American Type Founders (list of types)

American Type Founders was the largest producer of foundry type in the world, not only of in-house designs, but also from designs that came from merged firms;

Contents

ATF Designs

These foundry types were designed and produced by American Type Founders:

Barnhart Brothers & Spindler

These foundry types were originally cast by Barnhart Brothers & Spindler:

  • Boul Mich (1927, Oz Cooper)
  • Cooper series
    • Cooper (1918, Oz Cooper) originally Cooper Oldstyle Roman
    • Cooper Italic (1924, Oz Cooper) included swash characters.
  • Cooper Black series
    • Cooper Black + Italic + Hilite (1922, Oz Cooper), this became ATF's second-best-selling type, after Copperplate Gothic.
    • Cooper Black Condensed (1926, Oz Cooper) 20% lighter than the Cooper Black, the designer described it as “condensed but not squeezed.”
    • Cooper Tooled Italic, not designed by Oz Cooper, but was actually a knock-off of a Cooper Italic by a German foundry.
  • Cooper Fullface + Italic (1929, Oz Cooper)
  • Dietz Text (c. 1927, Oz Cooper), from original drawings made by August Dietz.
  • Fifteenth Century (c. 1897, Berne Nadall), later released by ATF as Caslon Antique.
  • Pompeian Cursive (1927, Oz Cooper)

Bruce Type Foundry

These foundry types were originally cast by the Bruce Type Foundry:

Central Type Foundry

These foundry types were originally cast by the Central Type Foundry of Saint Louis:

Dickenson Type Foundry

These foundry types were originally cast by Dickenson Type Foundry:

Inland Type Foundry

These foundry types were originally cast by Inland Type Foundry:

Keystone Type Foundry

These foundry types were originally cast by Keystone Type Foundry:

Marder, Luse, & Co.

These foundry types were originally cast by Marder, Luse, & Co.:

H.C. Hansen Type Foundry

These foundry types were originally cast by H.C. Hansen Type Foundry:

Nineteenth Century Faces

These foundry types were cast before the consolidation by unspecified foundries:[2]

References

  1. ^ McGrew, Mac, American Metal Typefaces of the Twentieth Century, Oak Knoll Books, New Castle Delaware, 1993, ISBN 0-938768-34-4, p. 25. Other sources, noltably Jaspert, credit this face to BB&S, while McGrew speculates that some of the sizes might actually have been cast from the Bruce Foundry's Italian Condensed #341.
  2. ^ Lawson, Alexander S., Anatomy of a Typeface, David R. Godine, Publisher, Boston, Massachusets, 1990, ISBN 0-87923-333-8, p. 297.