Clarendon font started off as a design exercise to create a font that could highlight text within normal type. this was almost always done by using italics, and Clarendon is nominally associated as the bold face – as in it was designed to look nice along with standard Times fonts.
Although, there were other typefaces with a similar “look” appearing at earlier dates, the Clarendon font seems to be most appropriately associated with an origin date of 1845, and by a Robert Besley of Fann St. Foundary. Although, Besley went on to gain further fame in later years as a Mayor of London
he even went on to patent the font, marking the first patant of a typeface, although this particular hold lasted for only 3 years. But during this short time frame, the Clarendon font became very popular, and once the property hold was released, many a copycat font were produced much to the chagrin of Besley himself
Clarendon font entered pop-culture history by using it in the wild western in North America (i.e. “wanted” or “reward” signs), and other, where Clarendon variants (specifically “French Clarendon“) took on a circus look (it’s even known as “Circus Letters” in some texts).
Anyway, it wasn’t until the 1920s when Clarendon, once again, experienced a resurgence of sorts, and like before, this was primarily due to pragmatic reasons. You see, at this point in history, newspaper production rocketed to new heights, and as a result, the printing technology became a lot more efficient as well as a lot faster and rigorous. However, a downside to this, was the fact that many of the type sets used were taking a physical beating resultingProxy-Connection: keep-alive
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n the plates being damaged (especially when the lines were especially thin).
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n the plates being damaged (especially when the lines were especially thin).
Consequently, a number of companies attempted to produce new fonts that would still look good, but could also function in the wear and tear realities of the new printing demands. Here, the Clarendon font stepped in.
One of the first companies that began to experiment in this way was Mergenthaler Linotype Company. After four trials they finally issued a typeface that was based on a clarendon/ionic model from the 1850s. The name of the typeface was Ionic No. 5…. The typeface was very successful…”Within a year, the typeface had been adopted by some 3,000 newspapers all over the world.” (Miklavcic, 2006)
Finally, Clarendon-like fonts experienced another boost during the 1950’s. This, just after the World War 2, coincided with a general increase in advertisement productions (the economic boom right after the war). Typography as a whole was caught in an intensive move to design new and innovative typefaces.
Anyway, this led to a large number of fonts which many feel fit within the Clarendon look. Including the current incarnation of the font, which was revised by Herman Eidenbenz in 1953.
My Idea is to make the book into a wanted poster. Beseley will be the crime boss, the rewards will be the different weights of fonts. I am slightly stuck from there .
Heather,
ReplyDeleteMaybe his aliases or cohorts in crime could be other wanted posters too. Like Bad Leading Bill or Rag Rough Randy, etc. Tell a story of their exploits. Wanted for what? Where were they last seen? etc. BTW...I deleted all of your duplicate posts.