, the masters used to stamp
matrices used to cast metal type, at the
Plantin-Moretus Museum. Its unique collection of original sixteenth-century matrices and punches inspired the Plantin design. , a visit to which provided source material for Plantin's design. At the time Plantin was released, Monotype's
hot metal typesetting system, which cast new type for each printing job, was developing a reputation for practicality in trade and mass-market printing, but the designs offered by Monotype were relatively basic choices, such as a
"modern" face, an
"old style" and a
Clarendon. This was actually a bold design based on
Caslon, with no connection to Christophe Plantin or Granjon, but Dreyfus suggests it may have prompted Monotype to research Christophe Plantin and the collection of the Plantin-Moretus Museum. The Plantin-Moretus Museum was created in 1876 from Plantin's collection which had been preserved and added to by his successors in business. It is notable as the world's largest collection of sixteenth century typefaces. Although Plantin commissioned types from Granjon, according to
Hendrik Vervliet the specific type Pierpont's design was based on began to be used by the Plantin-Moretus Press only in the 18th century, after Plantin had died and his press had been inherited by the
Moretus family. (It has been reported that Plantin did use the long letters of the type as replacement letters to cast a type by
Garamond shorter height, but Vervliet suggests that these may have been a set of slightly different characters cut by Granjon separately.) Plantin was designed and engraved into metal at the Monotype factory in
Salfords,
Surrey, which was led by Pierpont and draughtsman Fritz Stelzer. Both were recruits to Monotype from the German printing industry. The choice to revive a French Renaissance design was unusual for the time, since most British fine printers of the period preferred either
Caslon or revivals of the fifteenth-century style of
Nicolas Jenson (recognisable from the tilted 'e'), following the lead of
William Morris's
Golden Type, both of which Monotype would also develop revivals of. However, other revivals of Aldine/French renaissance typefaces followed from several hot metal typesetting companies in the following decades, including Monotype's own
Poliphilus,
Bembo and
Garamond, Linotype's
Granjon and
Estienne and others, becoming very popular in book printing for body text. ==Design==