Jump to content
Join our community of friends of typography!

Caslon Sans Serif, available somewhere?

Recommended Posts

David Rault
This topic was imported from the Typophile platform

Fellow Typophiles,

I read somewhere that a student, Miko McGinty, revived the Caslon Sans Serif of William Caslon IV, dated 1816, in a 1997 class supervised by Tobas Frere-Jones. Does anyone know more about this? Is this digitized Caslon Sans available somewhere?

thanks
dr

Link to comment
Dunwich Type

It’s on my list of things to do post-graduation, along with metal Franklin Gothic and a ligature face from the necropolis at Arles. That and paying off my student loans.

Link to comment
David Rault

well, i have others to add on the list if you feel like superman: jacno, oswald cooper handwriting... gosh i wish i was a typographer.

im going to get a copy of fontlab.

dr

Link to comment
marcox

David, get in touch with Font Bureau. The magazine that Caslon's Egyptian was designed for (Red Herring) is no longer a print publication, so it may be that any exclusivity agreements have expired.

Another alternate: Rian Hughes' English Grotesque, which shares a similar vibe, even if it differs significantly in the details.
http://www.fontshop.com/fonts/downloads/device_fonts/english_grotesque/

Link to comment
David Rault

James: I agree :-)

Stephen: Thanks, this is an interesting revival indeed, even if not quite the same with Caslon IV's.

Marcox: I'll try to get in touch with Font Bureau. I know Ryan Hughes' font, but it is for me much closer to Gill Sans than Caslon's sans...

davidr

Link to comment
Antonio Cavedoni

David, I know of several versions. First there’s James Mosley’s own Tivoli type, which is a an autotraced version from scans turned into a Type 1 font. I think it works very well for single words, it was used in the Italian book Radici della Scrittura Moderna which is a collection of translation of James’ own essays on typography, including The Nymph and the Grot (recently updated) where he introduced the history of sanserif types.

After seeing Mosley’s Tivoli I decided to have a go myself and produced my own version, called Micerino (Italian name of the smallest – as in “small character set, uppercase only” – pyramid in the Giza complex). It’s quite rough around the edges as to spacing and kerning. Some glyphs need review, too, but it’s almost usable. I included the alternate forms found in the two specimens I was given by James and Œ Æ ligatures as OpenType features/stylistic sets.

The Font Bureau version is definitely the way to go if you want something more usable. It has several weights and a lowercase, although it’s more loosely based on the original from what I’ve seen. I think it’s a reasonable type, especially considering it was done for a contemporary magazine so it’s natural that some of the features in the original type had to be somewhat muted.

Paul Barnes’ home page used to feature a specimen of what looked like his own digitization on Caslon’s Two Lines English Egyptian. I know nothing about it, apart from what I saw online, so I’m not sure about it, but you could try asking. Martin Tiefenthaler from Vienna recently wrote me about it, and I think he’s enquiring Paul as well as per my suggestion.

Link to comment
David Rault

Antonio:

Many thanks for all these informations, though i can't seem to be able to find any of these types on Internet, not even Micerino on your website... Thanks for the info, anyway.

dr

Link to comment
David Rault

Antonio:

Your job is brilliant, congratulations. For now this pdf is enough for me, but be sure I will keep you informed.

Please let me know when you finalize it.

dr

Link to comment
  • 2 years later...
ppk812

" I realize that I completely misunderstood the sources I worked from, and I now consider the lowercase an interesting failure. "

from Christian Schwartz, what does that exactly mean and how should he have designed it for a more accurate revival?

Link to comment
Nick Shinn

As the only English sans serif lower case letters that were around during the first half of the 19th century were Bold Condensed, an "accurate revival" of a Regular style from that era is impossible.

There are other considerations today. For instance, in the Figgins lower case I contemplated giving the top of the "f" a substantial overhang, which I thought would be appropriate for that era, but decided against that in a 21st century international face, where the "f" is followed by all sorts of accented characters.

Note that the early 19th century "G" is problematic, and very few new faces in the style of that era follow the model authentically.

Link to comment
ppk812

thanks for your response nick, i've also just read some of the other threads regarding the caslon two lines english egyptian

Link to comment
  • 2 years later...
fonetiks

David:

I created my own version of Caslon Two Line Egyptian for a book I published with Coach House Books in 1997 entitled "Head Paintings". I added lowercase letters, numbers and punctuation. The book is now out of print but copies can occasionally be found at www.abebooks.com. You can see the full font at my website: www.robertfones.com. I have to confess that I found the combination of uppercase and lowercase very awkward and have never used the font since. No wonder Caslon only issued it originally in caps. I have also seen a version used in the New York Times magazine.

Link to comment
HVB

What are the differences between Caslon Two Line Egyptian and the Caslon's Egyptian by Miko McGinty, Cyrus Highsmith, and Christian Schwartz that's available for licensing at Font Bureau? - Herb

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

Our partners

Discover the fonts from the Germany foundry FDI Type. A brand of Schriftkontor Ralf Herrmann.
The largest selection of professional fonts for any project. Over 130,000 available fonts, and counting.
Discover the Best Deals for Freelance Designers.
Get to your apps and creative work. Explore curated inspiration, livestream learning, tutorials, and creative challenges.
Try Adobe Stock for free and get 10 free photos …
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We are placing functional cookies on your device to help make this website better.