Baroque and
rococo aesthetic trends, use of the pointed-pen for writing, and steel
engraving techniques effected a gradual shift in typographic style. Contrast between thick and thin strokes increased. Tilted stressing transformed into vertical stressing; full rounds were compressed. Blunt bracketed serifs grew sharp and delicate until they were fine straight lines. Detail became clean and precise. Transitional roman types combined the classical features of lettera antiqua with the vertical stressing and higher contrast between thick and thin strokes characteristic of the true modern romans to come. The roman types used c. 1618 by the Dutch printing firm of
Elzevir in
Leyden reiterated the 16th-century French style with higher contrast, less rigor and a lighter page effect. After 1647 most Elzevir faces were cut by the highly regarded Christoffel van Dyck, whose precise renditions were regarded by some experts at the time as finer than Garamond's.
Fell types 's
First Oration against Catiline. From mid-16th century until the end of the 17th, interference with printing by
the Crown thwarted the development of
type founding in England—most type used by 17th-century English printers was of Dutch origin. The lack of material inspired Bishop of Oxford
Doctor John Fell to purchase punches & matrices from Holland c. 1670–1672 for use by the
Oxford University Press. The so-named Fell types, presumed to be the work of Dutch
punchcutter Dirck Voskens, mark a noticeable jump from previous designs, with considerably shorter extenders, higher stroke contrast, narrowing of round letters, and flattened serifs on the baseline and descenders. The design retained a retrogressive old-style irregularity, smooth modeling from vertical to horizontal, and angled stressing of rounds (except a vertically stressed
o). Fell capitals were condensed, even-width, with wide flattened serifs; all characteristics of the definitive modern romans of the late 18th century. Fell italic types were distinguished by high contrast matching the Fell romans; wider ovals; a split-branching stroke from the stems of
m n r and
u; and long, flat serifs—prefiguring modern. They repeated the non-uniform slant of French models, and the capitals included swash
J and
Q forms. An open-source digitisation of the Fell Types has been released by designer and engineer Igino Marini.
Caslon ''', from a sample issued by the Caslon foundry and quoting the same text. Compare against the Fell type. The first major figure in English typography is reckoned by type historians to have ended the monopoly of Dutch type founding almost single-handedly. The gun engraver-turned-punchcutter
William Caslon spent 14 years creating the
stable of typefaces on the specimen sheet issued in 1734. The complete canon included roman, italic, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic
etc. Caslon's Great Primer roman and English roman were retrogressive designs that very closely followed the Fell types and the roman of
Miklós (Nicholas) Kis c. 1685 falsely attributed to
Anton Janson. Caslon's slightly bracketed serifs and old-style irregularity were not novel, but a precise cut and perpendicularity gave legibility to the forms. Caslon's italic structures follow the Fell italics, but at a condensed width and with conventional branching from stems. William Caslon's prodigious output was influential worldwide. Caslon type and its imitations were used throughout the
British Empire. It was the dominant type in the
thirteen American colonies of
British America (introduced by
Benjamin Franklin) for the second half of the 18th century and was used for the
United States Declaration of Independence. Caslon marks the rise of England as the center of typographic activity.
Fleischmann Joan Michaël Fleischman (1701–1768) was born in
Nürnberg where he trained as a punchcutter. He found employment with Dutch type founders in Holland and settled there c. 1728. At the Enschedé foundry in
Haarlem he cut punches for a large amount of material. Some time after 1743 he produced a distinguished roman design—related to the preceding transitional types but departing from them. It prefigured modern romans with sparse
transaxial modeling, joining the vertical stressing to hairline thins and ball-ends. Fleischmann borrowed from the general mode of Phillipe Grandjean's and Louis Simonneau's , commissioned by
Louis XIV in 1692 for the , but did not imitate that face. Fleischmann's capitals were a new variety; an even-width scheme, compressed rounds, all-vertical stressing, and triangular beak ends of
E F L T and
Z, all characteristics prefiguring the "classical" moderns of
Bodoni and
Didot. Fleischmann's italic bore some resemblance to Granjean's but had longer ascenders and followed the established Dutch structures for
h v and
w. Fleischmann was held in great esteem by his contemporaries, his designs exerting a decisive influence in the last quarter of the 18th century. Renowned French punchcutter
Pierre Simon Fournier (1712–1768), confessed to having copied Fleischmann's design, and was first to dub "contrast" types like the Fells, Caslon and Fleischmann "modern". Fournier's rococo-influenced designs—Fournier and Narcissus—and his
Modèles des Caractères (1742) continued the style and adapted it for his own modern age. Like Baskerville, his italics were inspired by handwriting and the engraved lettering known as
copperplate hand. Fournier also published a two volume
Manuel Typographique, in which he recorded much European typographic history, and introduced the first standardized system of type size measurement—the "
point".
Baskerville typeface''' designed by John Baskerville. About 1751,
John Baskerville, having found financial success in producing goods from sheet metal, moved into the printing business. His roman and italic types appeared later than Fleischman's but are considered transitional and partly retrogressive with a return to lower contrast, smooth transaxial modeling, finely modeled bracketed serifs, and long stems. The exquisite design and finish of Baskerville's roman however, combining elegance and strength, was modern. His roman design, and especially his italic, were rococo-influenced. His letterforms are an intentional transition between old-style forms and modern styles.
Modern romans of sample''' published with genuine
Bodoni types by the Officina Bodoni in 1925. The font shown is the digital Bodoni
Monotype c. 1999.. True modern romans arrived with the types of the Italian
Giambattista Bodoni and the French
Didots. Completing trends begun by the Fell types, Fleischman, Fournier and Baskerville, the so-called "classical" modern romans eschewed
chirographic and organic influences, their synthetic
symmetric geometry answering to a rationalized and reformed classical model driven by the
strict cartesian grid philosophy of
René Descartes and the predictable
clockwork universe of
Isaac Newton. The "classical" appellation of modern romans stems from their return to long ascenders and descenders set on widely spaced lines, and a corresponding light page effect reminiscent of old-style—occurring at a time of classical revival. Bodoni was foremost in progressing from rococo to the new classical style. He produced an italic very close to Baskerville's, and a French cursive script type falling in between italic type and joined scripts. The roman types of
Francois Ambroise Didot and son
Firmin Didot closely resemble the work of Bodoni, and opinion is divided over whether the Didots or Bodoni originated the first modern romans. At any rate the Didots' mathematical precision and vanishing of rococo design reflected the "enlightenment" of post-revolution France under
Napoleon. Francois Ambroise also designed "maigre" and "gras" types corresponding to later condensed and expanded font formats. The Spanish designer
Joaquín Ibarra's roman was influenced by Baskerville, Didot and Bodoni, but hewn nearer to old-style and used in the same classical manner, including spaced capitals. In England modern romans resembling Bodoni's were cut for the printer
William Bulmer c. 1786 by the punchcutter William Martin, who had been apprenticed to Baskerville and influenced by him. Martin's italic mirrored the open-tail
g and overall finesse of Baskerville's. In Britain and the United States, modern romans (emerging around 1800 and totally dominant by the 1820s) took a somewhat more rounded, less geometrical form than the designs of Didot and Bodoni; an obvious difference is that in Anglo-American faces the upper-case C has only one serif (at the top) whereas in European designs it has two. == 19th and 20th century typography ==