Financed by
Anne Cobden-Sanderson, Doves Press was founded by
T. J. Cobden-Sanderson sometime before 1900 (when he invited his friend and neighbour
Emery Walker to join him). Their partnership was dissolved in 1908, but Cobden-Sanderson continued printing. Cobden-Sanderson had commissioned the press's own typeface Doves Type which was drawn under the supervision of Walker. The Doves
Bindery, which Cobden-Sanderson had set up in 1893, bound the books he and Walker printed. The press produced all its books using a single 16-point size of this house typeface between 1900 and 1916. The press is considered to have been a significant contributor to the
Arts and Crafts movement, whose founders were associated with
William Morris and the
Kelmscott Press. The capital letters of Doves Type were based on
typefaces used by
Nicolas Jenson in the 1470s and the lowercase letters were based on typefaces used by
Jacobus Rubeus. Atypical punctuation, extremely wide capitals, and an offset dot of the letter 'i' were distinctive features of the typeface. Doves Type was similar to William Morris's earlier
Golden Type and, like it, was cut by
punchcutter Edward Prince. The press was located at No. 1
Hammersmith Terrace. It was named after
The Dove, Hammersmith, a nearby riverside pub. The Doves Press was responsible for the Doves Bible (5 vols, 1902–1904), which the
Columbia Encyclopedia considered one of the best examples of its kind. == The Doves Type dispute ==