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33-573: Castellar may refer to the places below or to the Castellar typeface. France [ edit ] Castellar, Alpes-Maritimes , a commune in the Département of Alpes-Maritimes, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Castellare-di-Casinca , a commune in the Haute-Corse department on the island of Corsica Castellare-di-Mercurio , a commune in

66-506: A municipio in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia El Castellar , a municipio in the province of Teruel, Aragon See also [ edit ] Castelar , a city in Morón Partido, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

99-419: A municipio in the province of Guadalajara, Castile-La Mancha Castellar de la Ribera , a municipio in the province of Lleida, Catalonia Castellar de n'Hug , a municipio in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia Castellar de Santiago , a municipio in the province of Ciudad Real, Castile-La Mancha Castellar del Riu , a municipio in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia Castellar del Vallès ,

132-505: A 12-set example. All character were designed to have widths a whole number of units of the set. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, up to 18 or even more. ..... English and American manuals use a different size for the pica: the new-pica = 0.1660 inch. On the European mainland all wedges and tables in the manuals are based on the "old" pica = 0.1667 inch and those wedges can be identified by the extra capital E (= English). That gives small differences in

165-470: A gallery space, and had school groups in for printing workshops. The Museum’s major collections were: The Type Archive involves the following entities: the Type Museum Trust, which is a Registered Charity 1009198 and a Registered Museum 1101 and its subsidiary The Type Museum Limited Registered Company 3677895 (trading as Monotype Hot-Metal). The Archive was located for its 30-year history at

198-534: A lead letter without any adjustment for offset or computer printing will not produce a good result. The alphabetical list below refers primarily to the fonts produced by the English "hot metal" Monotype company. The numbers mentioned below are from the English "specimen-blades", four editions of the booklets "Monotype book of information", and some additional information from the London Type Museum. In

231-479: A magnifying glass. The bead edge and bright centre in print suggest a calligraphic typeface. And with letterpress there is a much wider choice of suitable, often more expensive, paper types that can be printed. After the "hot metal" firms ceased production because of the transition from letterpress to offset printing in more and more printing companies, with Lanston Monotype being the first to do so in America,

264-751: A number over 10 million. The Archive housed Monotype Hot-Metal Ltd., a group of four pensioners, formerly of the Monotype Corporation, who manufactured matrices (moulds for typecasting) for Monotype hot-metal typesetting equipment that remain in operation around the world to supply letterpress printing hobbyists and some commercial firms. The Archive offered apprenticeships and trained several individuals in matrix manufacture. These operations ended on 25 July 2022. The Archive had no regular open hours nor scheduled availability for researchers for most of its operation. However, it conducted open houses from time to time, hosted occasional exhibitions in

297-577: A paper ribbon. Typing the texts on keyboards was manual work that took much more time than casting. A composition-caster needed the ribbons of at least three separate keyboards. Correction of the final composition was accomplished by simply replacing the moveable type. The lines did not need to be recast, as with Linotype machines . These composition-casters could produce type in sizes up to 14 point pica or Didot font width. "Large-composition" customized machines and moulds could provide composition up to 36 points. The matrices are correspondingly larger and there

330-678: A set of a buildings on Hackford Road in Stockwell. The buildings were once occupied by Price & King’s veterinary medicine and quarantine station, sometimes housing baby elephants. This history led founder Shaw to use an elephant as a symbol of the Archive. The Type Archive was run by a small team of staff and volunteers. Some were directly involved in the manufacture and provision of Monotype matrices and spare parts and employed by Monotype Hot Metal Ltd. The company had continuous orders for matrices and machine parts since it began operations from

363-536: Is constantly being modified and can be best consulted on the website of the company. 14pt (14D) 14pt Large Face (14D) ^ Fleet Titling Type Museum The Type Archive (formerly the Type Museum ) was a collection of artefacts representing the legacy of type founding in England , whose famous type foundries and composing systems supplied the world with type in over 300 languages. The Archive

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396-660: Is room for only one alphabet in the die case. For this reason one machine-run could not provide composition in both Roman and italic typeface, so additional hand work was required in such cases. Type for hand-composing was also cast with Monotype machines; all characters up to 36pt, and rules, could be cast on a large-composition machine. Another machine was the "super-caster" or "supra", which could cast single type. After conversion it could also be used to cast any material needed in print shops, including reglettes, ornaments, and similar designs, as well as characters up to 72 points. There were moulds with inserts for sizes 14 to 36 point. For

429-506: Is that the American fonts do not match the English fonts. Letters with the same name had in most cases a different designer, and their appearance and implementation differ. The identification numbers do not all correspond. The matrices of the two firms also differ in terms of depth, the image inside the matrix, implementation, and size. For example, the American matrices are shallower by 0.025   mm (0.010   inch ), and consequently

462-448: Is that the type is printed with some force on the paper, pressing the ink on the type out to the edges of the letter. The center of the character is accordingly printed a bit lighter than the edges. This results in what is called a "bead edge". It is further enhanced because not only the surface of the type get inked, but also the bevels around it, which also contributes to the visual effect of the printed typeface, as can be readily seen with

495-457: The "Monotype" brand was synonymous with high quality and reliability. In their name much typographic research on historical character designs from the early years of typography has been carried out. Many of the letters were produced as "revivals", including characters in Garamond , Baskerville , Bodoni , Bembo , Caslon and many other typefaces. The major difference between the two firms

528-435: The 1960s many Monotype fonts were discontinued. The "patterns" for the originals from which the punches were created, the punches, and the whole stock of remaining matrices were destroyed. The font has disappeared except for the matrices in the possession of various printers. Sample sheets of these fonts are particularly difficult to find and are lacking in many collections. A small number of American letter designs are added to

561-448: The Haute-Corse department of France on the island of Corsica Italy [ edit ] Castellar, Piedmont , a former comune in the province of Cuneo Castellar Guidobono , a comune in the province of Alessandria, Piedmont Spain [ edit ] Castellar, Jaén , a municipio in the province of Jaén, Andalusia Castellar de la Frontera , a municipio in the province of Cádiz, Andalusia Castellar de la Muela ,

594-531: The Monotype company. This name has been used by three firms. Two of them had their roots in "hot metal" or lead type in the printing industry. They did not adapt when the market changed as computer, offset and photographic systems became dominant. These were: A third firm produces fonts for computer use: The latter firm is in a sense the successor to the English Monotype factory. It has the rights to

627-409: The Stockwell site. Uniquely skilled volunteers also maintained and operated the historic presses and Monotype casting machinery. A major exhibition showcasing the work of the late Berthold Wolpe , artist, designer, calligrapher, type designer, and typographer ran from September to December 2017 through December. The Archive said around 1,000 visitors viewed the material on display. The Wolpe exhibition

660-551: The building was no longer owned by the Science Museum, and was in a very poor state of repair, and the new owner intended other uses for the property. The Type Museum was closed and all equipment has been stored at the National Archives . The first two firms mentioned above produced a long list of fonts, which were identified by names and serial numbers. That type design eventually acquired a very good name and

693-416: The even larger sizes of 42, 48, 60 and 72 point another type cast was used. The machine had to be reconfigured for each different type requirement. The width of the hot-lead Monotype type is expressed in units of a set. The widest letter in the alphabet, usually the capital "W", was measured in quarter- pica points, a unit being 1 ⁄ 18 part of this width. The unit width is calculated as follows for

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726-404: The font designs needed adjustment for computer use. There is a difference compared with the old hot-metal characters since the fixed relationship between the width of the letters in the unit arrangement is often experienced as a disadvantage. Discussion of this problem has long been going on, for example by Jan van Krimpen . The design of a lead type cannot be copied without some adjustments since

759-1177: The interior of American foundry moulds need to be higher to produce characters with a type height of 23.3  mm (0.918   inch). This was one of many measures taken by the two Monotype companies to divide the world market between themselves. For example, the Americans served the Americas and the Canadian markets. The British company, The Monotype Corporation Ltd. in Salfords, had many customers in India, Africa, and Asia. For these countries many non-Latin typefaces were created for printing in Hebrew, Javanese, Sanskrit, Sinhala, Thai, and other languages. The composition-caster machines of The Monotype Corporation produced ready-to-use composed pages with text consisting of single pieces of type. The machine provided filled lines, justifying them by adding spaces of varying widths. These ending machines were controlled with

792-605: The italic typefaces f and the "long s" are also descenders. Many of the older fonts were intended mainly for use in newspaper columns. Times New Roman is a good example, but there were many others. The descenders were kept as short as possible in such fonts so that all the text could be set with the same line spacing. However, for many fonts for luxury productions longer variants of the descenders were also available—the lining would usually need to be adjusted to accommodate them when casting. The design of fonts for letterpress printing needs to be adjusted for this technique. The reason

825-425: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Castellar&oldid=1087360160 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Monotype typefaces#Castellar Monotype fonts were developed by

858-637: The list, designated by "Am" and their number. American matrices differ from those in England. American matrices were 0.0025   mm (0.0010   inch) less deeply engraved. Consequently, the American moulds were 0.0025   mm (0.0010   inch) higher internally compared with moulds from the factory in Salfords UK. Consequently, American matrices on an English cast produce a low letter. English matrices on American moulds produce French-height type. The list of computer letters from Monotype Imaging, Inc.

891-606: The original designs, and later obtained rights to many more designs from other sources. The remains of the production archive and what is left of the machines are at the Type Museum in London , England. There the original matrices can still be accessed and parts of the old machines ordered. The collection itself is the property of the British Science Museum . The survival of the Type Museum was threatened since

924-456: The pressure on lead type during printing presses the ink sideways, and the final appearance of the letter on paper is wider than the surface of the lead character. This extra width is not the same at all places around the character. It depends on the paper surface used, the pressure, the type of press, whether cylinder or platten, and many other factors. Many digital fonts from the early digital age have this characteristic defect. The metal surface

957-458: The same UA. In some font designs the unit-arrangement can be different for each point size, for example, with the Lutetia (typeface) and some other fonts of Jan van Krimpen . These UAs are essential for the layout of the matrix case, in which the matrices are sorted into rows by the unit widths. The various "unit-arrangements" have been given numbers. The letters g j p q y ij are descenders . In

990-432: The tables in the various manuals. In practice, however, these differences are so small that they make only little difference when cast with a S5-E wedge or a S5 wedge based on the new-pica. All character are designed to have as width a whole number of units of the set. So, for instance, A=14, B=13, C=14... a=8, b,d,h,k,n,p,q=10, c=8 ... The list with these widths is called the "unit-arrangement" (UA). Different fonts can have

1023-616: Was arranged in conjunction with Monotype Imaging, using a combination of resources in possession of the Type Archive and the children of Berthold Wolpe. An exhibition featuring the calligraphic work of Icelandic artist and handwriting expert, Gunnlaugur SE Briem , opened in June 2018, closing in mid-July that year. The COVID-19 pandemic and the unrelated death of founder Susan Shaw (1932-2020 ) made access particularly difficult for staff, volunteers, and researchers from March 2020. On

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1056-605: Was founded in 1992 by Susan Shaw in Stockwell , South London . The Archive announced in mid-2022 that it would relinquish its building and return portions of its collections to other institutions. The Type Archive was a repository of the original forms, punches , matrices and patterns of some of the most successful metal type and wood type foundries in the England. It holds a historic collection of presses . The Archive estimated that its collections included over six million artefacts, though collating among sources provides

1089-403: Was simply copied, the result being that the color of the printed pages is far too light. In offset or other modern printing techniques, the typeface on the plate and on the printed letter now match much more closely. The use of mostly coated papers with offset types also has an effect. During the type design process all this should be taken into account since simple design drawing of the surface of

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