Amsterdam Type foundry
The Amsterdam Type foundry was a Dutch type foundry which contributed a number of original type designs early in the 20th century. It eventually became a division of Tetterode. On October 1, 2000, Tetterode transferred the rights for all their typefaces to Linotype. [1]
Typefaces
Foundry Type
These foundry types were produced by the Amsterdam Type foundry[2]:
- Bristol (1929).
- Carlton (1929), an in-line version of Bristol.
- Choc (1964, Roger Excoffon) originally released by Fonderie Olive in 1955.
- Columbia, originally cast in 1904 as Kolonial by the Woellmer Type Foundry, also cast as Buffalo by the H.C. Hansen Type Foundry of Boston.
- Contura (1966, Dick Dooijes)
- De Roos (1947, S. H. De Roos).
- Egmont (1933, S. H. De Roos), later copied by Intertype (1937).
- Egyptian Bold, a nineteenth centry design.
- Garamond, based on the ATF design of 1917.
- Gravure (1912), a copy of Deberny & Peignot's Moreau-le-Jeune.
- Hermes (1924), a tooled version of Caslon.
- Gravure (1912), a copy of Deberny & Peignot's Moreau-le-Jeune.
- Hidalgo (1939, Stefan Schlesinger.
- Impressum (1962, Baum + Bauer), originally cut for Stempel Type Foundry.
- Juno
- Pressa, originally cut by Intertype as Ideal News.
- Romaans (Riegerl Weissenborn), based upon Schelter & Giesecke's Romanisch and later copied as Intertype's Lormier.
Cold Type
These designs were produced by the Amsterdam Type foundry for photocomposition:
References