Jan van Krimpen (Gouda, 12 February 1892 – Haarlem, 20 October 1958) was a Dutch typographer and type designer. He worked for the printing house Koninklijke Joh. Enschedé.
Van Krimpen's type designs are elegant book typefaces, originally made for manual printing and the monotype machine. Although a good few have been digitised (Romulus, Haarlemmer, Spectrum), the typefaces are only rarely used in publications.
Of special note is the Romulus 'superfamily', consisting of a seriffed font, a cursive, a chancery italic (Cancelleresca Bastarda), a sans-serif, and a Greek in a range of weights. Such an extensive family would have been a first, comparable to today's Scala family. The outbreak of the Second World War disrupted the project before completion. After the war, Van Krimpen was not interested in resuming it.
These foundry types were designed by Jan van Krimpen[1]: