Perpetua (typeface) explained

Monotype Perpetua
Style:Serif
Releasedate:1929–32
Creator:Eric Gill
Foundry:Monotype Corporation
Variations:Perpetua Titling

Perpetua is a serif typeface that was designed by the English sculptor and stonemason Eric Gill for the British Monotype Corporation. Perpetua was commissioned at the request of Stanley Morison, an influential historian of printing and adviser to Monotype around 1925, when Gill's reputation as a leading artist-craftsman was high.[1] Perpetua was intended as a crisp, contemporary design that did not follow any specific historic model, with a structure influenced by Gill's experience of carving lettering for monuments and memorials. Perpetua is commonly used for covers and headings and also sometimes for body text and has been particularly popular in fine book printing.[2] [3] Perpetua was released with characters for the Greek alphabet and a matching set of titling capitals for headings.

Perpetua is named for the Christian martyr Vibia Perpetua, an account of whose life was used in one of its first showings. Its companion italic is named "Felicity" for her companion of that name. The choice had appeal to Morison and Gill, both of whom were converts to Catholicism.[4] [5]

Design

Perpetua is often classified as a transitional serif font, with a delicate structure somewhat similar to British fonts from the eighteenth century such as Baskerville and stonecarved (lapidary) inscriptions in the same style.[6] [7] However, it does not directly revive any specific historical model. Characteristic "transitional" features in Perpetua include considerable contrast in stroke width, crisp horizontal serifs, a delicate colour on the page and a reasonably vertical axis, with letters such as 'O' having their thinnest points at the top and bottom.[8] [9] [10]

Along with these characteristics, Perpetua bears the distinct personality of Gill's characteristic preferences in carving monumental lettering for uses such as tombstones, dedications and war memorials. Fine book printer Christopher Sandford of the Chiswick Press, who knew Gill, commented that "all Gill's types…are variants of Gill's own very lovely, very personal hand-lettering."[11] Letter designs in Perpetua common in Gill's work include the 'a' that forms a sharp point without serif, the extended leg of the 'R' and the flat-topped 'A'.[12] In italic, the 'a' has a smooth top and the 'g' is a "single-storey" design recalling handwriting.[13] [14] The top of the 'f' has a wedge-shaped serif.[15] Historian James Mosley suggests that a rubbing of a 1655 engraving at Rye may have been an influence on the design.[16] Perpetua's italic also has some flourishes in the capitals. However, rather than being fully cursive in style, some characters resemble oblique type or the "sloped roman" style, a style rarely used for serif fonts in which letters are slanted but do not take on as many handwriting characteristics as in a "true italic". Examples of this are the flat foot serifs on letters like 'h', 'm' and 'n', where most body text italics would have a curl or no serif at all.[17] In structure, Perpetua appears relatively light in colour and rather "small" on the page, although this is less problematic in the carefully designed metal type, in which every size was carefully drawn differently, than in digital facsimile.[18] [19]

Background

Gill began work on Perpetua in 1925 at the request of Stanley Morison, typographical advisor to Monotype; they had met in 1913.[20] [21] [22] Morison sought Gill's talent to design a new typeface for the foundry, asking for a "roman letter suitable for book reading, which while being new, was to be of general utility and in no respect unusual."[23] In his memoir and assessment of Monotype's work, A Tally of Types (1953, after Gill's death), Morison claimed that he had chosen to collaborate with Gill because of a desire to create a new typeface on a pattern following no past model, and an impression that previous artistically inclined typefaces cut as niche products for the private use of fine press printing companies had been too eccentric:

it still remained desirable to cut…an original face [which] required a living artist capable of the work. There was no lack of fine calligraphers or fine printers in Britain and Germany [but] the possibility was remote of securing from this source a satisfactory set of drawings of a new roman and italic suitable for work of every sort…with the possible exceptions of the Doves and Golden Type, their efforts had been new and peculiar...
Morison wrote that he felt that Gill as a sculptor, with a trade of work more akin to the engraving process used to sculpt the master punches traditionally used to make metal type, could succeed where these designers, mostly trained in calligraphy, had not:
The finely bracketed serif with which the sculptors of the roman inscriptions dignified their alphabet is symbolic; it signified their sense of the fundamental difference between private and public writing; between script and inscription. Thus the function of the serif must be understood by the artist if his book-type is to have a chance of succeeding. The fine serif is not in origin calligraphic but epigraphic; not written but sculptured. It follows that a set of drawings of a finely serifed type by a contemporary practitioner of lettering could best be made by [a sculptor] and Gill was the obvious man to solve it. He was asked to make drawings of the letters he had long been habitually carving.

Morison engaged Gill to develop drawings for the face around 1925.

Usage

Mosley, in an article on Perpetua's development, comments that the design's:

openness and small x-height make it far from economical in use, and the delicacy - even spindliness - of its cutting are a severe handicap. It reveals its qualities best in the richly-inked and crisply machined first specimen text.[24]

Ultimately, despite Morison's high hopes for Perpetua, it has remained something of a niche face, particularly popular for high-quality printing projects and uses such as headings. Morison late in life conceded that

the question whether the sizes 8- to 14-point fully realise the ambition with which they were begun, i.e. to create an original type serviceable for all kinds of books, does not permit of an answer in the unqualified affirmative. Perpetua, it may be said at once, is eminently suitable for certain kinds of books...with which a certain obvious degree of 'style' is desired, as for example, the semi-private printing with which Gill was for a long time intimately associated.

Perpetua's appeal to fine book printers has been long-standing since its release, both in the UK and abroad.[25] [26] [27] Christopher Sandford wrote of Perpetua and Gill's similar type for the Golden Cockerel Press that "it is important that type in combination with finely cut engravings should not be so 'bold' as to 'kill' the artists' work, it is also important that it should not be too light to make a comfortable combination. While Gill's Perpetua is probably better suited to combine with line-engravings in copper, etchings, mezzotints or watercolour paintings, the [somewhat bolder] 'Golden Cockerel' type undoubtedly fulfilled Gill's intention for it to combine most charmingly with surface printing from wood-blocks." Vivian Ridler, some years later to become Printer to the University of Oxford, was so inspired by Gill's work around this time that he named his side printing project the Perpetua Press after the font in 1933.[28] [29] [30] OUP book designer Hugh Williamson, in his Methods of Book Design (1956), however warned that Perpetua's 12 pt size was smaller than "any other series now in general use" but commented that Gill had proven that "the design of alphabets for printing has further achievements to offer to artists of the stature to reach them."[31]

Two connected designs created around and after the time of its project at Morison's instigation became among the most popular typefaces ever designed. Morison was consulted to advise on a custom typeface for the Times around the end of Perpetua's convoluted development. One of several options proposed was a modified version of Perpetua, increased in bulk for the conditions of newspaper printing.[32] (Robin Kinross has noted that Perpetua's basic design is "hardly robust enough for newspaper printing.") In the end Monotype created a new font, Times New Roman, for that project instead, basing it on an earlier typeface named Plantin, but one of the key modifications was sharpening Times's serifs, similar to Perpetua's design; Morison's cited reason for the change was to resemble the previous fonts used.[33] [34] Times New Roman when released to general use rapidly became one of the most popular fonts in the history of printing. In Monotype's sales chart through to 1984 Times ranks top of all, with Perpetua eighteenth out of forty-three.[35] The Times did use Perpetua Titling for some sections in the metal type period.

While working on the project Morison engaged Gill also to begin work on a sans-serif project, which became the extremely successful Gill Sans series, ranking fifth on Monotype's sales chart.[36] [37] [38] Mosley describes this as "a best-selling design whose sales record must have compensated Monotype for many well-meaning failures."[39]

Development

The process of Perpetua's development was extremely convoluted.[40] After Gill had produced his drawings, Morison decided not to send them to the Monotype engineering department at Salfords, Surrey, with which he had had disagreements. Instead, he commissioned at his own expense for the punchcutter Charles Malin of Paris in 1926 to manually engrave punches which were used to cast trial metal type. Manually cutting punches was the standard method of creating the matrices, or moulds used to cast metal type, in the previous century, but was now effectively a niche artisanal approach replaced by machine pantograph engraving.[41] [42]

Once the Malin type had been cast, Gill found some of his decisions unsatisfying seen in extended passages of text, leading him to propose changes and corrections. These were ultimately used to develop a final set of working drawings for commercial release.

Gill made several attempts at designing a companion italic face for Perpetua. One was a sloped roman (oblique), in which the regular style is slanted without the different letterforms of italic type. This unusual design decision was done under the influence of Morison's opinion that a sloped roman form was preferable to that of cursive italics for use in book text, providing less of a contrast with the roman. However, the oblique was not accepted by Monotype management, who went so far as to declare it "worthless."[43] Ultimately a more conventional italic was used instead.[44] Morison commented to his friend Jan van Krimpen that "we did not give enough slope to it. When we added more slope, it seemed that the fount required a little more cursive to it." A slightly condensed italic alphabet Gill had drawn for Gerald Meynell of the Westminster Press was also considered as a basis for its italic.

An early showing of Perpetua in The Fleuron, a journal edited by Morison, suggested that Gill might design a script or calligraphic font, "Felicity Script", as a companion, but this was never developed. Perpetua was set in a limited edition of a new translation by Walter H. Shewring of The Passion of Perpetua and Felicity, giving birth to the name of the typeface and its companion italic. The book was printed in 1929. The same type and illustrations (also done by Gill) for that book subsequently appeared in the journal on printing Fleuron (number 7) which was edited by Morison and printed in 1930; Gill Sans was also promoted in an issue of it. Also set in Perpetua and published in 1929 was Gill's Art Nonsense and Other Essays.

While some sources give Perpetua a release date of 1929 based on these early uses, Perpetua was not to enter full commercial sale until 1932. Once on sale, it was sold for Monotype's typesetting machines, which cast metal type under the control of a keyboard, and also sometimes offered in metal type for hand-setting for the use of larger sizes and smaller printers.

Users

Digitisations and adaptations

Perpetua has been digitised by Monotype and a basic release is included with Microsoft Office. The professional release adds additional features likely to be used in professional printing, such as small capitals and text figures.[58] Lapidary 333 by Bitstream is an unofficial digitisation.[59]

Related typefaces

As many of Gill's faces and lettering projects show characteristic features, many of Gill's other families are similar in spirit. Joanna has similarities to Perpetua but a more robust colour on the page with regular slab serifs and an only slightly slanted italic; Gill described it as "a book face free from all fancy business". Gill's family for the Golden Cockerel Press, which has been digitised as ITC Golden Cockerel, also has similarities.[60] Monotype's Gill Facia family from the digital period, reviving Gill's lettering projects such as for WH Smith, is a more festive and decorative family in the same style particularly intended for display-size text.[61] After Gill's death Monotype's competitor Linotype, seeking to have a Gill design for their line-up, licensed rights to a roman type by Gill for the Bunyan Press, and released it with a Gill-style italic under the name of "Pilgrim". This proved very successful: Frank Newfeld has praised it as "a gutsier Perpetua".[62] [63]

Financier, by Kris Sowersby, is a respected revival influenced by Perpetua and other Gill designs, in particular the more solid Solus and Joanna.[64] [65] Particularly acclaimed for being released in optical sizes for small and large text unlike the official Monotype digitisations, it was commissioned by the Financial Times and has also been commercially released.[66] [67]

Also loosely inspired by Perpetua is Constantia, a typeface by John Hudson for Microsoft and intended to render well for onscreen display.[15] [68]

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Brewer. Roy. Eric Gill: The Man Who Loved Letters.
  2. Book: Simon Loxley. Type: The Secret History of Letters. 12 June 2006. I.B.Tauris. 978-1-84511-028-4. 162–4.
  3. Web site: Perpetua. Microsoft Typography. Microsoft. 12 October 2016.
  4. Poole. J. Stephen. Stanley Morison, Catholic and Man of Letters. The Heythrop Journal. January 1982. 23. 1. 51–55. 10.1111/j.1468-2265.1982.tb00629.x.
  5. Web site: Burns. Tom. Stanley Morison - the man within. The Tablet. 9 October 2016.
  6. Book: Karen Cheng. Designing Type. 2006. Laurence King Publishing. 978-1-85669-445-2. 32–43, 76.
  7. Book: Tony Seddon. Essential Type: An Illustrated Guide to Understanding and Using Typography. 16 August 2016. Yale University Press. 978-0-300-22237-1. 118–9.
  8. Book: Paul C. Gutjahr. Megan L. Benton. Illuminating Letters: Typography and Literary Interpretation. 1 June 2009. Univ of Massachusetts Press. 978-1-55849-762-7. 104–6.
  9. Book: Karen Cheng. Designing Type. 2006. Laurence King Publishing. 978-1-85669-445-2. 32, 64, 76, 85.
  10. Book: Riggs. Tamye. Typeface: Classic Typography for Contemporary Design. 2009. Princeton Architectural Press. New York. 9781568988108. 76–9. 1st.
  11. Sandford. Christopher. A Note on the Golden Cockerel Type. Matrix. 1982. 2. 23–26.
  12. Web site: Mosley. James. Eric Gill's R: the Italian connection. Type Foundry. 11 November 2015.
  13. Web site: Mosley. James. Eric Gill and the Cockerel Press. Upper & Lower Case. International Typeface Corporation. 7 October 2016. bot: unknown. https://web.archive.org/web/20120729035625/http://www.itcfonts.com/Ulc/OtherArticles/GillCockerel.htm. 29 July 2012.
  14. Mosley. James. Eric Gill and the Golden Cockerel Type. Matrix. 1982. 2. 17–23.
  15. Web site: Levien. Raph. Raph Levien. Microsoft's ClearType Font Collection: A Fair and Balanced Review. Typographica. 24 November 2014.
  16. Lecture on Gill's work . James . Mosley . 'Me & Mr Gill' talk . Old Truman Brewery, London . November 10, 2015 .
  17. Book: Tracy. Walter. Letters of Credit. 17–18, 35, 61–4 etc..
  18. Bigelow. Charles. Seybold. Jonathan. Technology and the aesthetics of type. The Seybold Report. 1981. 10. 24. 3–16. 0364-5517.
  19. Rhatigan. Daniel. Gill Sans after Gill. Forum. September 2014. 28. 3–7. 26 December 2015. 15 February 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150215150435/http://image.linotype.com/files/pdf/GillSansArticle.pdf. dead.
  20. Book: Wardle , Tiffany . The story of Perpetua . . 2000 . 5 . 2009-03-26 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20061110180517/http://www.typeculture.com/academic_resource/articles_essays/pdfs/tc_article_38.pdf . 2006-11-10.
  21. Book: Harling, Robert . The Letter Forms and Type Designs of Eric Gill. D. R. Godine (The Typophiles). 1978. 2nd. 36. 0-87923-200-5.
  22. Book: Stanley Morison. A Tally of Types. registration. 7 June 1973. CUP Archive. 978-0-521-09786-4. 97–105.
  23. Holmes. Nigel. Eric Gill: Cut in Stone. Visual Communication Quarterly. 20 January 2011. 15. 1–2. 44–49. 10.1080/15551390801914579. 145774356.
  24. Mosley. James. James Mosley. Eric Gill's Perpetua Type. Fine Print.
  25. Web site: Grabhorn. Jane Bissell. Teiser. Ruth. Jane Bissell Grabhorn. The Colt Press: oral history transcript / and related material, 1965–1966. Internet Archive. 1965 . University of California Regional Oral History Office. 9 October 2016.
  26. Web site: Stauffacher. Jack Werner. Teiser. Ruth. Jane Bissell Grabhorn. A printed word has its own measure : oral history transcript / and related material, 1968–1969. Internet Archive. 1968 . University of California Regional Oral History Office. 9 October 2016.
  27. Web site: Wilson. Adrian. Teiser. Ruth. Jane Bissell Grabhorn. Printing and book designing : oral history transcript / 1965–1966. Internet Archive. 1965 . University of California Regional Oral History Office. 9 October 2016.
  28. Web site: Pan. Rosalind. The Perpetua Press – Vivian Ridler's side project. Private Press & Wood Engraved Books. 20 August 2015 . 9 October 2016.
  29. Web site: Vivian Rider – obituary. The Daily Telegraph. 2 February 2009 . 9 October 2016.
  30. News: Barker. Nicolas. Vivian Ridler: Printer to Oxford University from 1958 to 1978 and founder of the Perpetua Press. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220525/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/vivian-ridler-printer-to-oxford-university-from-1958-to-1978-and-founder-of-the-perpetua-press-1332043.html . 2022-05-25 . subscription . live. The Independent. 9 October 2016.
  31. Book: Williamson. Hugh. Hugh Williamson (book designer). Methods of Book Design. 1956. Oxford University Press.
  32. Book: Kinross. Robin. Modern Typography: an essay in critical history. 2004. Hyphen. London. 978-0-907259-18-3. 76–79. 2nd. 19 December 2015.
  33. Web site: The Times: New roman and related founts. . Times/Monotype . 16 September 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150916043631/http://www.elbrecht.de/TNR%26RF.jpg . September 16, 2015 .
  34. Web site: From Our Notebook. The Tablet. 9 October 2016.
  35. Randle. John. The Monotype. Matrix. 1984. 4. 42–54. 9 October 2016.
  36. Book: MacCarthy. Fiona. Eric Gill. 16 June 2011. 9780571265824. 300. Faber & Faber .
  37. Book: Loxley. Simon. Type. 31 March 2006. 9780857730176. 163. Bloomsbury .
  38. Badaracco. Claire. Innovative Industrial Design and Modern Public Culture: The Monotype Corporation, 1922–1932. Business & Economic History. 1991. 20 (second series). 226–233. 19 December 2015. Business History Conference.
  39. Mosley. James. James Mosley. Review: A Tally of Types. Journal of the Printing Historical Society. 2001. 3, new series. 63–67.
  40. Book: Haley. Allan. Typographic milestones. 1992. John Wiley & Sons. Hoboken, NJ. 9780471288947. 91–98. [Nachdr.]..
  41. Web site: Morison. Stanley. Stanley Morison. Printing the Times. Eye. 28 July 2015.
  42. Monotype matrices and moulds in the making. Monotype Recorder. 1956. 40. 3.
  43. Web site: Perpetua - Fonts.com . 2014-11-08 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120110130310/http://www.fonts.com/FindFonts/HiddenGems/Perpetua.htm . 2012-01-10 . Monotype Imaging: Perpetua
  44. Book: Harling, Robert . The Letter Forms and Type Designs of Eric Gill. D. R. Godine (The Typophiles). 1978. 2nd. 36, 48–51. 0-87923-200-5.
  45. Web site: The Divine Comedy by Dante, Penguin Classics. Fonts in Use. July 2016 . 9 October 2016.
  46. Web site: Coles. Stephen. The New Temple Shakespeare series, 1934–56. Fonts In Use. 23 April 2016 . 9 October 2016.
  47. Web site: Hardwig. Florian. The Sonnets of William Shakespeare, Cassell & Company Ltd. Fonts In Use. 22 April 2016 . 9 October 2016.
  48. http://www.identityworks.com/forum/identity-strategy/the-united-airlines-rebranding-strategy/#more-329 Identity Works
  49. Web site: EASE.
  50. http://www.upenn.edu/webguide/style_guide/typography.html Penn: Web Style Guide: Typography. Referenced 1/14/2011.
  51. Web site: Archived copy . 2013-12-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100528145641/http://www.colby.edu/communications/identity/manuals/downloads/ColbyIdentityStnds.pdf . 2010-05-28 .
  52. https://issuu.com/underhillassociates/docs/the_king_s_school_brand_guidlines_v The Kings School Brand Guidelines
  53. Web site: Routledge Critical Thinkers.
  54. Web site: Coles. Stephen. The Untouchables (1987) Movie Poster. Fonts In Use. 26 September 2013 . 1 January 2016.
  55. Web site: Magdalen College Chapel, Oxford - Services and Music.
  56. Web site: Microsoft Word - FINAL Choral Services Full Music List ELV 2018.docx . 2018-10-06.
  57. Web site: V&A · The Platinum Jubilee emblem competition. 2022-02-04. Victoria and Albert Museum. en.
  58. Web site: Perpetua MT. MyFonts. Monotype. 9 October 2016.
  59. Web site: Lapidary 333. MyFonts. 9 October 2016.
  60. Web site: ITC Golden Cockerel. MyFonts. 10 October 2016.
  61. Web site: Gill Facia. MyFonts. 10 October 2016.
  62. Book: Newfeld. Frank. Frank Newfeld. Drawing on Type. 322.
  63. Web site: Griffin. Patrick. Bunyan Pro. Canada Type. 3 September 2017.
  64. Web site: Financier Typeface Family « TDC TOKYO ENG.
  65. Web site: Best Awards – Klim Type Foundry and The Financial Times. / Financier Typeface Family. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151019002745/http://bestawards.co.nz/entries/graphic/financier-typeface-family/. 2015-10-19.
  66. Web site: Financier: a new typeface family for the Financial Times – Creative Review. 3 November 2014.
  67. Web site: A New Font is Giving the Financial Times a Smart, Luxurious Update. 27 September 2016.
  68. Web site: Van Wagener. Anne. The Next Big Thing in Online Type. Poynter Online. 31 August 2017. bot: unknown. https://web.archive.org/web/20060604203726/https://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=47&aid=78683. 4 June 2006.