Pages of As, Bs, Cs...

kristin
19.May.2005 8.39am
kristin's picture

I have a vague memory of a book that was available on line (and may still be) whose purpose was to help in identificaton of fonts. Each page was set up with a grid of maybe 30 squares and in each square was a letter in 60 point or thereabouts. Underneath the letter was the typeface name. Apparently this book had pages and pages of cap As, then cap Bs, and so on.

I'm not referring to Rookledge's International Typefinder. I have that book and find it useful. The book I'm vaguely recalling did not have one-line specimens for each typeface, it simply had various incarnations of each letter of the alphabet grouped together.

I never actually saw the book and have no idea if it would be helpful. However, one of our art directors is looking for info on the book and I seem to have misplaced the url or any information about it.

So can anyone help an old lady with her senior moment? What the heck was that book? Did anyone actually purchase it and/or find it useful?

Thanks!

"IdentaFONT" (Nancy Wansick, Don Wansick)

Personally, I don't find it very useful because the selection is slim and outdated and there's no logical order to the displays. It only really works when you're trying to identify a single distinctive glyph.


I think I have that book:

Encyclopedia of Comparative Letterforms for Artists & Designers
by Norman S. Weinberger

© 1971 Art Direction Book Co.
third printing 1985

It's fun to look through, but I don't know that I've ever actually used it....


I posted this also on the Type Identification board and got the answer I was looking for:

SjButton
Thu, 2005-05-19 12:19

www.namethisfont.com

Even just the specimines of this book are helpful.

The other books sound interesting as well.


Benjamin, could you please tell me/us more about that book?

hhp


Sure thing. It's sounds like it's actually quite similar to Kristen's book.

The book is approx 10 1/2 x 8 1/2", horizontal, hardcover, 416 pages.

Each page has a grid of 35 squares, each containing a capital letter or numeral, at about 72 points. There are 8 pages of each letter, so that's 280 typefaces. Each square also has a small number which corresponds to a master grid index in the back, listing the typeface names and foundries.

Full lowercase alphabets are listed in a separate section, five to a page, again numbered to correspond to the grid index.

Threre's also an alphabetical index at the back.

I can try to post some pictures later if you're interested.


> I can try to post some pictures later if you’re interested.

Wow, that would be great.
Maybe some of the lc "g" action in there?

hhp


Actually, the lc pages aren't at all as cool as the uc. They just show full lc alphabets (five to a page) like any other specimen book.

Could I interest you in some uc "G"s instead?


For UC, the "Q"s, please - thanks!

hhp


The entire font identification process could be greatly simplified if everyone would just agree to only use Hobo.


Hrant, some Qs for you.
And some more.

(These are from the 2-page overview, showing all 8 pages worth.)

Extra credit: Spot the Hobo!


Benjamin,

Hobo Q is on page 168, row 2, and column 4. :)


Anyone for a game of typeface bingo?


There is Hobo. Yeah, I think we should stick with that one. What a beautiful letterform.


Thank you Benjamin! That's a keeper for sure.

BTW, what font is the second one from the left on the 4th row of page 164?

hhp


My pleasure.

That one's listed as:

West, Dave
Behemoth Clarendon Italic Swash
5546c
Photo-Lettering, Inc.


There is also the German book "ÜberSicht" (http://www.typografie.de/verlagsverzeichnis/typografie/230-9.html). It was published in 1991 and lists 1800 typefaces.