The Klingspor Type Foundry was a German hot metal type foundry established in 1892 when Carl Klingspor bought out the Rudhard’sche Foundry of Offenbach. His sons, Karl and younger brother Wilhelm, took on the business in 1904, renaming the foundry Gebrüder Klingspor in 1906, and turned it into a major concern. Famous type designers like Rudolf Koch , Walter Tiemann and Otto Eckmann worked for this foundry and created well known typefaces like Koch Antiqua , Wilhelm Klingspor , Tiemann Antiqua and Eckmann .
3-473: Starting in 1925, Klingspor types were distributed in the United States by Continental Type Founders Association . The foundry closed in 1956 when it was acquired by D. Stempel AG, which had held a majority stake in the company since 1917. The right of the typefaces was transferred to D. Stempel AG , Frankfurt am Main which then had been transferred to Linotype . Many original designs can be seen in
6-765: The Klingspor Museum in Offenbach am Main. These foundry types were produced by the Klingspor Foundry: Continental Type Founders Association Continental Type Founders Association was founded by Melbert Brinckerhoff Cary Jr. in 1925 to distribute foundry type imported from European foundries. The influence of more modern European type design was thus felt in the United States for
9-450: The first time, and American foundries responded by imitating many of the more popular faces. A.T.F.'s Paramount and Monotype's Sans Serif series are two examples of this. The following foundries were represented: Beginning in 1927 Continental also distributed faces cast by Frederic Goudy , and two faces for Doug McMurtrie . At first Goudy's type was cast at his own Village Letter Foundry , but after 1929 these were cast by
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