A Brief History of Typography: Abcdefg Hijklmn Opqrst Uvwxyz Abcdefghi Jklmnopq Rstuvwxyz
A Brief History of Typography: Abcdefg Hijklmn Opqrst Uvwxyz Abcdefghi Jklmnopq Rstuvwxyz
letter type faces survive to this day, they are used seldom and
A B C D E F G sparingly, because they are still hard to read, especially the
H I J K L M N capital letters.
O P Q R S T
U V W X Y Z A New Look: Almost as early,
craftsmen elsewhere in Europe began to
a b c d e f g h i design a new style of al-phabet. The earli-
est was designed in 1470 by Nicolas Jenson, a
j k l m n o p q French printer who lived in Italy. His type face
was pat-terned after letters carved by Roman
r s t u v w x y z sculptors on monuments from the days of the
Above is a classic Roman empire such as the Arch of Constantine and a
alphabet. Shown below is 125 foot tall marble column erected 114 A. D.
a section of the 656 foot long Trajan. Both monuments survive to this day.
relief sculpture that spirals its
way to the top of the Column The Romans, ever conscious of balance and harmony, de-
of Trajan. The sculpture details cided that letters needed small extensions at the tops and bot-
the emperors victorious battles toms of strokes to give the letters stability. These extensions
against the ancient inhabitants
were called serifs.
of Romania.
From that time until the mid-1700s, Roman typefaces
became the standard in most of Europe. Prominent type
designers of the period included Claud Garramond (French),
William Caslon and John Baskerville (English), and
Giambattista Bodoni (Italian). The designs bearing their
names continue to be the foundation of serif typeface
design and remain popular today.
points per inch. The inch at that time, however, was based on the
length of the first knuckle on the King's thumb. If a new king had a
longer or shorter thumb Louis XV, it was back to square one.
About 50 years later, another French type designer, Didot, re-
fined the system by basing it on the legal foot measure which was
permanently standardized by that time. The Fournier/Didot System
remains the standard for type measurement in most of Europe.