Type spaces : in-house norms in the typography of Aldus Manutius / Peter Burnhill.

"How is type to be measured? This innocent question has always troubled the activity of making typefaces and setting characters to make lines of text. In the days of industrialized metal typography, we thought we had some clear answers. But now that type has no material form, those apparent cer...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Burnhill, Peter, 1922-2007 (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: London : Hyphen, 2003.
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Description
Summary:"How is type to be measured? This innocent question has always troubled the activity of making typefaces and setting characters to make lines of text. In the days of industrialized metal typography, we thought we had some clear answers. But now that type has no material form, those apparent certainties have gone." "In this work of fresh investigation, Peter Burnhill takes a very close look at some books of the early sixteenth century, and comes up with the surprising suggestion that this printing shows a unified system of dimensions: of character size, of line-increment, of line length, and of text area. He argues that there was a moment when the exceptional figures of the publisher Aldus Manutius and his punchcutter, Francesco Griffo, could use a set of 'in-house norms'. The evidence is presented in a set of annotated enlargements of pages from Aldine books. This system of unified measurement has a rationality that can apply to any process of character assembly, in any age, and with any system of production."--BOOK JACKET.
Physical Description:143 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN:0907259197
9780907259190
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City Campus

  • Call Number:
    686.224 BUR
    Copy
    Available - City Campus Main Collection
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