akzidenz grotesk specimen
TRANSCRIPT
accidenz groteskakzidenz grotesk
akzidenz groteskPedro da Gama2009
index
071121253135
introhistoryidentifying characteristicssimilarities to other typefacesits purposebibliografia
intro
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intro
Akzidenz-Grotesk is a realist sans-serif typeface originally released by the H. Berthold AG type foundry in 1896 under the title Accidenz-Grotesk. It was the first sans serif typeface to be widely used and influenced many later neo-grotesque typefaces. Max Miedinger’s Helvetica, Adrian Frutiger’s Univers and Bauer and Baum’sFolio are examples of it.
Akzidenz Grotesk is well-known for the logic of its systematic family, and it is tempting to equate this modernist idea with the sans genre - however, almost no-one used sans-serif facesfor text in 1900.
history
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Royal Grotesk specimen book from
Haag Drugulin, Leipzig -
edition 1963.
Berthold’s Akzidenz-
Grotesk probe no.
429 - pro-bably 1954.
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history
Akzidenz Grotesk was released by Berthold in Berlin in 1898, according to their own literature. It was obviously based on faces already offered by other foundries, some of which were later taken over by Berthold. One of the contemporaries of AG wasRoyal Grotesk. In 1880, the german typographer and hieroglyphic expert Ferdinand Theinhardt develops a sans-serif typeface under the name of Royal Grotesk for the Prussian Academy of Sciences publishers. Eighteen years later Hermann Berthold takes over Theinhard’s foundry, making the Royal Grotesk typeface part of Akzidenz Grotesk family. In Berthold’s specimen booklet no. 429, which was most likely released in 1954, Akzidenz Grotesk Mager (light) was still re-ferred to as Royal Grotesk, in brackets. They kept adding weights, some of them from other faces, acquired from other foundries. Some say the early Akzidenz Grotesk Halbfett (medium) was also from Theinhard, but there are no certainties about this, as it was not documented.
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Berthold’s Akzidenz-
Grotesk probe
no. 473
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history
Every foundry had a version of that type of face, more often than not available in a few sizes only. The original series remained quite divers, individual weights showing not much resemblance but in name. It was mainly a mar-keting and naming success. The versions of Akzidenz Grotesk that we use on computers nowadays descend from the recuts made in the late 50s under the direction of Günter Gerhard Lange, who was their (freelance) artistic director at the time. The idea was to get a uniformity be-tween the different weights of this family, since they all come from different sources.
GG Lange always claimed that Berthold had taken someAkzidenz Grotesk weights and sizes from Popplbaum in Vienna, and that is supposed to account for the release date of 1896 or 1898. Popplbaum was not bought by Berthold until 1926.Berthold did take different fonts from all the foundries they bought (and obviously also made deal without buying a foundry)
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The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy
The quick brown fox jumped over
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy
The quick brown fox jumped over
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
The quick brown fox jumped over the
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
Light 9ptLight Italic 9pt
Extended 9ptExt. Italic 9pt
Regular 9ptItalic 9pt
Condensed 9ptCond. Italic 9pt
Medium 9ptMedium Italic 9pt
Bold 9ptBold Italic 9pt
Extra 9ptExtra Italic 9pt
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history
and rename them until they got a family together which still showed the original influences, sometimes even from size to size. The deals between foundries (by 1924 Berthold had bought 17 foundries in Prague, Riga, Stuttgart, Leipzig, Moscow and St. Petersburg) have never been fully researched, and neither has the complete history of Akzidenz Grotesk been written yet.
Style variations such as AG Extra (1958), AG Extra Bold (1966), AG Super (1968), AG Super Italic and AG Extra Bold Italic (both 2001) were also designed under the supervision of GG Lange.
In May 2006, Berthold released Akzidenz Grotesk in OpenType format, under the name Akzidenz Grotesk Pro, which offers extend language support for Central European, Baltic and Turkish as well as Welsh, archaic Danish and Esperanto and is available in CFF PostScript OpenType.
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Akzidenz Grotesk Next Pro example
fromBerthold’s
website.
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history
The foundry also released Akzidenz Grotesk Standard, which includes glyphs of Western European character set, in bothPostScript and TrueType flavored OpenType.
In December of the same year, Berthold announced the release of Akzidenz Grotesk Next. Designed by Bernd Moellenstaedt and Dieter Hofrichter, was conceived as a single family that uses the principal shape characteristics of the original Akzidenz Grotesk, which now appear throughout all the weights. The x-height has been readjusted as well as the weights to ob-tain a more consistent design throughout the family from extralight to black. Akzidenz-Grotesk Next is available in PostScript and TrueType flavors of OpenType with over 500 glyphs and extended language support for Central European, Baltic and Turkish as well as Welsh, archaic Danish and Esperanto.
identifying characteristics
Q
MiR a
gjJ G
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identifying characteristics
Let’s go through some of the most singular features of this type-face (as of 1898), which make this font what it is for us nowadays.
•tail of uppercase Q does not cross the circle•uppercase J does not descend below baseline•right-angle bar and spur at the base of uppercase G•middle of uppercase M descends to baseline•single-story lowercase g (no lower ball)•square dots on lowercase i and j•double-story lowercase a•lowercase i is just a straight line•uppercase R has a straight leg
similarities to other typefaces
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Akzidenz Grotesk,
Helvetica and Univers
48pt.
e e e
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similarities to other typefaces
Akzidenz Grotesk is sometimes at first glance mistaken for the Helvetica or Univers typefaces. Can you easily spot Akzidenz?
The similarities of Helvetica, Univers and Akzidenz Grotesk are apparent, but there are some subtle differences between these typefaces. Let’s see:
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
•lowercase a, e, c and s and uppercase C, G and S havediagonal (or open) terminals
•lowercase a has different shapes in all of the typefaces•uppercase J has a smaller tail•uppercase Q tail doesn’t cut through the letter•uppercase G base has different spurs•uppercase R has a straight leg
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hamburgerfonts hamburgerfonts
hamburgerfonts hamburgerfonts
Akzidenz and Helvetica
Akzidenz and Univers
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similarities to other typefaces
Aside from the subtle differences in these individual letters, Miedinger’s primary change to Akzidenz Grotesk is Helvetica’s higher x-height, the distance from the baseline to the height ofthe lowercase letter x. The general effect is that Helveticaappears more oblong while Akzidenz Grotesk maintains circular counters and bowls. Though Univers also has a bigger x-height than Akzidenz Grotesk, the main difference is the general weight of the typeface. though letters like a, e, b, o and s are thinner, other like m, g, f, x and y are much wider and the left and right spaces before kerning are also wider, which produces wider text. Both Helvetica and Univers are more regular and have a greater consistency of stroke weight.
Some new weights, condensed and extended widths werereleased under the title Standard.
its purpose
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its purpose
Very little is known about Akzidenz’s purpose. What did the typographers had in mind when they made this typeface and what was it made for. Every typeface has a purpose; it may be head-lines, advertisement, books, magazines, a specific logo, etc. But in this case, there are no certainties about its genesis. What we do know is that Akzidenz’s direct percursor, Royal Grotesk (Ferdinand Theinhardt, 1880) was conceived for a scientific pub-lication, so one may assume Berthold had the same idea in mind when it came to the making of this typeface.
One thing is for sure, like all sans serifs from that time, Akzidenz Grotesk was meant to be used as a display face (the German word Akzidenzschrift means display face or jobbing type), but because it also included a good lowercase and different weights it was used more and more as a text face.
bibliography
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books
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bibliography
Manual de tipografía, John Kane, Editorial Gustavo Gili, SL, Barcelona, 2005
The Elements of Typographic Style, version 3.0, RobertBringhurst, Hartley & Marks Publishers, Vancouver, 2004
Veintidós consejos sobre tipografía / Ventidós cosas que nunca debes hacer con las letras, Enric Jardí, Actar,Barcelona, 2007
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web pages
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bibliography
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akzidenz_Groteskhttp://www.bertholdtypes.comhttp://www.myfonts.comhttp://typophile.com/node/4567http://typophile.com/node/19482http://typophile.com/node/17655http://typophile.com/node/17643http://www.xabel.com/?p=50http://www.fonts.comhttp://www.rightreading.com/typehead/akzidenz_grotesque.htm
andMartin Majoor’s Inclined to be dull PDF
the end
akzidenz groteskaccidenz grotesk