Member Mic… Posted January 3, 2018 Share Posted January 3, 2018 Hi I'm looking for help to identify a typeface originally used by Reynolds Stone, I believe. Help much appreciated! Link to comment
Ralf Herrmann Posted January 3, 2018 Share Posted January 3, 2018 Pretty sure he didn’t use a typeface. He just carved it. Link to comment
Member Mic… Posted January 3, 2018 Author Share Posted January 3, 2018 You're absolutely right. I didn't make myself clear, my apologies. I'm looking for a typeface that resembles it as much as possible. It looks like an ancient Roman engravement lettering and one can find some examples on the web so I believe there's a font that matches it. "Slim" S, and J not going below the baseline are pretty characteristic. Only capital letters. Link to comment
Solution Ralf Herrmann Posted January 3, 2018 Solution Share Posted January 3, 2018 I doubt you will find a close match. It’s an individual artwork. But the general style is of course available. download at MyFonts download at MyFonts download at MyFonts download at MyFonts (The last one has no J descender) Or check the “Similar to Trajan” list, since that is what it boils down to: http://www.identifont.com/find?similar=Trajan&q=Go 1 Link to comment
Member Ric… Posted January 3, 2018 Share Posted January 3, 2018 The most similar would probably be Linotype’s Minerva [1, 2], alas not available in digital form. It also reminds me of the still unidentified typeface used for the Phantom Thread movie poster. 1 Link to comment
Member hen… Posted March 26, 2020 Share Posted March 26, 2020 @Michał Wojtkowski Reynolds Stone did design typefaces and not just carve. Ralf Herrmann is forgivably mistaken. There is his original private typeface named 'Janet' for his wife and used by Litton Cheney Press. There is also his reworking of Minerva commissioned by Linotype that was introduced to the public in 'Linotype Matrix', no. 21, Jan. 1955. It was discontinued in the early 1970s. No digital versions exist, although KTKM have produced a typeface after Reynolds Stone called KM Minerva, but it is not published. Link to comment
Ralf Herrmann Posted March 26, 2020 Share Posted March 26, 2020 5 minutes ago, henrykirton said: Reynolds Stone did design typefaces and not just carve. Ralf Herrmann is forgivably mistaken. Mistaken about what exactly? I didn’t claim that he never created typefaces. I only assumed that the image shown in the first post is not typeset. Link to comment
Member Kev… Posted March 26, 2020 Share Posted March 26, 2020 Janet has already been discussed here at length in another thread. And Ralf is perfectly correct. Reynolds Stone’s original wood engraving of the Janet alphabet was eventually translated into a metal typeface, not the other way round. A digital version exists as well—its use is tightly controlled and limited by Reynolds Stone’s estate, but did appear in the promotional materials for The Phantom Thread (starring Daniel Day Lewis, whose family was close friends of the Stones). 1 Link to comment
Member hen… Posted March 27, 2020 Share Posted March 27, 2020 18 hours ago, Ralf Herrmann said: Mistaken about what exactly? I didn’t claim that he never created typefaces. I only assumed that the image shown in the first post is not typeset. I'm sure something was lost in translation. Apologies. 1 Link to comment
Member hen… Posted March 27, 2020 Share Posted March 27, 2020 @Kevin Thompson - I have the book Reynolds Stone Engravings and get lost in it as often as I can. Link to comment
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