Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Janson> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 88 of
88
with 100 triples per page.
- Janson abstract "Janson is an old-style serif typeface inspired by a set of Dutch Baroque typefaces. It is an even, regular design, particularly intended for body text. Janson is based on surviving designs from Leipzig that were named for Anton Janson (1620–1687), a Leipzig-based printer and punch-cutter from the Netherlands who was believed to have created them. Research in the 1970s and early 1980s, however, concluded that the typeface was the work of a Hungarian punch-cutter, Miklós (Nicholas) Tótfalusi Kis (1650–1702). Tótfalusi Kis traveled to Amsterdam in 1680 to serve as an apprentice under Dirk Voskens; he cut several typefaces while working under Voskens, producing a roman-text face about 1685 upon which present-day Janson is based. Tótfalusi Kis also cut Greek and Hebrew typefaces, both for use in printing Polyglot Bibles. A revival of the face was designed in 1937 by Chauncey H. Griffith of the Mergenthaler Linotype foundry. The revival was taken from the original matrices, held since 1919 by the Stempel Type Foundry, which were Mergenthaler's exclusive agent in Europe.The most common digital version, Janson Text, comes from a metal version produced by Hermann Zapf in the 1950s at Stempel. This was based on Kis' original matrices. Digitisations are available from Linotype, Adobe, Bitstream (adding Cyrillic glyphs), URW++ (adding an additional light and black weights) and others.Despite its 17th-century origins, Janson is used in a wide variety of contemporary text applications. As of the magazine's 2011 redesign, Architectural Digest uses Janson for body text in all of its articles.A separate common revival of the 'Janson' designs is Ehrhardt, created by Monotype in the 1930s. Somewhat more condensed than most Janson revivals, giving it a crisp, vertical appearance, it is a popular book typeface, particularly often used in the UK. Besides a number of revivals specifically of Ehrhardt (described in that article), two more by Linotype and Berthold have been sold under the name of Kis.".
- Janson thumbnail JansonTsp.svg?width=300.
- Janson wikiPageExternalLink equity.html.
- Janson wikiPageExternalLink index.html?id=14.
- Janson wikiPageExternalLink P_055.html.
- Janson wikiPageExternalLink spbk_ehrht.html.
- Janson wikiPageExternalLink ehrhardt-mt.
- Janson wikiPageID "4041643".
- Janson wikiPageLength "5208".
- Janson wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- Janson wikiPageRevisionID "680575152".
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink 1937.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Amsterdam.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Anatomy_of_a_Typeface.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Anton_Janson.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Architectural_Digest.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Bitstream_Inc..
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Category:1937_introductions.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Category:Digital_typefaces.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Category:Letterpress_typefaces.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Category:Linotype_typefaces.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Category:Old_style_serif_typefaces.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Category:Photocomposition_typefaces.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Category:Typefaces_with_text_figures.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Chauncey_H._Griffith.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_Baroque.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_Baroque_architecture.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Ehrhardt_(typeface).
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew_language.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Hungarians.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink József_Molnár_(writer).
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Leipzig.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Mergenthaler_Linotype_Company.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Monotype_Imaging.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Polyglot_(book).
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Polyglot_Bibles.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Roman_text.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Roman_type.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Serif.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Stempel_Type_Foundry.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Type_foundry.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink Typeface.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLink URW++.
- Janson wikiPageWikiLinkText "Janson".
- Janson wikiPageWikiLinkText "Miklós Kis".
- Janson basedOn "Nicholas Kis' Roman of 1685".
- Janson creator Chauncey_H._Griffith.
- Janson date "1937".
- Janson foundry Mergenthaler_Linotype_Company.
- Janson hasPhotoCollection Janson.
- Janson imagesize "250".
- Janson style Serif.
- Janson wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Janson wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Janson wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Dead_link.
- Janson wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Distinguish.
- Janson wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_font.
- Janson wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Janson wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Typ-stub.
- Janson subject Category:1937_introductions.
- Janson subject Category:Digital_typefaces.
- Janson subject Category:Letterpress_typefaces.
- Janson subject Category:Linotype_typefaces.
- Janson subject Category:Old_style_serif_typefaces.
- Janson subject Category:Photocomposition_typefaces.
- Janson subject Category:Typefaces_with_text_figures.
- Janson hypernym Typeface.
- Janson type Article.
- Janson type Person.
- Janson type Article.
- Janson type Foundry.
- Janson type Typeface.
- Janson type Typeface.
- Janson type Thing.
- Janson comment "Janson is an old-style serif typeface inspired by a set of Dutch Baroque typefaces. It is an even, regular design, particularly intended for body text. Janson is based on surviving designs from Leipzig that were named for Anton Janson (1620–1687), a Leipzig-based printer and punch-cutter from the Netherlands who was believed to have created them.".
- Janson label "Janson".
- Janson differentFrom Adobe_Jenson.
- Janson sameAs Janson.
- Janson sameAs Janson.
- Janson sameAs Janson.
- Janson sameAs m.0bf1sb.
- Janson sameAs Q716102.
- Janson sameAs Q716102.
- Janson wasDerivedFrom Janson?oldid=680575152.
- Janson depiction JansonTsp.svg.
- Janson isPrimaryTopicOf Janson.