Selected Essays on the History of Letter-forms in Manuscript and Print 2 Volume Paperback Set
Stanley Morison(Author)
David McKitterick(Editor)
Cambridge University Press
Published on 9. April 1981
Book
Paperback/Softback
448 pages
978-0-521-22338-6 (ISBN)
Description
During his long career Stanley Morison held appointments as typographical adviser to Cambridge University Press, to the Monotype Corporation, and to The Times, where he was responsible both for its radical new design in 1932 and for the standard history of the paper. These two volumes bring together the majority of his most lasting essays. Many of them, pioneering in their day, are now classics in their field. The collection, first published in 1980, spans a period of forty years. It includes essays on letter-forms in manuscript and in print, beginning with those published in The Flueron in the 1920s, on typefaces in sixteenth-century Italy, on the development of Latin script, on the history of learned presses and on the typography of newspapers.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 297 mm
Width: 210 mm
Thickness: 73 mm
Weight
3165 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-521-22338-6 (9780521223386)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Content
Volume I: 1. The art of printing; 2. Towards an ideal roman type; 3. The Chancery types of Italy and France; 4. On script types; 5. Towards an ideal italic; 6. The italic types of Antonio Blado and Ludovico Arrighi; 7. Decorated types; 8. Leipzig as a centre of type-founding; 9. Venice and the arabesque ornament; 10. The development of handwriting: an outline; 11. 'Black-letter' text; 12. Early humanistic script and the first roman type; 13. Notes on the development of Latin script; Volume II: 14. Memorandum on a proposal to revise the typography of The Times; 15. Supplement to the memorandum; 16. The origins of the newspaper; 17. The learned press as an institution; 18. Marcello Cervini, Pope Marcellus II; bibliography's patron saint; 19. Recollections and perspectives of D. B. Updike.