- Bell Gothic
Infobox font
name = Bell Gothic
style =Sans-serif
classifications = Realist sans-serif
date = 1938
creator =Chauncey H. Griffith
foundry = Mergenthaler LinotypeBell Gothic is a realist
sans-serif typeface designed byChauncey H. Griffith in 1938 while heading the typographic development program at theMergenthaler Linotype Company . The typeface was commissioned by AT&T as a proprietary typeface for use in telephone directories (and should not be confused with the Bell typeface, designed for the British typefounder and publisher John Bell (1746-1831) by the punchcutter Richard Austin). Bell Gothic was superseded byMatthew Carter 's typefaceBell Centennial in 1978, the one hundredth anniversary of AT&T's founding.Design
Earlier in Griffith's career at Mergenthaler Linotype, he had developed a highly successful newspaper text face called Excelsior which overcame many of the limitations of printing smaller point sizes on low quality newsprint. This contributed to his addressing similar limitations of telephone book printing. Bell Gothic was designed to be highly legible at small sizes, economical in its use of space (and hence paper), and reproduce well on uncoated, absorbent paper newsprint stock under less than optimal conditions. Griffith's face Bell Gothic is distinct for the cross bars on the uppercase I, the foot and cross bar on figure 1, and the angled terminus of the stroke on characters b, d, h, k, l, n, p, and q. While there are suggestions of an
ink trap in several characters, they are minimal in comparison to the exaggerated ones found in Bell Centennial.Evolution of use
Bell Gothic remained in uninterrupted use for AT&T telephone directories for forty years. Following AT&T's adoption of Bell Centennial, the Mergenthaler Linotype foundry licensed Bell Gothic for general use. Beginning in the early 1990s Bell Gothic became popular and associated with avant garde experimentation with type at places like the
Cranbrook Academy of Art , the Design Academy Eindhoven in the Netherlands, andRISD . The typeface was used as a display and caption face by "Metropolis" magazine, by Canadian graphic designerBruce Mau in designing the initial ZONE book series, Dutch graphic designer Irma Boom, and has been widely used bySemiotext(e) Books, theMIT Press , andDia Art Foundation .References
*Aldersey-Williams, Hugh, Katherine McCoy,
Lorraine Wild , et al. "The New Cranbrook Design Discourse." Rizzoli: 1990. ISBN 0-8478-1252-9.
*Blackwell, Lewis. "20th Century Type." Yale University Press: 2004. ISBN 0-300-10073-6.
*Fiedl, Frederich, Nicholas Ott and Bernard Stein. "Typography: An Encyclopedic Survey of Type Design and Techniques Through History." Black Dog & Leventhal: 1998. ISBN 1-57912-023-7.
*Macmillan, Neil. "An A–Z of Type Designers." Yale University Press: 2006. ISBN 0-300-11151-7.External links
* [http://www.linotype.com/122/bellgothic-family.html Linotype's page for Bell Gothic]
* [http://typophile.com/node/15842 thread on Typophile discussing Bell Gothic]
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