Section 1
Type Classifications
This section examines in detail the history of type through the organization and classification of type styles and time periods. Each type classification is presented with an overview, brief biographies of prominent type designers, visual characteristics, and applications, as well as sidebars covering distinct developments or features of each type classification.
How does a graphic designer determine, among the thousands of typefaces available, which font or fonts might fulfill a specific need? While most typefaces are classified into three categoriesâserif, sans serif, and scriptâit is a limited and somewhat shortsighted classification system. One method for familiarizing yourself with typefaces and their unique characteristics and attributes, as well as understanding their historical development and potential applications, is to use a more detailed and accurate system of type classification.
All type classification systems use the historical development of type, from the fifteenth century to the present day, as their organizational framework. While there are no two type classification systems that agree upon specific categorization of every typeface, these systems still remain an effective and informative reference guide for identifying and utilizing the number of typefaces available today.
An early type classification system by typographer Francis Thibaudeau (French, 1860â1925) was based on four broad categories of typefaces, namely Antiques (Sans Serifs), Egyptiennes (Slab Serifs), Didots (moderns), and ElzĂ©virs (typefaces with triangular serifs).
A basic system for classifying typefaces was also devised in the nineteenth century, when printers sought to identify a heritage for their own craft analogous to that of art history. Humanist letterforms are closely connected to calligraphy and the movement of the hand. Transitional and modern type-faces are more abstract and less organic. These three main groups correspond roughly to the Renaissance, Baroque, and Enlightenment periods in art and literature. Historians and critics of typography have since proposed more finely detailed schemes that attempt to better capture the diversity of letterforms. Designers in the twenty-first century have continued to create new typefaces based on these historic characteristics.
The first and most universally used type classification system, Vox-ATypl, was developed in 1954 by typographer Maximilien Vox (French, 1894â1974), adopted in 1962 by the Association Typographique Internationale (ATypl) and in 1967 as the British Standards Classification of Typefaces (BS 2961:1967). Subsequent attempts in creating universal type classification systems were also made by ATypl (1961), DIN (1964), Lawson RIT (1971), Bitstream (1986), Linotype (1988), and Adobe (1991).
The following type classification system is a simplified, practical reference tool for graphic designers and is based on the anatomical characteristics of letterforms, with several sub-categories.
Classification Categories
Humanist
Old Style
Transitional
Modern
Slab Serif
Sans Serif (Grotesque, Neo-Grotesque, Geometric, Humanist)
Glyphic
Script (Formal, Casual, Calligraphic)
Decorative
Blackletter (Textura, Bastarda, Fraktur, Rotunda)
Examples of each type classification with brief descriptions of their historical development and their primary visual characteristics are provided on the following pages.
Core Humanist Typeface:
Jenson (1471)
Nicolas Jenson (French, 1420â1480)
Type Designer Profile:
Nicolas Jenson
(French, 1420â1480)
Nicholas Jenson studied punch cutting (see here), printing, and typography in Mainz, the German birthplace of typography, before establishing his own printing press in Venice, Italy. He was one of the first printers to use type based on the traditional Roman letter rather than the dark Blackletter (see here) or Gothic type found in earlier German printed books. His early Roman letterforms have strong vertical stems and reflect the transition from thick to thin strokes originally created by a broad-nibbed pen.
Born in northeastern France in 1420, Jenson initially apprenticed at the Paris Mint before being promoted to Master of the Mint in Tours...