklmnopqrsruvtvxvz Virtuosa. Designed bv Hermann Zapf for Stempel Typefoundry in 1953. cxxxxxxxxixxx:xxcxoxxv aUdetzliiildniiwiicltaoluiw'XL'z Vivaldi. Designed by Fritz Peters. URW 1970. A^&^&^r^^&cJ^&Gtf&C 46 rX(3i0lQ&xXa&QXO<P(zX'Qf& UNJOINED. INFORMAL Adine Kernberg Script. Designed tor Intecsas type foundry. '^'la'me^-ceznbezg Qjczwt Admiral Script. Designed bv Robert Hunter Middleton for Ludlow in ^fnxxx 1953. xQxoyxxxxLxoTQ xsxuxxxyx ccbcaercrnijhlyyiYiopcTrstiivwxyz Alys. Designed by Pat Hickson for Red Rooster Typefounders in 1994. a6cdefgliijk(mnopqrstuvuji(yz Amanda. Issued by Stephenson Blake in 1939. cXXXXiX^W7^Xc4icX9XiXSXXXXXXj9 aH>c&.ciq(viklYHHCvo,rizuvwx)<j, Axkona. Designed bv Karl Klauss for Gensch Sc Hevse in 1935. A'BCT)^GUJ3T<WlO'VQ'KSZ abcclej-ghiiklnmopcirdtuvwxyz. 47 UNJOINED. INFORMAL Bordeaux. Designed bv David Quay for Letraset in 198S. XHXXidlXuXidtX^ilyXidvX^ Burgund. Designed bv Martin Wilke. ,fyfLetropol-0-inerna Caprice. Designed bv Martin Wdke for Berthold type foundry 1939. abchajj^kiorz.krnn.O'pctsiuuujcuZ Coronet. Designed by R.H. Middleton for Ludlow in 1937. XUXVIZ ! : i' i f a.ocG.ef-ayutttlmn.opariCu.Lu/xu: Dorchester Script. Released bv English Monotype 1939. .n/r afcclejanijkd n n ova rstu via 4s UNJOINED. INFORMAL Diskus. Designed bv Martin Wdke for Stempel ^4 foundry 1955. 73 C2X X GL^^XX Xd}XdXXXA] X ^ Fluidium. Designed tvpe by Adesandro cy" c^j .'n^L.'Kr^ na z:zu i\cxu = Butti for Nebiolo in 1951. dPxmCjK]]KniiiixxrxTummj2 a cde{glu(k // 1 u top qUjhw- lvxij Georgian Cursive. Designed bv George F. Trenholm in Company in 1934. :- Cast by Machine Composition Boston. Aic~zizg^4^imnQ^Qi(K^zM^% at)cdekc]hljkl.mr\6'pc]jh<.t>iu.\ivjxi[y Lydian Cursive. Designed by Warren Chapped for ATF in 1940. AWmQHWMMXOPQ KSZUVWXVZ abcdefgkijklmpiopqrstwwxyz Murray Hid. Designed by Emil I. Klumpp for ATF around 1956. abede^aiu,it(miiopq.tstui'uvy5 49 UNJOINED. INFORMAL Park Avenue. Designed bv Robert E. Smith. Cut by ATF around 1933. ^dXXXXXXXiXyXKXXXXXXQ ^XSXXXXXXXX J-ttd^fqkLjkLrn,r.oh.q:itLLU'OJX.LjZ Parkway Script. Designed by Emil Hirt for Ludlow in 1964. cXrGBCzLXXXGS^XydXKXXAczNOXQczRS a oca era Petra. Designed by Heinrich h uklmnoha is tu atuxuz Pauser for Stempel aocd-eisih Raleigh Cursive. Designed by Williard T XXdXJXXXXJZ type foundry 1954. ijklm. noi>ar$ iuVu>%-yz Sniffin for ATF in 1929. Introduced in 1930. Of 3 G3)igQm<1XlMcM0TQaR3lScC3yyQY ahco&fcj\XLfk.DmzopqrXiiv\\'xijz Rondine. Designed bv Adesandro Butti and Raffaello Bertien for Nebiolo in zXX^XXxXXX^^XXZXXXXQyXXXX 50 1948. UNJOINED. INFORMAL Savove. Designed bv Alan Meeks for Le traset m iqqz. xxxxxxxJ(^nxQix::GxrTvx\{!xy: zzocr.ercnu-cjr.nooGiSLuvwxL'z Sterling Cursive. Designed bv Moms F. Benton for ATF in iqi 919 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxifz Style Script. Designed bv Sol Hess for Monotype in 1940. c4JSCM9QJ43}KfMMOfmSVU abcdefekij-klntnopcfrd Temple Script. Issued by Engdsh Monotype VWXl/Z tuvwxyz in 1937. ABCDEZQWJXCMnOPORSU vwwxyz abcdefighijklmnopcprsiuvxvxyz Trafton Script. Also rvoe roundr1/ in cadec "Quick". Designed bv Howard Allen Traitor, German1,-. -l.'V.Lcf .in. /'.:.'( 'i.'"./ Z-jmu i- >;/< : in 19:55. Cut bv Bauer UNJOINED. CIVILITE Civflite. Modern Adaptation: Designed bv Morris Benton Original vogue. version: Bed eve to Designed bv Robert Granjon be the first cursive design cut in 1922. in 1557, to in type. Cut by ATF imitate semi-formal in 1923-24. writing in rA3e'cf^tX3JKtX^7Cv\O^Q5l5cCcW^ niwvv: afjcOe-fa^ijrUmi-iopqr^fwn Zapf Civilite. Designed in 1983-84. by Hermann Perhaps latest face to be Zapf during 1940 and 1971. Cut by Paul Hayden Duensing cut as metal type. AA3^co^.56$5&a^iJ^^^^^^0*ppQ^^S3'na V X X- XT Pi o.b UWef cr aki] (< LfmnorJ qu rStuW^v; UNJOINED. CHANCERY Bible Script. Designed by Richard Bradley for Letraset 1979. A B CDEFCHIJK L MN OPQRS TU VWX YZ abcdcfahijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Cadigraphic 421. Designed by Georg Trump for Weber type foundry in 1954. ABCDEFGHLJKLMNOPQR5TUVWXYZ abcdefghi j kbnnopqTstuvwxyz Cataneo. Jacquedne Saqua 8c Richard Lipton. Bitstream 1993. (Bernardino Cataneo A3 CDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijktmnoyqrstuvvjxijz Florens. Designed by Garret Boge for Letter Perfect 1989. AB CDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWX.YZ acXXqXjIjrinopqrstuvw?iyz JuHana. Designed by Phidp Bouwsma for Alphabets Inc. A B C D E FG 1994. H U KM ( W P C7R5TU VWX YZ iWcx)cfi,]liij'^jw urrvnti 0 uxa 53 2 1545). UNJOINED. CHANCERY Marigold. Designed by Arthur Baker. Released by Agfa Compugraphic in i ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPC^SmWATZ alckfflkiildfnjwjirirstiiwxyz Oxford. Designed by Arthur Baker for Agfa Compugraphic in 1989. ABCDEFGHIJKLALVOPQRSIUVIVXYZ akcdeyGhi]kLamopoK.STUvwxvz Pedcan. Designed by Arthur Baker for Agfa Compugraphic in 1989. ABGDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ alcdefghijldmnop^rstuvwxyz Poetica. Designed the by Robert Sdmbach for Adobe Systems in 1993. Based on chancery scripts of Italian Renaissance. A BCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRS T UVWXYZ abakfghijklmnopqrsTuvwxyz Sanvito. Designed bv Robert Sdmbach for Adobe Systems in scribes of the Itadan Renaissance and based on the 1993. Named highly practical after one of the principal bookhands Renaissance humanistics. ABCDEFG-HIJkLL/vtNOPQRSTUVWXYZ 2kcdef0hijklm.nopqrstu.vw XV z 54 of the UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Advertisers Upright Script. Onginady "Odphant" coded in 1895. Shown by BB8cS in 1925. aJD&g:s3Cri^sm9ig>giS5'Qimi0xy o!efgf\i}mm^opQrstuV^x^5 Agitator. Designed by Wolfgang Eickhoff in i960. A&CDEFGHIJKJLMNOPQR STUVWXYZ Alexa. Designed by John Benson for Adobe Systems in 1995. Based on his own handwriting. ABCDEFGHIJK.LMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abode Alexia. Designed by PhiHp faliijklnuioptjrstuvu'tyz Bouwsma for Alphabets Inc. in 1994. ABCT^EFGHIJKlMMOPa^TUVWXYZ Alhambra. Designed by Richard Lipton for the Font Bureau in 1993. /ABCDEFGHIJKLMWOPQRSTCIVWXYZ 55 UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Arriba. Designed Ashley Script. by Phid Designed Gnmshaw for Letraset by Ashley Havinden 1993. for Monotype 1955. A3CPEF</HIJKLMN0PqK^rUVWXyZ abcdefghijklmnopqrftuvwxyz Balzac. Designed by Johannes Boehland for Stempel type foundry 1951. A<ZCrl><?QHJJKrHHO<PQ<%STUVWX abcdefghijklrrtrjopqrstuvtoxyz Balzano. Designed letters by John Benson for Adobe by calligrapher Systems in 1995. Inspired Raphael Boguslav. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPqRSTUVlfXYZ (dxdeffjli Bazaar. Designed by Imre Reiner for Bauer ijk\mr\opqrstuvwxi\z 1956. 56 by a page of pen-written UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Becka Script. Designed by David Harris for Letraset 1985. ABCVEF&HVKLMNOrQIZ$TUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstu Bendigo. Designed by Phid Grimshaw for Letraset Bernhard Hand-Brush Script. Designed by Lucian ippj. Bernhard for Bauer in 1928. Biffo Script. Designed for Monotype. flaCDfGf//JKLM(YOPQRSTUOQKyZ a6cdefqr)ij(dmnopqrstauoi)(cfz Bouwsma Script. Designed by Phdip Bouwsma for Alphabets Inc. 1994. A3GX>Ef^H!JKLM/XOTQJiGruVkJXyZ cdalef^^nnabcvjtu^ 57 UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Brody Script. Designed by Harold Broderson for ATF around 1953. A3Ct>FGH99K.WK0PQRSTUULUXlJ3 Bulletin Script. Introduced Caflish Script. Designed by Keystone Type by Robert of the swiss typographer Foundry in 1899. SHmbach for Adobe Systems 1993. Based on the handwriting Max Caflish. A BCVEFQHIJKLMNOPQRSTU VWX YZ adcX^akljidMOi^p^r^iUYti^cy^ Caliban. Designed by John Benson for Adobe Systems in 1995. A B CbEFCfHIJKLMNOPQRSFU VWXYZ abcdefcj Cartoon. Drawn by Howard Aden Trafton in kuklmnopc^rstuvwxyz 1936. Cast by Bauer type foundry in ABCDEFGHJ/KLMNOPQRSTUVWXyZ Germany. UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Cascade Script. Designed by Matthew Carter for Linotype in 1966. ABCDEFGHIJKLMAJOPQJZSTUWWZ abcdefqhiJkltnnopclrstuiJuJxyz Champion. Designed Choc. Designed by Cigogna. Designed by Gunter Gerhard Lange for Berthold Roger Excoffon for Odve foundry by Adesandro Butti and type foundry in in 1955. Aldo Novarese for Nebiolo in 1954. accdelahi'iUlmn.upa'istHVwx.uzcuLce Compliment. Designed by Helmut Matheis for Ludwig 8c Mayer 1966. ABCDGXQW] KUM N OpQRSTU VIM Demian. Designed by Jan Van Dijk for Letraset 1984. ASdGz-iFT-CX-MXCFXxXxii^Z M&wXuFXmiMr~Uvxpz 59 1957. UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Derby. Designed by Gunter Gerhard Lange for Berthold type foundry in 1953. abcdefcjhijklmnopcjrstuvwxyz Dynamik. Designed by Herbert Post for Berthold in 1952. ASC&eTgHJJKLMjVOpQRS-CUVlAZ abc&efghijlclmnopqrstuvwxyz Elli. Designed by Jean Evans for Font Bureau 1993. A3CDITG7riI7XLA17N'OPOR5TL/VlVXYZ abcdefyhijklmncipqrihn-ivpry? Express. Designed by Walter Hohnisch for Ludwig 8c Mayer type foundry in 1957 abcdefghi'lklmnopqrstuvivxifz Fine Hand. Designed by Richard Bradley for Letraset A& CT) E F Q 1A IJ K L^AyIN 1987. OJ> OUS T L L V WXYZ' abccitfqhuXiwwpcprstuvvvxijz:. 60 UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Flamme. Issued Letraset by Schelter 8c Giesecke 1933. Modern version: designed by Alan 1993. Flex. Designed by George Salter in 1937 Cast by Amsterdam Typefoundry. JJmicable Resolutions Forte. Designed by Carl Reissberger for Monotype in .Introduced 1962. ABcvetGHJjKLMNOPajisjuv wxyz aGcdefg&ijtiCHiHOpqrstHVWxyz Fox. Designed by W. Rebhuhn for Gensch 8cHeyse 1955. a$idefefii)MiHh<ipqtstuvW\iz Freestyle Script. Designed by Martin Wait for Letraset in 1981. al>cde,UkipimKOp(j^stiuY-u)x,^z 61 Meeks for UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Galahad. Designed by Alan Blackman for Adobe Systems. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Grayda. Designed by Frank H. Riley. Introduced in 1939 by ATF. XBC^SXgXX/AXJXO aocatJqniwlmnofi<pgtuvuixyz Hauser Script. Designed by George Hauser for Ludlow in abcdefykijklmH cpqt-j, Holla. Designed by Rudolf Koch for Klingspor in 1936. tuCuxijj 1932. AftC7)$C,H()dJ(l(KyiOVQKSlUV abcdePghijklmnopqrstuDwxifz Indy Italic. Designed by Charles Hughes for Letraset 1990. ABCXEFGHZXKLMNOPQRXTUVWXVZ Jowa Script. Designed by J. Wagner for Wagner 1967. /t^S4^^^A%A0f,Q^Sr 62 ^\)%xn UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Keynote. Designed by Wifliard T Sniffin for ATF in 1933. PQR7UVWXljZ~ GSeDSf qHd$}C 171710 aoc^etcltijklmnotcxstuOivxxjT. Konzept. Designed bv Martin Wilke for Stempel type foundry 1968. A/^7^?^7HMr<ZJANOPQRS^U ft6c2>e{^i\ijrvlA^^o^TstuviA;xy2 Laser. Designed by Martin Wait for Malibu. Designed by Alan Meeks Letraset 1987. for Letraset 1992. ABCDEFCtiUKLMHOPQ/lSTUVWXYZ akdefgkq/clifiricpqrsttiYWxyz Matura. Designed by Imre Reiner for Engdsh Monotype in 1938. ^BCDEFCJHTTKLMNOPQR$TUVWXyZ Abcdefgbi/klmnopqrstuvwxgs Maxime. Designed by Pete Schneidler for Bauer type 63 foundry in 1955. UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Nevison Casual Script. Designed by T Nevison for Image Club 1967. A3CV^T(XXXiXL^W^Q^XST[l])WX^ oAod^qAjuJ(4bbnmjpQJu&u^M!)ipA\5 New Berolina. Designed by Martin Wilke for Monotype in 1965. 747CZ5^qdi3$Kj2MNOpQnSXzXVWXKyZ. ADcdefekijkLmnopYjrgtu vwxuz. Palette. Designed by Martin Wilke for Berthold 1951. /^Cl>^AllDO^AA4CXQ7ZSH:ui)K)^, aScdefiYjhijkltonepqzstuotvxyz Palomba. Designed by George Trump a Papageno. Designed for Weber (?cdef g ni j by Richard Weber for foundry in type 1955. rUTTmopqrsruxnvxyz. Bauer type foundry 1958. ABCOfCHIJKLMNQPQRiTUVW abcdefghijklmnopqrjtuvtHMyz. Pendry Script. Designed by Martin Wait for Letraset 1981. ABCPEFqH/JKLMHOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefyhi/klmnopYyrstumxifz 64 UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Pepita. Designed by Imre Reiner for Monotype in H.fr Polo. Designed by Carl Pohl. Typoart 1959. Based Reiner's on own hand writing. cicl^AVj kinA.no par stuvt^i'i^y Z i960. ABCDEFGUI^MUQPCRSTUV WXY2 a bcdef gh i Present Script. Designed foundries in by Friedrich j klr+i nopc^u rstwvwxyB Karl Sadwey. Issued by the Stempel and Linotype 1974. ABCVexaX\J3KLMXOXOK5TU\AXXXX c\o<zae.jgW\jl<\yy\nopqrsiu\Y\YJxyz Prima. Designed by Martin Hermersdorf for Stempel foundry in 1957 ABCDtfgHJJKLMJdOPQRSTU abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Pristina. Designed by Phifl Grimshaw for Letraset in 1994. AKCVZTQmOXJlJJXO'PQ'R.STUVWXVZ aloc/efafiijkfmnoparsfuvwpyz Privat. Designed by J.J. Siercke for Bauer type foundry, 1966. A<s4BCDpOE-&FCH-/?KL/V\iA4N&pc?KS T^UVVJJCyZ 65 UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Rapier. Designed by Martin Wait for Letraset in 1989. A3 C> SX^/XZ^AXZ PtAXD PQ7XS TrXflAtVX^Z Reiner Black. Designed by Imre Reiner for Bauer type foundry in 1955. abcbefghifkltHHcpqtifttthuvu/xyz Reiner Script. Tobias Frere-Jones. Font Bureau type foundry, 1993. Original version: Imre Reiner for Bauer 1951. &DCderir)ijklm.hiJK<irstuvwX02 Roundhand. Attributed to Herman Ihlenburg. Designed for ATF around 1900. JJSBQ2)&&S3(JJ3iJU(0&Q9iSTUYWSCyZ abcdefght/klmnopyrstuuiuxyz Ru'ach. Designed by Tim Donaldson for Letraset, 1990. A-gCDZyaVUkLMNOXQKSZLiVJxjXLJZ gbcdefghijklwyiopqrsiuviscxyz 66 UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Ruling Script. Designed by Gottfried Pott for Linotype-Hed in Ruzicka Freehand. Designed by Ann Chaisson 1992. Mark Altman for Linotype and in 1993. ABGDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRXTLIVWXX abcdefGrujklmnopqrstuvujXLjZ Salto. Designed by Karlgeorg Hoefer for Kdngspor type foundry in 1952-53. L^fye S^rmual G^Jinner of tfje Sho. Designed by Karlgeorg Hoefer for Linotype in ^^luL 1993. ABC"Oef CS-H I.) KLMNQPQRSTW V WKY2 Smudger. Designed by Andrew Smith for Letraset in 1994. qUdeAzhijklrvrnopyrstuwxifZ- 67 UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Spring. Designed by Garrett Boge for Letter Perfect in Tiger Rag. Designed by John Viner for Letraset in 1988. 1989. 0XUthkLjLlmdpc1ntu.vMY.hiz Trophy Obdque. Designed by Frank Bartuska in 1950. AbCDEX&XUXLMNOPQ^TUXWXYX dcXikj'MmtopQrstu./^xi/z Ulyses. Designed by Timothy Donaldson for Letraset in 1991. AlfflkfqhijkllHHOMKtMIVXIfl Venture. Designed by Hermann Zapf for Mergenthaler Linotype in 1969. ABCDEFGHlJKLMNOPORSTUVWXrZ ab cdefqkijkimnofjcjMrshivwxyz 68 UNJOINED. FREESTYLE Visigoth. Designed by Arthur Baker for Alpha Omega Typography in 1988. ABCDEFqHlJKLMNOTQttTUVWXyZ *U*fgki]Uwurfr<&tKVX-yz Wave. Designed by Robert H. Middleton for Ludlow in 1962. o43G&7g769?lCJim'nOPQr&S'j'ZtV?V'X'%Z adcdetekcfktmnopcfzttuvwxy} 69 UNJOINED. MONOTONE Archi-text. Designed by Marshad Bohlin for EmDash in 1989. ^tzZZZF<GA\AG~MN0POPGTAAXArZ ablnd(fP^hi|L.!n'i,i7^pcqrf)Djv7'xwz Balloon. Designed by Max R. Kaufmann for ATF in 1939. ABCDEFGWJKLMNOPQRZTUVWXyZ Blueprint. Designed by Steve Matteson for Monotype 1993. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Challenge Bold. Designed by Martin Wait for Letraset 1982. ABCOBFGHUKLMNOPqPS TUVWXYZ dbcdefgkljkLmnopqrstuV'WKyz Comic book. Designed by Greg Kolodziejzyk for Image Club 1987. ABCDEPGHIJkLWNOPQRSTUVWXYZ 7 UNJOINED. MONOTONE Comicbook. Designed by Nicholas D. Kent for Vanguard Media 1992. A3CPBFGH\J\<lfAUOPQRGTUVV/XyZ Dom Casual. Designed by Peter Domberzian for photolettenng. Cut by ATF around 1952. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Doodle. Designed by Jonathan Macagba for Handcrafted Fonts 1994. ABCDEFGHlJKLMNOPqRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Eaglefeather. David Siegel & Carol Toriumi-Lawrence. Agfa 1994. (Frank Lloyd Wright, AbCC^LirGhUKLM/IOPQR/TUVWX/Z abcdefghijklmnopqr5tuvv/xyz Farfell. Designed by Noel Rubin for Image Club 71 1992. 1920) UNJOINED. MONOTONE Flash. Designed by Edwin W. Shaar and caded "Flash Bold" Cut by Monotype in 1939. ABCdEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUWXyZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Fontoon. Designed by Steve Zafarana for Galapagos Design Group 1994. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Gillies Gothic. Designed by William aire Graphite. Designed by David S. Gidies in 1935. Cast by Bauer in Germany. de^ak ijk LmnopcLtitu.vwxy^ Siegel for Monotype 1993. A5C^E=5HiJKLMN0PQR5TUVWXY: :bcdefghijklmno3 crsrjvwxvi Grove Script. Designed by Pat 8c Paul Hickson for Red Rooster Type Founders ABCDEFQ^/JKLmnOPQRSTUVUJXl(Z abcd^ghgkifnnopqrstuvuixyz 72 1994. UNJOINED. MONOTONE Hurry. Designed by Marshad Bohlin for EmDash 1994. XiXXVXZXXXXXLX)XOPO(25XUXXrXX2 XcdefpjfajjklMriopqrstu^^XLj,z Kristen. Designed bv George Ryan for Galapagos Design Group 1994. ABCDE?GHIJKLMNO?QI^TlJVWXYZ abcdefghijKimnopqrstuvujxyz Langer. Designed Paul by Lang for Monotype in 1993. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Lemonade. Designed byTy Semaka for Image Club 1991. ABCDEFGHIJKLMM0PQRSTUVWXY2 aDcdefghijklmnopqpsxuvwxy2 Lightnin'. Designed by Alan Meeks for Letraset 1994. AftGVefStilcJtCLWr/OPQftSTUVWXXZ abcde^hi^klmnapqiituw/xyz 73 UNJOINED. MONOTONE Limehouse Script. Designed by Alan Meeks for Letraset 1986. flSCDfgtfimM0P$KSW(O)Cy2 abcie(^k(jHin,ftcp^rstavvotjz Mead. Designed by Steve Matteson for Monotype 1993. ^6D6F6HlJlcLMN0?QP-<DTL!VWKYZ- Nadianne. Designed by Aldo Novarese for Agfa 1990. ASCDEJQH^KCMNOPQKSTUVWXLjZ- abctlefghi'iklmiYiopqrstLAVwxLjz Papyrus. Designed by Chris Costedo for Letraset 1983. A5CDEPGHIJKLM NOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdergnijUmnopqrstuvwxLj; xuz Perky. Designed by Marshad Bohlin for EmDash 1994. ^XCXGVGXXXtL\\]]0XQ^XXX^1X: abed efgjdj V I iu.HjDp^rs+ulv/vjz 74 UNJOINED. MONOTONE Santafe. Designed by David Quay for Letraset in 1983. rfC9Q^q<jq<CWWV<PQK-2TUUlU9<lX'Z abcdtfighJj'Idmjwpcp&tujMipqifr Sassoon Primary. Designed by Rosemary Sassoon for Adobe Systems 1990. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcde/ghijklmaopqrstuvwxyz Signature. Designed by Greg Kolodziejzyk for Image Club in 1987. ASGDEFfflf'Jkl.MOPQ.RgntWXfZ (Xxx/^/^An^j^r^tuHiYmz Sinclair Script. Designed Pat Hickson for Red Rooster Typefounders by 1993. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefgkijklmnopqrstuuwxyz Squire. Designed by Michael Neugebauer for Letraset in 1980. ABCDEFGBDKLMNDPQRSTWVWXyZ abcdefgXuklmmpqrstiAvwxyz 75 UNJOINED. MONOTONE Studio Script. Designed by Pat Hickson for ITC. Studio Scppt Stylus. Designed by Dennis Pasternak for Galapagos Design Group in 1994. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Tannhauser. Designed by Alan Meeks for Letraset in 1988. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Tekton. Designed by David Siegel handlettering of West Coast and Jim Wasco for Adobe Systems in architect Frank Ching. ABCDEFGHiJKLMNOPaKSTU VWXYZ& abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Tomboy. Designed by Garrett Boge for Letter Perfect in 1989. A bCDEFQHIXKLMNOPQPSTMVWXyZ abcdefghi/klnwopqrstwwxyz 76 1989. Based on the UNJOINED. MONOTONE Van Dijk. Designed by Jan Van Dijk for Letraset 1982. AbCDLF(qrilXKLXANO?Qi\3TlAAWXiZ abcdefghijklfHopqrstuvwwfz Wiesbaden Swing. Designed bv Rosemarie Kloos-Rau for Linotype-Hed in 1992. x-xcxgxXl,xxixxx^j^oxq-rxxxxix)<:^^ 77 UNJOINED. INLINE Oberon. Designed by Phid Grimshaw for Letraset 1986. abcdefghijklmnopqrstiwwxyz 78 UNJOINED. MISCELLANEOUS BergeU. Designed by Thomas Finke for Letraset 1991. Xz^^X^dJX^^XrXrXXXGxyGjX ,\k7-l;"f^lvi[-kliMu Charcoal. Introduced Typefounders of by Keystone Type Foundry in 1899. Recut by Charles Broad Phoenix. Christmas Gift Script. Designed by Andy Hudinger for T[26] 1993. abc^^rM'^WrvOpqrsUYWXvjZ Handwrite Inkblot. Designed John Handy. Designed by Todd by Tim Brei forT[26] ippj. Donaldson for Letraset 1995. AZCXZTXU.\}lAl^HPrT>rZX^VASXi<JZ 79 of UNJOINED. MISCELLANEOUS Judy Finckel. Designed by Intecsas. :^3CVcF^HXXmXG?GXXXm\X^2: jbc,lctYr',iyk!mncp(/"ifUW-JX^ Kidtype. Designed bv Jake Lariat. Designed by and Scott Scarano for Monotype Helmuth Thorns for Type founders Marguerita. Designed by David <&&%$) Quay for Letraset of 1994. Phoenix in 1963. 1993. tW%H3C%M$y*@$ fi SfXsU XXi*X f% (%4&d6j^dujMmnc^p^r$tuvicxyz Party. Designed by Carol Kemp for Letraset 1993. XXzX&ETGffLJKLMXf%}Xi3TVVXXYZ ahcaejahXXnlb'Pcp^^K'^'?CLiz 80 UNJOINED. MISCELLANEOUS Roughedge. Robert J. howed. RJH Productions 1994. ABC^Hf^kIJ:<LMNO-PaRSTUYV'y.YZ abcdef3HijklTmop^r5tav^vxyz Scorpio. Designed by Jim Marcus forT[26] in 1993. ^^zmimme>n\^\;\vm Scotty. Designed by Scott Smith for T[26] in 1993. ABCDEFGrtDKLfANOPORSn/VV/XYZ docdeF^ki)klmhopqrSttiYwKyi Scratch. Designed by Greg Samata forT[26] in 1993. ABODBTO-HiJUUM NOPQRSTUVWXYZ Stop. Designed by Walter Hohnisch for Ludwig oc Mayer 1939. ABCOEFGH1JKLMNOPQRS TUVWXVZ 81 UNJOINED. MISCELLANEOUS Twang. Designed by Tim Donaldson for Letraset in 1994. A^CPeFCHrjrCL/MN0P^>MTUVVo(V2 Variator. Jim Marcus. T[26] 1993. 82 Endnotes for Chapter 5 1. Clarence P. Hornung. 2. Jeff Level, et al. Type, Monotype Publishing Corporation, Books, Publishing Version 5.0 1954). (New 1995). Mac McGrew. American Metal Typefaces pf the Twentieth Oak Knod 4. Z (New York: Penn The Complete Font Software Resourcefor Electronic York: Precision 3. Letteringfrom A to Century (New Castle, Delaware: 1993). Typography Ltd. The Monotype Index 5.0 (Chicago: Monotype Typography Ltd, 1995)- 5. Ron Eason and Sarah Rookledge. Rookledge's International Directory of Type Designers. A Biographical Handbook (New York: The Sarabande Press, 6. R.S. Hutchings. A Manual of Script Typefaces (London: 7. Stuart 8. W. Pincus 9. Lawrence Wadis. Modern Encyclopedia of Typefaces Booth, et al. Jaspert, 1994). Cory Adams Pen & Brush Lettering. A Book ofAlphabets (London: Studio et al. The Encyclopedia of Type Faces (London: Bath 1990). 83 1960-90 Ltd., 1965). Vista, 1993). ocMackay Press, 1983). (London: Lund Humphries, Chapter 6 Questionnaire Results The compiladon of the arrangement, ing, face whose perusal of the letters (but otten look large of European counterparts oped over hundreds for Later, in the The sparkling array of brush of the most writing wide variety Assyrian earlv great late and pen styles many most and typicady chapter of upon cursive writ for secondly, a type indicates of which also after the invention Louis Barbedor and of commerce, foremost bit to the John Benson Beatty Tobias Frere-Jones Robert SHmbach Hermann Zapf H of France masters of designers. A was the of script letter by great freedom project, therefore, of whom responded: of print development to the evolution of the script script type be and the coundess copybooks of of which are characterized aspects of this thesis devel must also instructions for writing beautifully. The days Non- more and more writing. letter England that script the quicker pen motions Persian letterforms of the script brush. a pen or a clearly forms in periods added their Richard based sixteenth-century writing masters, designers contributing interesting designers, five foregoing Edward Cocker of sodcit the opinions of some of today's ten type the manuals of the England's confirm the author's opinion that a typeface production caded examples and provided our own be, first, writing tool, further development during find in its see increase in book and ornamental Today we One We the 1600s, masters such as inspired with a miscedaneous section of years. the round-hand style penmanship designers derive from historic models, and, always) may be found in influencing produced their forms. not resist efforts at categorization. credited classification of those specimens into a sensible are that it must being written of medieval scribes when the ing. specimens, the face of a script letterrorms that retains the A of and the contacts with contemporary type features the essential catalog Conclusions and with a of style.1 opportunity to questionnaire was sent to Their i. responses to the questionnaire How do you describe Benson 'A type have been collected and organized as fodows: typeface? a script face based writing, dgated upon cursive vernacular models. or Ideady of pen-written origin, not, whose letter forms derive from scripts can also be based upon brush- forms." written "I Beatty from range by the a copy both consider the a typeface. of script if have flourished lettering of architects Though Slimbach ''Any Zapf "Any design variety of present so large typeface that retains the based a script designs, but can because as to be useless. leave carry bear face look Renaissance. through the ages. o is a script when it 'cursive', I My definition o I translated to consider them a form the imprint of the making a classification that a typeface whose opposed to drawn) could be extremely difficult, primary design source caded a tool." of handwriting or can contain being written with a writing the other a caldgraphic many ingredients also make classification On say be the name at once would (as the elaborate control exhibited has handwriting o as replication can forms." on defining any face with movement would forms and engineers to ingredients or cadigraphed handwriting. The handwriting to the swash elements appear to is handwritten on in each period since the several typefaces typeface contains many summarize, based connected and unconnected if not impossible. Given that, I To anv ot verv rapid and coarse penmen that includes Frere-Jones 'A be consider a script typeface to at once. difficult. These handwritten influence hand, picking the category small and onlv the isolated. 3^ This adows for a wonderful characteristics should always as a script would make the faces that direcdy be category mimic the hand's 2. What inspired you to design admired, Benson or a script i.e., your own writing or lettering, "My interest centers on the overad patterns and textured surfaces of hand-lettered Cursive "Of my by pages. a Ad cdent, of exemplar you my comments are job, although by the in rooted letter form hang with handwriting is needed of not a by people I did because the wav way to make a ready script, that come don't find "Part of a parody of was requested General Menou, in any the be is one of the most subjective many elements of design controded so that each After combination. every background and dedberately sloppy and every ad that stydsh inconsistent hand of typographic conventions. was an experiment in I hadn't sources. Cafeteria, basic forms 'livening to make the revival of Reiner only from handwritten Script because seen elsewhere. They are not with the original I try not to necessarily bad, I just interesting." them particularly my background is in scripts which are the types, how which then must a mix of calligraphic and typographic attitudes do faces of my opinion that type ad of the others judged hand-drawn detads. I decided had inspired Yale Script job." was a good it's a translation of great Frere-fones "I designed Dolores rendering My hope textures. typographic typefaces, strongly results are then bent. Tough in A full understanding element can work, the lively of such and in Egypt. officers their controls over each disparate hand-written forms." vitality and the other was of ad the appded -arts. ply scripts produce the most two ventures into script Napoleon's Slimbach historic something else? was to capture some of this Beatty a basis calligraphy. I have also an appreciation of of our modern roman and Poetica, Caflisch Script, and Sanvito, I italic typefaces. Renaissance With my wanted to recognize certain classic script writing types." styles as vital and Zapf The Trying contemporary "As a commission to the face should go. sources of inspiration design a new Normady the Script you get precise instructions in which directions inspiration is for twentieth-century cadigraphers and type to capture particular styles and patterns, either 86 by designers vary specific instructions or because greatly. of one's own interests and script j. faces Do you are dvely think forms is them into typographic turning difficult, but The best also rewarding. and contemporary. script types are becoming more popular? "Yes." Benson "I bedeve Beatty convey script typefaces have had always the impression of the personal touch, centage of the usage of script typefaces faces appears that script the larger are has fodowing a regular the imprint probably per If it being used more often in recent years, it should be considered number of unstudied and They are human hand. The of a never varied much through the years. uncaring users that type usage and are compeded in their use of typefaces style. those who want to right in their choices because have little understanding only by frivodty of the current most of what of typeset is they substance." without Frere-Jones "I think overtly they are, but only rebellious or the ones that use the script environment to make 'ugly'. Emigre's but because it's different. I think Making a script face popularity. forms Remedy didn't become popular because it's that's anything that's different these different from any days other is will a enjoy that script, some an easier task than, face." say, a ready unique old style text "They have Slimbach a flood of always quickly the advent of been made digital around in informal auto-trace the more script formal varieties, faces (some good, programs, it adows many whereas today there some not so good). short cuts in the is With way of design." alphabet "They are Zapf already very popular. For a personal touch in many ads is wanted in contrary to san-serif Type designers popular, digital but agree scripts are auto-trace that script faces have been slowly gaining programs, does improving technology which not around more and more make necessarily it easier mean 87 for centuries and popularity due in part have to the to turn an alphabet into a better designs. always been availability font. of However, 4- Ifyes> " it because of easily available and powerful software design tools, cultural reasons , or something; else ? I don't Benson "Yes, Beatty "Since my of yes. know." answer was no, large lead-type houses I wid use this space to suggest that prior to the 1950s show a fairly investigating consistent number of script The types compared with the roman and itadcs of various weights. faces developed script after the 1950s the exuberance always begin found in Electronic same scatter-shot manner and with peevish and very exactly perishable excretions influx of the careless the short-dved photo-type technology before a new bring pressure for control. to in types are houses the rigors of prove caded only understanding currendy being generated the same result currently the catalogs in the a short-dved period of stydsh but fairly soon to be caded Frere-Jones "To pick up from otherwise) the last question, are part of the central cause is latest trend. are Slimbach entirely "As mentioned, but not find as a reaction to an different, faces Although today's cold and industrial grungy this trend has designers helping to looking script faces Zapf New world script very at work as wed. fosters At least a number of causes, one to be a satisfying res he found inhuman. While the the results are it thinking much the same easier to get an alphabet on the make a good design. Also, modern personalties than ever computer, display typography before and spontaneous- this." technical possibdities is very or are a natural part of "The software (script inhuman. William Morris founded typographers' encompasses more of the appearance thoughts." the software tools make necessarily that present Designers find grungy typography the medium. ponse to the machine that some Kelmscott Press the much a today factor in two of the the together with special software makes the use of a popularity respondents bedeve of script faces today, but other that the introduction of new a period of experimentation with results that are not always pleasing. forces are technology 5- To what degree do you think designers faces to use script "Most designers, in advertising Benson pure "I'm Beatty design by than at least, explore seem the novelty of script designer and the You or artist. least makes good certainly must designers of type legibility. It is less faces for afraid that this questionnaire rings true have difficult to Frere-Jones "This is a designers either difficult who are one to answer, case, though, I "Legibdity comes think that I think it "I Zapf lack it the more an not a is tested. formality expressions rather quadty Most, issue being used in eye-catching by never that the kind of designer able do ripple effects or designers for know to been painting, writing, qualities. and not now things that legibility and dst maker, it's not clear if you are most script not describe to thinking uses script but Usts are a masterpiece. playing who are best what contribute, that rules and a about the type using faces to them. In investigate faces aren't ad that formal or legible. design." of alphabet legibdity with script faces for they be accurately gauged, for it is if not ad script typefaces were of romans and than neither formadty and that can by of design ? and unique expression see no extra reason to test Legibdity is which is with because of list the scripts, or the graphic making legibdity, but personadty Slimbach description have and alphabet issues by the professional read enough the variables are so numerous and so affected not easier to make than is the motivated and their through the ages not too issues oflegibility some cases, designed to relative be used 89 legibdity. for text to the conditions under for they lack legibdity. Scripts to explore issues of are not used display setting. They are used to promote 6. What do Benson you is think "Roger [sic] the script Beatty "Again, to dst the script face Excoffon's Mistral, brought faces. It digital pre-dates the today out and why? in 1953, revolution this question assumes that a current style because it makers that makes them based innovative most on style- sculpture, feel as changes if they frequently doing were and gives the music-do not last because their structural elements of substance. why not start a dst You dst Style is maker constructive. something very important something Business of types that wid bent Lve to do is often Lasting art of ad kinds-painting, of their superficial style seem of decades." important. things that wid soon go out of fashion. dterature, or other so by several is innovative remains the most on assembdng through the a but because dst of swinging of something of the pen dulum." Frere-Jones "I'd find it hard although it's technicady with elegance you this here to pick one, so don't out of the often are a few category, it combines even in text. That's a because if the designer has done it correctly, nobody Slimbach "I would dke readable at retaining tual Zapf the spontaneity It is and vitadty chose a by Jovica favorite remarkably different. These typeface includes: according Mistral an unreleased version of by wid Caflisch Script 90 It which for is legible and Caflisch's) by contains according adowing new concept many to the order variation contex in which in faces." script to their personal opinion, ad of which are Roger Caflisch Script Jovica Veljovic. calligraphy ignored, that often goes of the original model. Veljovic. A and rough, choppy structure, running hand (Max also a multiple master typeface "ExPonto designed Fabnzio Schiavi, an unreleased version of feat and variant characters that are substituted are typed. Each designer it is text sizes and simulates a modern dgatures they to think typography find. FF Steel, despite its very face is remarkably legible, Triplex Itadc, that come to mind: Excoffon, Triplex Itadc, FF Steel by by Robert Slimbach and ExPonto by Conclusions This project with type began few it was dates from books difficult when they tem The author would large been difficult. Along with the and dke number of script always discover were first the In the catalogs, The produced. of script faces, their origins and the typefaces and their wide foregoing available are majority catalog which Association scheme may is of script of not of developed done based classification was variety Such software easier to experiment with and create script is for as digital form faces, infor Internet. In each typeface on the author's a type classification sys Font Information Interchange. satisfy everybody; because structure, classifying of the faces has script presented as one solution. author conducted a review of the actual type now avadable. in magazines and through the foundries and to stress that this classification classification, the through personal contacts Especially helpful was characteristics. the history and order to create the designers Archie Provan for However, digital technology become to by Professor developed be gathered; and specimen face's design analysis of each script journals books, next objective was to create a classification system are not available anymore. mation was obtained many cases, The script typefaces as could quite a in research purpose was to understand the throughout the years. many different and the background designers. The development today, but with design software now so powerful and versatile that typefaces, thereby providing graphic it has designers with an enormous repertoire of styles to use. One of the most temporary of script quent type important designers parts of the project was to estabdsh contact with a and obtain their personal opinions on the faces. A questionnaire, described in responses were designers' responses only because compiled. leads chapter The information 6, development was sent to each obtained from designer the initial to a clear conclusion: script types continue to grow typographers are always looking for fresh new styles, group and and of con popularity their subse and the in popularity, not research but because digital technology makes script typefaces easier to create. In a world now obsessed with anachronism, a reminder of beauty. Our increasing days redance wonders of technology, a script type when the simplest tools were used on the keyboard 9i almost seems to create to be an handwriting of great and the word processor promises to make any handwriting an endangered very technology responsible which for its species, has been preservation and therefore responsible in another for especially the form! 92 decline precious to us. of the How ironic that the handwritten document is also Endnotes for Chapter 6 i. Raymond A. Ballinger. Corporation, 1952), Lettering Art in Modern Use (New York: Reinhold 59. 93 Pubdshing Chapter 7 Recommendations When a designer type author and presented Because present of their catalog, in creates more than one chapter script shapes, it seems contain the same 5 in faces that when famdiar look. It is face, this project, are hard a type Suggestions for and according they usuady to classify designer possible that but between Further the designers tend to fad they based by the under the same category. with the research were ad done done to prepare the typeface, on a specific they inspiration, they have been designed all but with a long designers tend them. research can to create their to the classification creates more than a single that similar shape seems to appear one after the other even period Study faces be done to with the same determine if there is a specific reason look. An investigation into to obtain personal opinions. 94 why this would type involve interviews with Appendix Index of i Typefaces Appendix Adagio (Pg. Adine I Bendigo (Pg. +i) Kernberg Script Admiral Script (Pg. Adscript (Pg. (Pg. Bernhard Cursive 35) Agitator (Pg. (Pg. Alys (Pg. Bible Script (Pg. 55) Bickley Blueprint (Pg. 55) Amanda (Pg. Amazone (Pg. American Script (Pg. Ariadne (Pg. Artscript (Pg. Badoon (Pg. 30) 56) Bank Script (Pg. Bazaar (Pg. 42) 58) Caldgraphic 421 Cantate (Pg. 31) Caprice (Pg. 48) Cartoon (Pg. 31) 58) (Pg. 53) 58) Cascade Script (Pg. 56) Becka Script (Pg. Cadban (Pg. 40) Cancellaresca Script (Pg. 30) 56) Balzano (Pg. 48) Caflish Script (Pg. (Pg. 56) 57) 58) Cabarga Cursiva (Pg. Baltimore Script (Pg. Balzac (Pg. 36) Byron (Pg. 70) Balmoral (Pg. Brush Script (Pg. Burgund (Pg. 41) 47) Ashley Script 58) Budetin Script (Pg. 30) 48) 42) Script (Pg. Brody 70) 56) Arkona (Pg. 31) Bouwsma Script (Pg. 30) 41) Aristocrat (Pg. Arriba (Pg. 70) Boulevard (Pg. 30) Archi-text (Pg. 36) Bordeaux Script (Pg. 47) 41) 57) Bond Script (Pg. 47) Cataneo (Pg. 57) 96 53) 57) Madonna (Pg. 53) Script (Pg. Biffo Script (Pg. 55) Alhambra (Pg. or Bernhard Tango (Pg. 55) 55) Alexia (Pg. 79) Bernhard Hand-Brush Script (Pg. 47) Advertisers Upright Script (Pg. Alexa Bergell (Pg. 47) 57) 59) 42) 41) Challenge Bold Champion (Pg. Charcoal (Pg. Charme (Pg. (Pg. 70) Farfell (Pg. 71) Fine Hand (Pg. 60) 59) Flamme (Pg. 6r) 79) Flash (Pg. 36) Choc (Pg.59) 72) Flex (Pg. 61) Christmas Gift Script (Pg. Florentine Cursive (Pg. 79) Cigogna (Pg.59) Florens (Pg. Cividte (Pg. Flondian Script (Pg. 52) Comic book (Pg. Comicbook (Pg. Fontoon (Pg. 71) Commercial Script (Pg. Compdment (Pg. Coronet (Pg. Corsiva (Pg. Derby Freestyle Script (Pg. 61) 48) French Plate Script (Pg. French Script (Pg. 59) 35) Gando Ronde (Pg. Dom Casual (Pg. Gidies Gothic (Pg. 71) Graphite (Pg. 71) Dorchester Script (Pg. 49) 72) 72) Grayda (Pg. 62) 48) Greyton Script (Pg. Dynamik (Pg. 60) Eaglefeather (Pg. 35) Georgian Cursive (Pg. 49) Doodle (Pg. 35) Galahad (Pg. 62) 31) Diskus (Pg. 43) Fox (Pg. 61) 31) (Pg. 60) Diane (Pg. 72) Forte (Pg. 61) 42) Demian (Pg. 43) 49) Formal Script (Pg. 31) 59) Copperplate bold (Pg. 53) Fluidium (Pg. -o) 43) Grove Script (Pg. 71) 40) 72) Handwrite Inkblot (Pg. Elan (Pg.38) Elegance (Pg. 36) Hauser Script (Pg. 62) El Greco (Pg. 42) Helinda Rook (Pg. Eld (Pg. 60) Holla (Pg. 62) ExPonto Hurry Express (Pg. 60) Indy 97 (Pg. 73) Italic (Pg. 62) 32) 79) Inscription (Pg. Mayfair Cursive (Pg. 40) Invitation Script (Pg. Isadora (Pg. John Mead (Pg.74) 32) 32) Handy (Pg. 79) Jowa Script (Pg. 62) Judy Juliet (Pg. Medial Script (Pg. 38) Medici Script (Pg. 44) Mistral (Pg. Finckel (Pg. 80) Juliana (Pg. 36) Murray Hid (Pg. Nadianne (Pg. 53) 49) 74) Nevison Casual Script (Pg. 64) 32) Kaufmann Script (Pg. New Berodna (Pg. 64) 38) Keynote (Pg. 63) Nova Script (Pg. Kidtype (Pg. 80) Nuptial Script (Pg. Konzept (Pg. 63) Oberon (Pg. Kristen (Pg. Oxford (Pg.54) 73) Kiinstler Script (Pg. Langer (Pg. 44) Palace Script (Pg. 32) Palomba (Pg. 64) Laser (Pg. 63) Papageno (Pg. 64) Papyrus (Pg.74) 43) Lemonade (Pg. Park Avenue (Pg. 73) Parkway (Pg. 43) Lightnin' 32) Palette (Pg. 64) 73) LeGriffe (Pg. 44) 78) Lariat (Pg. 80) Liberty 44) Party (Pg. 73) Limehouse Script (Pg. Linoscript (Pg. 50) (Pg. 80) Pendry 35) Lydian Cursive (Pg. Script (Pg. Pedcan (Pg. 74) 50) 54) Script (Pg. 64) Pepita (Pg. 65) 49) Madbu (Pg. 63) Perky Mandate (Pg. Petra (Pg. 38) (Pg.74) 50) Marguenta (Pg. 80) Piranesi Italic (Pg. Marigold (Pg. Poetica (Pg.54) 54) 44) Matura (Pg. 63) Polo (Pg. 65) Maxime (Pg. 63) Pompeian Cursive (Pg. 9S 45) Poppl-residenz (Pg. Shelley Andante 45) Present Script (Pg. 65) Shelley Volante Prima (Pg. 65) Sho (Pg. 67) Pnstina (Pg. 65) Signature (Pg. Pnvat (Pg. 65) Slogan (Pg. Quid Script (Pg. Rage Italic (Pg. (Pg. 33) 75) 37) Script (Pg. Sloop 45) (Pg. 33) 34) Smudger (Pg. 67) 37) Raleigh Cursive (Pg. Sned Rounhand (Pg. 50) 34) Rapier (Pg. 66) Spring Reiner Black (Pg. 66) Squire (Pg. Reiner Script (Pg. 66) Stationers Semiscript (Pg. Repro Script (Pg. Sterdng Rondine (Pg. 37) Stop 50) (Pg. 68) 75) Cursive (Pg. Studio Script (Pg. Roundhand (Pg. 66) Style Script (Pg. Ru'ach (Pg. 66) Stylus (Pg. Script (Pg. 67) Sackers EngHsh Script (Pg. Sackers Itadan Script (Pg. 51) 76) 39) Tannhauser (Pg. 76) Tekton (Pg. 33) 76) Bold (Pg. Swing Ruzicka Freehand (Pg. 67) 76) Temple Script (Pg. 33) 51) (Pg. 81) Roughedge (Pg. 81) Ruling 45) 51) Salto (Pg. 67) Thompson Quidscript (Pg. Santafe (Pg. 75) Tiger Sanvito (Pg. 54) Tiranti (Pg. Sassoon Primary Savoye (Pg. Tomboy (Pg. 75) (Pg. 68) 46) (Pg. 76) Trafton Script (Pg. 51) Scorpio (Pg. 81) Scotty Rag (Pg. 81) Trophy Oblique (Pg. 68) Twang (Pg. 82) Scratch (Pg. 81) Typo Upright (Pg. Signal (Pg. Ulyses (Pg. 68) 38) Shelley Allegro Van Dijk (Pg. (Pg. 33) 99 51) 77) 35) 45) Vanator (Pg. 82) Veltro (Pg.39) Venture (Pg. 68) Vertical Writing Virtuosa (Pg. (Pg. 39) 46) Visigoth (Pg. 69) Vivaldi (Pg. 46) Vladimir Script (Pg. 37) Volante (Pg. 68) Wave (Pg. 69) Wedding Wendy Plate Script (Pg. (Pg.39) Wiesbaden Swing Yorkshire (Pg. Young 35) (Pg. 77) 34) Baroque (Pg. Youthdne (Pg. 34) 34) Zapf Civdite (Pg. 52) 100 Appendix Index of n Designers Appendix n Agfa Staff Benton, Morris Fuder Flondian Script (Pg. Hednda Rook (Pg. 35) x<\dscnpt (Pg. Civdite (Pg. 52) Sackers English Script (Pg. Commercial Script Sackers Itadan Script Linoscript (Typo Upright) (Pg. Altman, Mark 67)' Ruzicka Freehand American Script Bond Script (Pg. 31) (Pg. 38) Typo Upright (Pg. Bernhard Cursive or Bernhard Tango (Pg. Bertieri, Raffaedo Rondine 35) (Pg. 50) Blackman, Alan Andrich, Vladimir Vladimir Script (Pg. 51) Bernhard Hand-Brush Script (Pg. 30) Medial Script 62)" Galahad (Pg. Advertisers Upright Script (Pg. Boehland, Johannes Barnhart Brothers & Spindler Balzac (Pg. 55) (Pg. Boge, Garrett Baker, Arthur Florens (Pg. (Pg. 68)' (Pg. Oxford (Pg. Spring Pedcan (Pg. Tomboy (Pg. Archi-text 68)" Obdque (Pg. Hurry Benson, John Perky (Pg.55)- Alexa Balzano (Pg. Cadban (Pg. (Pg. Bofdin, Marshad Bartuska, Frank Trophy (Pg. Wendy 69)' Visigoth (Pg. Bernhard, Lucian (Pg. American Type Founders Marigold Cursive Sterling (Pg. (Pg. (Pg. (Pg. Bohn, Hans Kiinstler Script 102 (Pg. Madonna (Pg. 57) (Pg. 41) Bouwsma, Philip Alexia Cooper, Oswald (Pg. Pompeian Cursive Bouwsma Script Juliana Boston (Pg. (Pg. Papyrus (Pg. 39) Dom Casual Bradley, Richard Fine Hand (Pg. John (Pg. Riptide Brody Script (Pg. (Pg. Ulyses (Pg. 68)' (Pg. 55) Evans, Jean Elli (Pg. (Pg. 50) 6o)' (Pg. Excoffon, Roger Cabarga, Lesde Choc Cabarga Cursiva Diane (Pg. Matthew (Pg. (Pg. Finke, Thomas (Pg. Berged (Pg. Shedey Adegro Font (Pg. Shedey Andante Company (Pg. Forster, Tony (Pg. Sned Roundhand (Pg. Yorkshire (Pg. Shedey Volante 31) (Pg.36)" Mistral Cascade Script Tiranti (Pg. (Pg. Frere-Jones, Tobias Chaisson, Ann 67)' Ruzicka Freehand Reiner Script (Pg. Chapped, Warren Lvdian Cursive Twang Agitator (Pg. 59) Gando Ronde (Pg. Eickhoff, Wolfgang Butti, Adesandro Carter, 66)' Ru'ach 82)' (Pg. Broderson, Harold Rondine (Pg. Handy 60)' Handwrite Inkblot Fluidium (Pg. Donaldson, Timothy Brei, Todd Cigogna (Pg. Dombrezian, Peter Writing Bible Script (Pg. 45) Costedo, Chris Foundry Vertical Bruce (Pg. 103 66)' (Pg. Gaunt, Sidney Clayde Hirt, Emd French Plate Script (Pg. Parkway 35) Stationers Semiscript (Pg. 45) Plate Script (Pg. 35) Wedding Gillies, William Elegance Salto (Pg. (Pg. 81)' Isadora (Pg. Howed, Robert J. 81)' Roughedge (Pg. Indy Itadc 62)' (Pg. 62)' Hauser Script (Pg. Hullinger, Andy Christmas Gift Script Havindon, Ashley Ashley Script (Pg. Hughes, Charles Hauser, George (Pg. Gando Ronde Inland Type (Pg. 6s) (Pg. Foundry Invitation Script Hess, Sol Artscript Adine (Pg. Kernberg Script 80)' Judy Finckel (Pg. Studio Script (Pg. Intecsas Staff Hickson, Pat Sinclair Script 66)" Roundhand (Pg. 51) Grove Script (Pg. 32) Ihlenburg, Herman (Pg. 41) Style Script (Pg. Hunziker, Hans-Jorg Hermersdorf, Martin Byron (Pg. 65)" Becka Script Alys Kris Holmes, David Prima (Pg. 60) (Pg. Stop (Pg. Pnstina Harris, 67)' (Pg. Express Braganza Oberon (Pg. 36) Hohnisch, Walter (Pg. Bendigo 50) (Pg. 67) Sho Grimshaw, Phd Arriba (Pg. Hoefer, Karlgeorg S. Gillies Gothic Script (Pg. Kaufmann, Max Richard (Pg. Balloon (Pg. (Pg. Kaufmann (Pg. 104 (Pg. (Pg. Kemp, Carol Lubac, Andre-Michael So)" Party (Pg. Le Griffe Kent, Nicholas D. Comicbook Macagba, Jonathan (Pg. Doodle Keystone Type Foundry Budetin Script Charcoal (Pg. 58) (Pg. (Pg. 41) Arkona (Pg. 47) Wiesbaden Swing Murray Hid (Pg. Mead (Pg. (Pg. (Pg. (Pg. 63)" Madbu (Pg. Savoye (Pg. (Pg. Middleton, Robert Hunter Admiral Script (Pg. 59) Coronet Formal Script Mandate (Pg. (Pg. Wave (Pg. 105 (Pg. 43) (Pg. Mayfair Cursive (Pg. 47) (Pg. Florentine Cursive 42) Richard Script (Pg. Tannhauser (Pg. 60) (Pg. (Pg. Limehouse Script (Pg. Champion (Pg. (Pg. Lightnin' (Pg. Lange, Gunter Gerhard Sloop (Pg. 61)' Inscription (Pg. Alhambra Script Flamme Lang, Paul El Greco (Pg. (Pg.74)" Cancedaresca Script Comic Book Boulevard (Pg. Steve Bickley Kolodziejzyk, Greg Signature (Pg. Meeks, Alan (Pg. 62) Cataneo 82)' Blueprint Rudolf Lipton, (Pg. Matteson, Klumpp, EmdJ. Derby Vanator Compliment Kloos-Rau, Rosemarie Langer (Pg. Charme Adagio Hoda 81)' Scorpio Matheis, Helmut Klauss, Karl Koch, (Pg. Marcus, Jim (Pg. 79) Quid Script (Pg. (Pg. 69) (Pg. 44) Mohring, Hans Post, Herbert (Pg.38)' 60)' Elan Dynamik Monotype Staff (Pg. Pott, Gottfried (Pg.57)- 67)' Biffo Rudng Dorchester Script Swing Bold Script (Pg. Quay> David (Pg. Bordeaux Script (Pg. (Pg. 80)' Temple Script (Pg. Marguenta 51) Santa Fe Muden, Jerry Repro Script (Pg. (Pg. (Pg. Rebhuhn, W. 37) 60" Nebiolo Type Veltro Fox Foundry (Pg. Reiner, Imre (Pg. 39) Bazaar Neugebauer, Michael (Pg. 63)" Squire Matura (Pg. (Pg. 65)" Pepita Nevison, T Nevison Casual Script 64)' (Pg. (Pg. Reiner Black (Pg. 66) Reiner Script (Pg. 66)' Novarese, Aldo Cigogna Reissberger, Carl (Pg. 59) 61)' Judet (Pg. Nadianne Forte 32) (Pg. Rdey, Frank H. (Pg. 62)' Slogan Grayda (Pg. yp Rubin, Noel Pasternak, Dennds Farfed (Pg.76)- Stylus (Pg. Ryan, George Pauser, Heinrich Petra (Pg. Kristen (Pg. 50) (Pg. Sadwey, Friedrich Karl Peters, Fritz 65)' Vivaldi Present Script (Pg. Salter, George Pohl, Carl Polo Poppl, (Pg. Flex (Pg. 65) (Pg. 6:) Samata, Greg Friedrich 81)' Poppl-Residenz Scratch (Pg. 106 (Pg. Saqua, Jacquedne Cataneo Sdmbach, Robert Caflisch Script (Pg. Poetica Sassoon, Rosemary Sassoon Primary Sanvito (Pg. 75) Saunders, Patricia Corsiva (Pg. Smith, Andrew 67)' Smudger (Pg. (Pg. Smit, Leonard Scarano, Jane 80)' Kidtype (Pg. (Pg.54)' Amazone (Pg. Smith, Scarano, Scott H. D. (Pg. Robert E. (Pg. Brush Script (Pg. Schneidler, Peter Park Avenue (Pg. 80)' Kidtype Maxime Smith, Scott (Pg. 63) 81)' Scotty Schraubstadter, Wildam French Script Sniffin,WmardT (Pg. 35) Keynote Schwekendiek, Gerhard Greyton Script Liberty (Pg. Lemonade Amanda (Pg. Eaglefeather Youthdne (Pg. Aristocrat 47) (Pg. (Pg. (Pg. 34) (Pg. 30) Thompson, Samuel Winfield (Tommy) Siercke, J. J. Pnvat Foundry Stevens, Donald (Pg. (Pg. Cantante (Pg. Palace Script David Tekton (Pg. 50) Copperplate bold (Pg.72) Graphite (Pg. Stephenson Blake Type Nuptial Script Siegel, (Pg. Raleigh Cursive (Pg. Edwin Flash (Pg. 63) Piranesi Itadc Semaka, Ty Shaar, (Pg. Baltimore Script (Pg. 31) (Pg. 30) Thompson Quillscnpt (Pg. 65) 107 (Pg. 45) Thorns, Helmuth Lariat Wasco, Jim (Pg. 80) Tekton Toriumi-Lawrence, Carol Eaglefeather Weber, (Pg. Signal Trafton Script or Quick (Pg. 51) (Pg.38) West, James Trenholm, George F Bank Script Georgian Cursive Nova Script (Pg. Burgund Caprice Trump, Georg Diskus (Pg. 421 (Pg. 31) Wilke, Martin 49) (Pg. 44) Calligraphic (Pg. 64) Wege, W. (Pg. Palomba Richard Papageno Trafton, Howard Allen Cartoon (Pg. (Pg. 48) 48) (Pg. Konzept (Pg. 64) (Pg. (Pg. 63) 64)' Van New Berodna Dick, Jan Demian Palette (Pg. Van Dijk Young, (Pg. 77y (Pg. 64) Donald Young Baroque Veljovic, Jovica (Pg. 34) Zafarana, Steve ExPonto Fontoon Viner, John (Pg. Rag (Pg. Zapf, Hermann 68)' Tiger (Pg. Medici Script Wagner, J. Jowa Script Venture (Pg. 62) Virtuosa Wait, Martin Balmoral ChadengeBold (Pg. Freestyle Script (Pg. Zapf von Pendry Script Rapier (Pg. (Pg. 52) (Pg. Zwingelberg, Ron 63)' (Pg. (Pg. Hesse, Gudrun Ariadne 61)' Laser (Pg. 68) Zapf Cividte (Pg. (Pg. Rage Itadc 64)' (Pg. (Pg. 66)" " AVAILABLE IN DIGITAL FORM. 108 Appendix Index of in Type Foundries Appendix The following in dst of type foundries is mentioned throughout the project. Adobe Systems Inland Type Agfa Staff Intecsas Staff Alpha Omega Typography Intertype Alphabets Incorporation ITC International Typeface Corporation Amsterdam Type Keystone Type Foundry ATF American Type Founders Foundry Kdngspor Company BB&S Barnhart Brothers 8c Spindler Letraset Baltimore Type Letter Perfect and Composition Ludlow Typograph Corporation Bauer Type Boston Monotype Staff Foundry Nebiolo Type Foundry Foundry Foundry Eisner & Flake OHve EmDash Red Rooster Type EMono Engdsh Monotype RJH Productions Font Bureau Stempel Type Font Foundry Foundry Stephenson Blake Company Company Galapagos Design Company Ludwig & Mayer Foundry Berthold Type Foundry TFR Type Founders Group Gensch & Heyse T[26] Handcrafted Fonts Vanguard Media Image Club Weber Type no Foundry of Phoenix Bibliography Selected Avrin, Leila. Scribes, Scripts and (Chicago: American Library Baldnger, Raymond A. Blunt, Wilfrid. Bibliography Books. The Book Arts from Association, the Renaissance 1991). Lettering Art in Modern The Sweet Roman Hand. Antiquity to 500 Use (Reinhold Publishing Corporation, Years ofItalic Cursive Script (London: James 1952). Barne, 1952). Dreyfus. John. "Script into Type," The Penrose Annual Drucker, Johanna The Alphabetic Labyrinth. The Letters 50 in (1956). History and Imagination (London: Thames 8c Hudson Ltd, 1995) Fairbank, Alfred. A Book of Scripts Font Bureau. Type Specimens Harvard, Stephen. Co. Inc., (Baltimore, Maryland: Penguin Books, (Boston, Massachusetts: The Font Bureau, Inc., 1995). An Italic Copybook. The Cataneo Manuscript (New York: Tapdnger Pubdshing 1981). Heder, Steven. "Signature Styles," Upper and Lowercase 21 (Fad 1994). Holme, C. G. Lettering of To-day (New York Studio Pubdcations Inc., Hornung, Clarence Hutchings, R.S. P. Letteringfrom A to Z (New York Penn A Manual of Script Typefaces (London: Jaspert, W. Pincus, Kapr, Albert. 1968). et al. Pubdshing Corporation, 1954). Cory Adams ccMackay The Encyclopedia of Type Faces (London: Bath The Art of Lettering. The History, Anatomy, 1949). Press, and Aesthetics Ltd., 1965). 1983). of the Roman Letterforms (Munich: K.G. Saur, 1983) Lawson, Alexander. Anatomy of a Leach, Mortimer. Letter Design in Typeface (Boston: David R. the Godine, 1990). Graphic Arts (New York: Reinhold Pubdshing Corporation, i960). Level, Jeff, et al. York: Precision Lindegren, Erik The Complete Font Software Resourcefor Electronic Type, Publishing Version 5.0 (New 1995). ABC of Lettering and Printing Types 1976). 112 (Sweden: Lindegrens Boktrycken AB, McGrew, Mac. American Metal Typefaces of the Twentieth Knod Book, Stanley, and Regarding Script Types, " Print (Cambridge: Cambridge Tommy. Script Van der Ploeg, Jan. "Script Types" Selected Essays Letteringfor Artists Types," on University Press, Delaware: Oak (New York: Press of Ars Print % the History of Letter-forms in Manuscript 1981). (New York: Dover Pubdcations, Inc.). (April-May 1954). Wotzkow, Helm. The Art of Lettering. Its .Mastery Inc., Castle, 1925). Monson. "On Script Thompson, (New 1993). McMurtrie, Douglas C. "A Note Typographica, Century and Practice (New York: Dover Pubdcations, 1967). Wallis, Lawrence. Modern Encyclopedia of Typefaces 113 1960-90 (London: Lund Humphries, 1990).