In the mid-nineteenth century there were numerous wood type manufacturers in the United States. All the significant manufacturers were based in the
Northeast and
Midwest, many around New York City and in
Connecticut. The market for wood type was apparently limited and most businesses had side-lines as dealers in other printers' equipment, or making other wooden goods. One of the larger firms until the 1880s was the company of
William H. Page, near
Norwich, Connecticut. Wood type competed with
lithography and
stencils in the market for display typography. Common type styles included the
slab serif,
fat face,
sans-serif,
reverse-contrast or "French Clarendon", and other genres such as "Tuscan" (spikes on the letter), "Grecian" (
chamfered) and ornamented forms. (The use of fictitious adjective names for newly invented type styles was common with wood type manufacturers but not invented by them, for example in London
Vincent Figgins had called his first slab-serif "Antique" around 1817 and the
Caslon foundry's first reverse contrast typeface around 1821 was given the probably fictitious name "Italian".) Types were made in extreme proportions, such as ultra-bold and ultra-condensed. For Bethany Heck, "wood type in the US was pioneered by mad scientists who strained good taste and legibility in an attempt to cover the broadest range of ornament, width and weight". Wood type had distinctive characteristics compared to metal type. The demand for novelty led to an arms race of new styles of novelty type designs, and because each type was individually cut by pantograph from a pattern, types could be offered in a wide range of sizes. Wood type styles were sold in a wide range of widths from condensed to ultra-wide, and Hamilton offered to supply at regular prices any width desired in between its standard widths. Robert James DeLittle, the last owner of the DeLittle wood type cutters in
York,
England, explained in 2000 that sometimes very condensed letters were needed for theatre posters because "If you were more important than the other chap, your name had to be in larger letters. If you were unfortunate enough to have a long-winded name you had great difficulty in fitting it into those narrow theatrical bills." Digital typeface designer Anatole Couteau comments: "in wood type...due to how the wooden blocks are cut, spacing is typically so tight that you constantly have to do kerning." text types (metal type example shown) tended to use a modularised design with capitals of similar width, something copied by display types of the period. Although apparently diverse in appearance, nineteenth century wood types tended to be ornamented variations on the same basic modularised design principles, similar to nineteenth century
Didone text typefaces. Nineteenth-century types were based on a system of keeping the capitals very similar in width, seen for example in the "tucked-under" leg of the R. This model was quite different from
Roman square capitals, where the capitals are quite different in width. Wood type manufacture was particularly common in the United States, and its companies made type in other languages for export. By the 1870s, missionaries working in China had commissioned type for printing posters, and wood type was also made for Russian and Burmese for export. Besides this, American manufacturers made German blackletter, Greek and Hebrew types catering to the
large immigrant communities. In 1880,
J. E. Hamilton founded the Hamilton Manufacturing Company in
Two Rivers,
Wisconsin. His company grew rapidly to take over the American industry. Hamilton gained its initial advantage by introducing a new method of making wood type very cheaply: the wood letter was cut out and then attached to a backing of a block of cheaper wood. Around 1890, Hamilton switched to the standard router method of cutting wood type as a single block. It also benefited from an effective distribution network and proximity to the growing western market. From 1887 to 1909 it took over most of its competitors. Some types from Hamilton are shown below: According to S. L. Righyni, in the late
inter-war period in Britain, the standard letterform on newsbills posted by
newsagents was "the sans-serif wooden letter-form", especially bold condensed sans-serifs from
Stephenson Blake, although the
Daily Express used Winchester Bold and
The Times had a custom design similar to
Kabel Bold Condensed. (Although wood type was used for news bills and posters, large newspaper headlines were rare in British newspaper printing until well into the twentieth century.)
Wood type sellers United States • Darius Wells • W. Leavenworth •
H. W. Caslon • H. M. Sellers •
Stevens Shanks • Day & Collins •
Stephenson Blake Germany • Will & Schumacher, later Sachs & Co. France •
Deberny & Peignot Switzerland • Roman Scherer Brazil • Funtimod India • Diamond Wooden Type Works ==Legacy technology==